GOD'S declarations of great wrath to come 
In the last age upon the faithless world 
I make known, prophesying to all men 
According to their cities. From the time 
5 When the great tower fell and the tongues of men 
Were parted into many languages 
Of mortals, first was Egypt's royal power 
Established, that of Persians and of Medes 
And also of the Ethiopians 
10 And of Assyria and Babylon, 
Then the great pride of boasting Macedon, 
Then, fifth, the famous lawless kingdom last 
Of the Italians shall show many evils 
Unto all mortals and shall spend the toils 
15 Of men of every land. And it shall lead 
The untamed kings of nations to the West, 
Make laws for peoples and subject all things. 
Late do the mills of God grind the fine flour. 
Fire then shall destroy all things and give back 
20 To fine dust the heads of the high-leafed hills 
And of all flesh. First cause of ills to all 
Are covetousness and a lack of sense. 
For there shall be love of deceitful gold 
And silver; for than these did mortals choose 
15 Naught greater, neither light of sun nor heaven, 
Nor sea, nor broad-backed earth whence all things grow, 
Nor God who giveth all things, of all things 
The Father, nor yet faith and piety 
Chose they before them. Of impiety 
30 A fount, and of disorder forward guide, 
An instrument of wars and foe of peace 
Is lack of sense, that sets at enmity 
Parents and children. And along with gold 
Shall marriage not be honorable at all. 
35 And the land shall have its borders and each sea 
Its watchers craftily distributed 
To all those that have gold; for ages thus 
Shall those who purpose to possess the land 
That feedeth many plunder laboring men, 
40 In order that, procuring larger space, 
They may enslave them by a false pretense. 
And if the huge earth from the starry heaven 
Held not her throne far off there had not been 
For men an equal light, but, bought with gold, 
45 It had belonged to rich men and God must 
For poor men have prepared another world. 
    There shall come to thee sometime from above 
A heavenly stroke deserved, O haughty Rome. 
And thou shalt be the first to bend thy neck 
50 And be rased to the ground, and thee shall fire 
Destructive utterly consume, cast down 
Upon thy pavements, and thy wealth shall perish, 
And wolves and foxes dwell in thy foundations. 
And then shalt thou be wholly desolate, 
55 As if not born. Where thy Palladium then? 
What god shall save thee, whether wrought of gold 
Or stone or brass? Or then where thy decrees 
Of senate? Where shall be the race of Rhea, 
Of Cronus, or of Zeus, and of all those 
60 Whom thou didst worship, demons without life, 
Images of the worn-out dead, whose tombs 
Crete the ill-starred shall hold a cause of pride, 
And honor the unconscious dead with thrones? 
    But when thou shalt have had voluptuous kings 
65 Thrice five, enslaving the world from the east 
Unto the west, there shall be then a lord 
Gray-headed, having name of the near sea, 
The world inspecting with a nimble foot, 
Bringing gifts, having large amount of gold 
70 And plundering hateful silver even more, 
And stripping it off he shall pick it up. 
And he shall have part in all mysteries 
Of Magian shrines, display his child as god, 
Abolish all things sacred, and disclose 
75 The ancient mysteries of deceit to all. 
Sad then the time when he himself, sad one, 
Shall perish. And yet shall the people say: 
"Thy mighty strength, O city, shall fall down," 
At once perceiving that the evil day 
80 Is coming on. And, thy most piteous fate 
Foreseeing, fathers and young children then 
Shall mourn together; they alas, alas! Shall wail 
Beside the Tiber's lamentable banks. 
    After him at the latest day of all 
85 Shall three rule, filling out a name of God 
The heavenly, of whom is the power both now 
And to all ages. One of them being old 
The scepter long shall wield, most piteous king, 
Who in his houses shall shut up and guard 
90 All the goods of the world, in order that, 
When from the utmost limits of the earth 
That man, the matricidal fugitive, 
Shall come again, he may bestow these things 
On all and furnish Asia with great wealth. 
95 And then shalt thou mourn and shalt put aside 
The luster of the broad-striped purple robe 
Of thy commanders and wear mourning dress, 
O haughty queen, off spring of Latin Rome; 
The glory of that arrogance of thine 
100 Shall be for thee no longer, nor shalt thou, 
Ill-fated, ever be raised up again, 
But shalt lie prostrate. For the glory also 
Of eagle-bearing legions shall fall low. 
Where then thy power? What allied land shall be 
105 Subjected by thy follies lawlessly? 
For then in all earth shall confusion be 
Of mortals, when the Almighty shall himself 
To the tribunal come to judge the souls 
Of the living and the dead and all the world. 
110 And parents shall not be to children dear 
Nor children to their parents, on account 
Of their impiety and their distress 
Unlooked-for. Thine thenceforth shall gnashing be 
And scattering and conquest, and when the fall 
115 Of cities comes and yawnings of the earth. 
    When a dragon charged with fire in both his eyes 
And with full belly shall come on the waves 
And shall afflict thy children, and there be 
Famine and war of kinsmen, near at hand 
120 Is the end of the world and the last day 
And judgment of the immortal God for them 
That are approved and chosen. And there shall 
Against the Romans first of all be wrath 
Implacable, and there, come a time 
125 Of drinking blood and wretched course of life. 
Alas, alas for thee, thou reckless land, 
Great barbarous nation; thou didst not perceive 
Whence naked and unworthy thou didst come 
To the sun's light, that to that place again 
130 Naked thou mightest withdraw and afterwards 
Come unto judgment, as unjustly judging. . . . 
With hands gigantic coming from on high 
Alone through all the world thou, shalt abide 
Under the earth. By naphtha and asphalt 
135 And brimstone and much fire thou utterly 
Shalt disappear and shalt be burning dust 
For ages; and each one who sees shall hear 
From Hades a great mournful bellowing 
And gnashing of teeth, and thee noisily 
140 Beating with thine own hands thy godless breast. 
For all together there is equal night; 
For rich and poor; and naked from the earth 
Naked again to earth they haste away 
And cease from life when they complete their time. 
145 No slave is there, nor any lord, nor tyrant, 
Nor king, nor leader having much conceit, 
Nor speaker learned in law, nor magistrate 
Judging for money; nor do they pour out 
The blood of sacrifices in libations 
150 Upon the altars; there sounds not a drum 
Nor cymbal. . . . 
Nor perforated flute that has a power 
To madden mind itself, nor sound of pipe 
That bean the likeness of a crooked snake, 
155 Nor trumpet, harsh-toned messenger of wars; 
Nor those made drunken in the lawless feasts 
Of revelry, nor in the choral dance; 
Nor sound of harp, nor harmful instrument; 
Nor strife, nor anger manifold, nor sword 
160 Is with the dead; but an eternity 
Common to all is keeper of the key 
Of the great prison before God's judgment-seat 
With images of gold and silver and stone 
Ye are ready, that unto the bitter day 
165 Ye may come to see your first punishment, 
O Rome, and gnashing of teeth. And no more 
Shall Syrian or Greek lay down his neck 
Beneath thy servile yoke, nor foreigner, 
Nor other nation. Plundered thou shalt be 
170 And made to suffer what thou didst exact, 
And in fear wailing thou shalt give, until 
Thou pay back all things; and thou for the world 
Shalt be a triumph and reproach of all. 
    Then shall the sixth race of the Latin kings 
175 End life at last and scepters leave behind 
From the same race another king shall reign, 
Who shall rule every land and scepters wield; 
And having full power, and by the decrees 
Of God most mighty, shall his children rule, 
180 And of unshaken children is his race; 
For thus it is decreed while time moves round, 
When there shall be of Egypt thrice five kings. 
    Thereafter when the limit of the time 
Of the Phenix shall come round, there shall a race 
185 Of peoples come to plunder, tribes confused, 
Enemy of the Hebrews. Then shall Ares 
Go plundering Ares; and he shall himself 
Destroy the haughty threatening of the Romans. 
For Rome's power perished then while in its bloom; 
190 An ancient queen with cities dwelling round, 
No longer shall the land of fertile Rome 
Prevail, when out of Asia one shall come 
To rule with Ares. And when he has wrought 
All these things, to the city afterwards 
195 Shall he come. And three times three hundred 
And eight and forty shalt thou make complete, 
When, taking thee by force, an ill-starred fate 
Shall come upon thee and complete thy name. 
    Ah me, I the thrice wretched, shall I see 
200 Sometime that day to thee destructive, Rome, 
But to all Latins most? It honors him 
With counsels who goes, up on Trojan car 
With hidden children from the Asian land, 
Having a fiery soul. But when he shall 
205 Cut through the isthmus looking wistfully, 
Moving against all, passing o'er the sea, 
Then shall dark blood pursue the mighty beast. 
And a dog chased the lion which destroys 
The shepherds. And then shall they take away 
210 His scepter and to Hades he shall pass. 
    And unto Rhodes shall come an evil last, 
But greatest, There shall also be for Thebes 
An evil conquest afterwards, And Egypt 
Shall perish by the wickedness of rulers, 
215 And he who, being mortal, even so 
Escaped headlong destruction afterwards, 
Thrice blessed was, even four times happy man. 
And Rome shall be a room, and Delos dull, 
And Samos sand. . . . 
220 Later again thereafter there shall come 
An evil to the Persians for their pride, 
And all their insolence shall come to naught. 
    And then a holy Lord of all the earth 
Having raised up the dead shall wield the scepter 
225 Unto all ages. Thrice then unto Rome 
Will the Most High bring pitiable fate 
And unto all men, and by their own works 
They'll perish; but they would not be persuaded, 
Which would have been much more, to be desired. 
230 But when forthwith there shall increase for ill 
An evil day of famine and of plague 
And of intolerable battle-din, 
Even then again the former daring lord 
Shall, having called the senate, counsel take 
235 How he shall utterly destroy. . . . 
    .    .    .    .    .    .    . 
Dry land shall bloom together with the leaves 
Appearing; and the, heavenly firmament 
Shall bring to light upon the solid rock 
Rainstorm and flame, and much wind on the land, 
240 And over all the earth a multitude 
Of poisonous sowings. But with shameless soul 
Shall they again act, fearing not the wrath 
Of God or men, forsaking modesty, 
Longing for and greedy tyrants 
245 And violent sinners, false, insatiate, 
Workers of evil and in nothing true, 
Destroyers of faith, on foul speech 
In false words; they shall have no fill of wealth; 
But shamelessly will they strip off still more; 
250 Under the rule of tyrants they shall perish. 
    The stars shall all fall forwards in the sea, 
All one by one, yet shall men see in heaven 
A brilliant cornet, sign of much distress 
About to come, of war and battle-strife. 
255    Let me not live when the gay woman reigns, 
But then when heavenly grace shall reign within, 
And when the holy child shall crush with bonds 
The mischievous destroyer of all men, 
Opening the depth to view, and suddenly 
260 The wooden house shall cover mortals round. 
    But when the generation tenth shall be 
Within the house of Hades, afterwards 
The mighty sway of one of female sex; 
And God himself shall increase many evils 
265 When she with royal honor has been crowned; 
And altogether then an impious age. 
The sun obscurely looking shines by night; 
The stars shall leave the sky; and with much storm 
A hurricane shall desolate the earth; 
240 And there shall be a rising of the dead; 
The running of the lame shall be most swift, 
The deaf shall bear, the blind shall see, and those 
That talk not shall talk, and to all 
Shall life and wealth be common. And the land 
275 Alike for all, divided not by walls 
Or fences, shall bear more abundant fruits. 
And fountains of sweet wine and of white milk 
And honey it shall give. . . . 
    .    .    .    .    .    .    . 
And judgment of the immortal God (great king). 
280 But when God shall change times . . . 
Winter producing summer, then shall be 
Oracles (all fulfilled) . . . 
But when the world has perished . . . 
JESUS CHRISTI SON OF GOD, SAVIOUR, CROSS.
And the earth shall perspire, when there shall be 
285 The sign of judgment. And from heaven shall come 
The King who for the ages is to be, 
Present to judge all flesh and the whole world. 
Faithful and faithless mortals shall see God 
The Most High with the saints at the end of time. 
290 And of men bearing flesh he judges souls 
Upon his throne, when sometime the whole world 
Shall be a desert and a place of thorns. 
And mortals shall their idols cast away 
And all wealth. And the searching fire shall burn 
1295 Earth, heaven, and sea; and it shall burn the gates, 
Of Hades' prison. Then shall come all flesh 
Of the dead to the free light of the saints; 
But the lawless shall that fire whirl round and round. 
For ages. Howsoever much one did 
300 In secret, then shall he all things declare; 
For God shall open dark breasts to the light. 
And lamentation shall there be from all 
And gnashing of teeth. Brightness of the, sun 
Shall be eclipsed and dances of the stars. 
305 He shall roll up the heaven; and of the moon 
The light shall perish. And he shall exalt 
The valleys and destroy the heights of hills, 
And height no longer shall appear remaining 
Among men. And the hills shall with the plains 
310 Be level and no more on any sea 
Shall there be sailing. For the earth shall then 
With heat be shriveled and the dashing streams 
Shall with the fountains fall. The trump shall send 
From heaven a very lamentable sound, 
315 Howling the loathsomeness of wretched men 
And the world's woes. And then the yawning earth 
Shall show Tartarean chaos. And all kings 
Shall come unto the judgement seat of God. 
And there shall out of heaven a stream of fire 
320 And brimstone flow. But for all mortals then 
Shall there a sign be, a distinguished seal, 
The Wood among believers, and the horn 
Fondly desired, the life of pious men, 
But it shall be stumbling block of the world, 
325 Giving illumination to the elect 
By water in twelve springs; and there shall rule 
A shepherding iron rod. This one who now 
Is in acrostics which give signs of God 
Thus written openly, the Saviour is, 
330 Immortal King, who suffered for our sake; 
    Him Moses typified when he stretched out 
Holy arms, conquering Amalek by faith, 
That the people might know him to be elect 
And honorable before his Father God, 
335 The rod of David and the very stone 
Which he indeed aid promise, and in which 
He that believes shall have eternal life. 
    For not in glory, but as mortal man 
Shall he come to creation, pitiable, 
340 Unhonored, without seemly form, to give 
Hope to the pitiable; and he will give 
Fair form to mortal flesh, and heavenly faith 
To those without faith, and he'll give fair form 
To the man who was fashioned from the first 
345 By the holy hands of God, and whom by guile 
The serpent led astray unto the fate 
Of death to go and knowledge to receive 
Of good and evil, so that leaving God 
He serves the ways of mortals. For at first 
350 Receiving him as fellow-counsellor 
From the beginning the Almighty said: 
"Let both of us, O Son, make mortal tribes-- 
Stamping them with the impress of our image; 
I now by my hands, and thou by the Word 
355 In after time shalt for our form provide 
That we may jointly cause it to arise." 
Keeping in mind this purpose he shall come 
To the creation, to a holy virgin 
Bringing the likeness antitypical, 
360 Baptizing with water by the elders' hands, 
And by the Word accomplishing all things, 
And healing every sickness. By his word 
He winds shall he make cease, and with his foot 
Shall calm the raging sea, walking thereon 
365 In peaceful faith. And from five loaves of bread 
And a fish of the sea live thousand men 
Shall he fill in the desert, and then taking 
All the remaining fragments for the hope 
Of peoples shall he fill twelve baskets full. 
370 And the souls of the blessed he shall call, 
And love the pitiable, who, being mocked, 
Beaten, and whipped, shall evil do for good 
Desiring poverty. He who perceives 
All things and sees all things and hears all things 
375 Shall search the heart and bare it to conviction; 
For of all things is he himself the ear 
And mind and sight, and Word that maketh forms 
To whom all things submit, and he preserves 
Them that are dead and every sickness heals. 
380 Into the hands of lawless men, at last, 
And faithless he shall come, and they will give 
To God rude buffetings with impure hands 
And poisonous spittle with polluted mouths. 
And he to whips will openly give then 
385 His holy back; [for he unto the world 
A holy virgin shall himself commit.] 
And silent he will be when buffeted 
Lest anyone should know whose son he is 
Or whence he came, that he may talk to the dead. 
390 And he shall also wear a crown of thorns; 
For of thorns is the crown an ornament 
Elect, eternal. They shall pierce his side 
With a reed that they may fulfill their law; 
For of reeds shaken by another spirit 
395 Were nourished inclinations of the soul, 
Of anger and revenge. But when these things 
Shall be accomplished, of the which I spoke, 
Then unto him shall every law be loosed 
Which from the first by the decrees of men 
400 Was given because of disobedient people. 
He'll spread his hands and measure all the world. 
But gall for food and vinegar to drink 
They gave him; this inhospitable board 
They'll show him. But the curtain of the temple 
405 Shall be asunder rent and in midday 
There shall be for three hours dark, monstrous night. 
For it was no more pointed out again 
How to serve secret temple and the law, 
Which had been covered with the world's displays, 
410 When the Eternal came himself on earth. 
And into Hades shall he come announcing 
Hope unto all the saints, the end of ages 
And the last day, and having fallen asleep 
The third day he shall end the lot of death; 
415 Then from the dead departing he shall come 
To light, the first to show forth to the elect 
Beginning of resurrection, and wash off 
By means of waters of immortal spring 
Their former wickedness, that, being born 
420 From above, they might be no more enslaved 
To the unlawful customs of the world. 
And first then openly unto his own 
Shall he as Lord in flesh be visible, 
As he before was, and in hands and feet 
425 Exhibit four marks fixed in his own limbs, 
Denoting east and west and south and north; 
For of the world so many royal powers 
Shall against our Exemplar consummate 
The deed so lawless and condemnable. 
430    Daughter of Zion, holy one, rejoice, 
Who hast suffered many things; thy king himself 
Mounted upon a foal is hastening on; 
Behold, meek he shall come, that he may lift 
Our slavish yoke, so grievous to be borne 
435 Lying upon our neck, and may annul 
Our godless laws and bonds compulsory. 
Know thou thy God himself, who is God's Son; 
Him glorify and hold within thy heart, 
From thy soul love him and extol his name. 
440 Put off thy former friends and wash thyself 
From their blood; for he is not by thy songs 
Nor by thy prayers appeased, nor does he give 
To perishable sacrifices heed, 
Being imperishable; but present 
445 The holy hymn of understanding mouths 
And know who this one is, and thou shalt then 
Behold the Father. . . . 
    .    .    .    .    .    .    . 
And then shall all the elements of the world 
Abide in solitude, air, earth, sea, light 
450 Of gleaming fire, and heavenly sky and night 
And all days into one shall run together 
And into outward form all-desolate. 
For from heaven shall the stars of light all fall. 
And there shall fly no longer in the air 
455 The well-winged birds, nor stepping be on earth; 
For wild beasts shall all perish. Nor shall be 
Voices of men, nor of beasts, nor of birds. 
The world shall hear no serviceable sound, 
Being disordered; but a mighty sound 
460 Of threatening shall the deep sea sound aloud, 
And swimming trembling creatures of the sea 
Shall all die; and no longer on the waves 
Shall sail the freighted ship. And earth shall groan 
Blood-stained by wars; and all the souls of men 
465 Shall gnash with their teeth, [of the lawless souls 
Both by loud crying and by fear,] dissolved 
By thirst, by famine, and by plague and murders, 
And they shall call death beautiful and death 
Shall flee away from them; for death no more 
470 Nor night shall give them rest. And many things 
Will they in vain ask God who rules on high, 
And then will he his face turn openly 
Away from them. For he to erring men 
Gave in seven ages for repentance signs 
475 By the hands of a virgin undefiled. 
    All these things in my mind God himself showed 
And all that have been spoken by my mouth 
Will he accomplish; and I know the number 
Of the sands and the measures of the sea, 
480 I know the inmost places of the earth 
And gloomy Tartarus, I know the numbers 
Of the stars, and the trees, and all the tribes 
Of quadrupeds, and of the swimming things 
And flying birds, and of men who are now 
485 And of those yet to be, and of the dead; 
For I myself the forms and mind of men 
Did fashion, and right reason did I give 
And knowledge taught; I who formed eyes and ears, 
Who see and hear and every thought discern, 
490 And who within am conscious of all things, 
I am still; and hereafter will convict 
[And punishing what any mortal did 
In secret, and upon God's judgment seat 
Coming and speaking unto mortal men]. 
495 I understand the dumb man and I hear 
Him that speaks not, and how great the whole height 
From earth to heaven is, and the beginning 
And end I know, who made the heaven and earth. 
[For all things have proceeded from him, things 
500 From the beginning to the end he knows.] 
For I alone am God and other God 
There is not. They my image formed of wood 
Treat as divine, and shaping it by hand 
They sing their praises over idols dumb 
505 With supplications and unholy rites. 
Forsaking the Creator they were slaves 
To lewdness. Men possessing everything 
Bestow their gifts on things which cannot aid, 
As if they for my honors deemed these things 
510 All useful, with the smell of sacrifice 
Filling the feast, as if for their own dead. 
For they flesh and bones full of marrow burn 
Offering on altars, and they pour out blood 
To demons, and they kindle lights to me 
515 The giver of light, and as to a god 
That thirsts do mortals drunken pour out wine 
For nought to idols that can give no aid. 
I have no need of your burnt offerings, 
Nor your libations, nor polluted smoke, 
520 Nor blood most hateful. For in memory 
Of kings and tyrants they will do these things 
Unto dead demons, as to heavenly beings, 
Performing service godless and destructive. 
And godless they their images call gods, 
525 Forsaking the Creator, having faith 
That from them they derive all hope and life, 
Deaf and dumb, in the evil putting trust, 
But they are wholly ignorant of good. 
Two ways did I myself before them set, 
530 Of life and of death, and before them set 
Judgment to choose good life; but they themselves 
Hastened to death and to eternal fire. 
Man is my image, having upright reason. 
For him a table pure and without blood 
535 Make ready and with good things fill it up, 
And give the hungry bread, the thirsty drink, 
And to the body that is naked clothes 
From thine own labors with unsullied hands 
Providing. Recreate the afflicted man, 
540 And help the weary, and provide for me 
The living One a living sacrifice 
Sowing piety, that also I to thee 
Sometime may give immortal fruits, and light 
Eternal thou shalt have and fadeless life 
545 When I shall prove all by fire. For all things 
I shall fuse and shall pick out what is pure, 
Heaven will I roll up and the depths of earth 
Lay open, and then will I raise the dead 
Making an end of fate and sting of death, 
550 And afterward for judgment will I come 
Judging the manner both of pious men 
And impious; I will set ram close to ram, 
Shepherd to shepherd, calf to calf, for test, 
Close to each other; whosoever were 
555 Exalted, proven by trial, and who stopped 
The mouth of every one, that they themselves 
Vieing with them that lead a holy life 
May likewise bring them into slavery, 
Enjoining silence, urged by love of gain, 
560 Not proved before me, then shall all withdraw. 
No longer henceforth shalt thou grieving say 
"Morrow shall be," nor "yesterday has been;" 
Not many days of care, nor spring, nor winter, 
Nor summer then, nor autumn, nor sunset 
565 Nor sunrise; for a long day I will make. 
And unto ages there shall be the light 
Longed for of the great . . . 
(Christ Jesus, of ages) . . . . 
    .    .    .    .    .    .    . 
    .    .    .    .    .    .    . 
    Thou who art self-begotten, undefiled, 
570 True and eternal, measuring by thy power 
From heaven the fiery blast, and with rough torch 
From clashing doth the scepter keep, and calm 
The crashings of the heavy-sounding thunders, 
And driving earth into confusion dost 
575 Hold back the rushing noises. . . . 
And the fire-blazing scourges thou dost blunt 
Of lightnings, and the vast outpour of storms 
And of autumnal hail, and chilling stroke 
Of clouds and shock of winter. For of these 
580 Each one indeed is marked out in thy mind, 
Whatever seems good to thyself to do 
Thy Son nods his assent to, having been 
Begotten in thy bosom before all 
Creation, fellow-counselor with thee, 
585 Former of mortals and creator of life. 
Him with the first sweet utterance of mouth 
Thou didst address: "Behold, let us make man 
In a form altogether like our own, 
And let us give him life-sustaining breath; 
590 Him being yet mortal all things of the world 
Shall serve, and unto him formed out of clay 
We will subject all things." And thou didst speak 
These things by word, and all things came to pass 
According to thy heart; and thy command 
595 Together all the elements obeyed, 
And an eternal creature was arranged 
In mortal figure, also heaven, air, fire, 
And earth and water of the sea, sun, moon, 
Chorus of stars, hills . . . 
600 Both night and day, sleeping and waking up, 
Spirit and passion, soul and understanding, 
Art, might and strength, and the wild tribes 
Of living things both swimming things and fowls, 
And of those walking, and amphibia, 
605 And those that creep and those of double nature; 
For acting in accord with his own will 
Under thy leading he arranged all things. 
But in the latest times the earth he passed, 
And coming late from the virgin Mary's womb 
610 A new light rose, and going forth from heaven 
Put on a mortal form. First then did Gabriel show 
His strong pure form; and bearing his own news 
He next addressed the maiden with his voice: 
"O virgin, in thy bosom undefiled 
615 Receive thou God." Thus speaking he inbreathed 
God's grace on the sweet maiden; and straightway 
Alarm and wonder seized her as she heard, 
And she stood trembling; and her mind was wild 
With flutter of excitement while at heart 
620 She quivered at the unlooked-for things she heard. 
But she again was gladdened and her heart 
Was cheered by the voice, and the maiden laughed 
And her cheek reddened with a sense of joy, 
And spell-bound was her heart with sense of shame. 
625 And confidence came to her. And the Word 
Flew into the womb, and in course of time 
Having become flesh and endued with life 
Was made a human form and came to be 
A boy distinguished by his virgin birth; 
630 For this was a great wonder to mankind, 
But it was no great wonder unto God 
The Father, nor was it to God the Son. 
And the glad earth received the new born babe, 
The heavenly throne laughed and the world rejoiced. 
635 And the prophetic new-appearing star 
'Was honored by the wise men, and the babe 
Born was shown in a manger unto them 
That obeyed God, and keepers of the herds, 
And goatherds and to shepherds of the lambs; 
640 And Bethlehem called by God the fatherland 
Of the Word was chosen. . . . 
    .    .    .    .    .    .    . 
    .    .    .    .    .    .    . 
And in heart practice lowliness of mind 
And cruel deeds hate, and thy neighbor love 
Wholly, even as thyself; and from thy soul 
645 Love God and do him service. Therefore we 
Sprung from the holy race of the heavenly Christ 
Are called of common blood, and we restrain 
In worship recollection of good cheer, 
And walk the paths of piety and truth. 
650 Not ever are we suffered to approach 
The inmost sanctuary of the temples, 
Nor pour libations to carved images, 
Nor honor them with prayers, nor with the smells 
Much-pleasing of flowers, nor with light of lamps, 
655 Nor yet with shining votive offerings 
Adorn them, nor with smoke of frankincense 
That sends forth flame of altars; nor do thou, 
Adding unto the sacrifice of bulls 
And taking pleasure in defilement send 
660 Blood of sheep-slaughtering outrage, thus to give 
Ransom for penalty beneath the earth; 
Nor by the smoke of flesh-consuming pyre 
And odors foul pollute the light of heaven; 
But joyful with pure minds and cheerful soul, 
665 With love abounding and with generous hands, 
With soothing psalms and songs that honor God, 
We are commanded to sing praise to thee, 
The imperishable and without deceit, 
All-father God, of understanding mind, 
    .    .    .    .    .    .    .