Nothing, thou elder
brother even to shade,
That hadst a being
ere the world was made,
And (well fixed)
art alone of ending not afraid.
Ere time and place
were, time and place were not,
When primitive
Nothing Something straight begot,
Then all proceeded
from the great united--What?
Something, the general
attribute of all,
Severed from thee,
its sole original,
Into thy boundless
self must undistinguished fall.
Yet Something did
thy mighty power command,
And from thy fruitful
emptiness's hand,
Snatched men, beasts,
birds, fire, air, and land.
Matter, the wickedest
offspring of thy race,
By Form assisted,
flew from thy embrace,
And rebel Light
obscured thy reverend dusky face.
With Form and Matter,
Time and Place did join,
Body, thy foe,
with these did leagues combine
To spoil thy peaceful
realm, and ruin all thy line.
But turncoat Time
assists the foe in vain,
And, bribed by
thee, assists thy short-lived reign,
And to thy hungry
womb drives back thy slaves again.
Though mysteries
are barred from laic eyes,
And the Divine
alone with warrant pries
Into thy bosom,
where thy truth in private lies,
Yet this of thee
the wise may freely say,
Thou from the virtuous
nothing takest away,
And to be part
of thee the wicked wisely pray.
Great Negative,
how vainly would the wise
Inquire, define,
distinguish, teach, devise?
Didst thou not
stand to point their dull philosophies.
Is, or is not, the
two great ends of Fate,
And true or false,
the subject of debate,
That perfects,
or destroys, the vast designs of Fate,
When they have racked
the politician's breast,
Within thy bosom
most securely rest,
And, when reduced
to thee, are least unsafe and best.
But Nothing, why
does Something still permit
That sacred monarchs
should at council sit
With persons highly
thought at best for nothing fit?
While weighty Something
modestly abstains
From princes' coffers,
and from statesmen's brains,
And Nothing there
like stately Nothing reigns,
Nothing, who dwellest
with fools in grave disguise,
For whom they reverend
shapes and forms devise,
Lawn sleeves, and
furs, and gowns, when they like thee look wise.
French truth, Dutch
prowess, British policy,
Hibernian learning,
Scotch civility,
Spaniard's dispatch,
Dane's wit are mainly seen in thee.
The great man's
gratitude to his best friend,
King's promises,
whore's vows, towards thee they bend,
Flow swiftly to
thee, and in thee never end.
John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester