on me, in vain the iron hoof of the wrathful steed!
The mine, big with destructive power, burst upon me,
and hurled me high in the air—I fell on
heaps of smoking limbs, but was only singed. The
giant’s steel club rebounded from my body; the
executioner’s hand could not strangle me, the
tiger’s tooth could not pierce me, nor would
the hungry lion in the circus devour me. I cohabited
with poisonous snakes, and pinched the red crest of
the dragon.—The serpent stung, but could
not destroy me. The dragon tormented, but dared
not to devour me.—I now provoked the fury
of tyrants: I said to Nero, ‘Thou art a
bloodhound!’ I said to Christiern, ’Thou
art a bloodhound!, I said to Muley Ismail, ’Thou
art a bloodhound!’—The tyrants invented
cruel torments, but did not kill me. Ha! not
to be able to die—not to be able to die—not
to be permitted to rest after the toils of life—to
be doomed to be imprisoned for ever in the clay-formed
dungeon—to be for ever clogged with this
worthless body, its lead of diseases and infirmities—to
be condemned to [be]hold for millenniums that yawning
monster Sameness, and Time, that hungry hyaena, ever
bearing children, and ever devouring again her offspring!—Ha!
not to be permitted to die! Awful Avenger in Heaven,
hast Thou in Thine armoury of wrath a punishment more
dreadful? then let it thunder upon me, command a hurricane
to sweep me down to the foot of Carmel, that I there
may lie extended; may pant, and writhe, and die.!"’
This fragment is the translation of part of some German
work, whose title I have vainly endeavoured to discover.
I picked it up, dirty and torn, some years ago, in
Lincoln’s-Inn Fields.
7. 135, 136:—
I will beget a Son, and He shall bear
The sins of all the world.
A book is put into our hands when children, called
the Bible, the purport of whose history is briefly
this: That God made the earth in six days, and
there planted a delightful garden, in which He placed
the first pair of human beings. In the midst
of the garden He planted a tree, whose fruit, although
within their reach, they were forbidden to touch.
That the Devil, in the shape of a snake, persuaded
them to eat of this fruit; in consequence of which
God condemned both them and their posterity yet unborn
to satisfy His justice by their eternal misery.
That, four thousand years after these events (the human
race in the meanwhile having gone unredeemed to perdition),
God engendered with the betrothed wife of a carpenter
in Judea (whose virginity was nevertheless uninjured),
and begat a son, whose name was Jesus Christ; and who
was crucified and died, in order that no more men
might be devoted to hell-fire, He bearing the burthen
of His Father’s displeasure by proxy. The
book states, in addition, that the soul of whoever
disbelieves this sacrifice will be burned with everlasting
fire.