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Chapter 1 |
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Cleanthes of Assos
(331-233 B.C.) |
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Real founder of Stoic theology, core philosophy of Ancient Rome. |
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1. |
Most glorious of immortals, Zeus
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2. |
The many named, almighty evermore,
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3. |
Nature's great Sovereign, ruling all by law
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4. |
Hail to thee! On thee 'tis meet and right
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5. |
That mortals everywhere should call.
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6. |
From thee was our begetting; ours alone
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7. |
Of all that live and move upon the earth
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8. |
The lot to bear God's likeness.
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9. |
Thee will I ever chant, thy power praise!
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10. |
For thee this whole vast cosmos, wheeling round
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11. |
The earth, obeys, and where thou leadest
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12. |
It follows, ruled willingly by thee.
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13. |
In thy unconquerable hands thou holdest fast,
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14. |
Ready prepared, that two-timed flaming blast,
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15. |
The ever-living thunderbolt:
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Nature's own stroke brings all things to their end.
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By it thou guidest aright the sense instinct
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18. |
Which spreads through all things, mingled even
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19. |
With stars in heaven, the great and small-
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20. |
Thou who art King supreme for evermore!
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21. |
Naught upon earth is wrought in thy despite, 0 God.
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Nor in the ethereal sphere aloft which ever winds
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23. |
About its pole, nor in the sea-save only what
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24. |
The wicked work, in their strange madness,
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Yet even so, thou knowest to make the crooked straight.
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Prune all excess, give order to the orderless,
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For unto thee the unloved still is lovely-
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28. |
And thus in one all things are harmonized,
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29. |
The evil with the good, that so one Word
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Should be in all things everlastingly.
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31. |
One Word-which evermore the wicked flee!
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32. |
Ill-fated, hungering to possess the good
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33. |
They have no vision of God's universal law,
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34. |
Nor will they hear, though if obedient in mind
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They might obtain a noble life, true wealth.
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Instead they rush unthinking after ill:
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Some with a shameless zeal for fame,
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Others pursuing gain, disorderly;
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39. |
Still others folly, or pleasures of the flesh.
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40. |
[But evils are their lot] and other times
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41. |
Bring other harvests, all unsought-
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42. |
For all their great desire, its opposite!
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But, Zeus, thou giver of every gift,
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44. |
Who dwellest within the dark clouds, wielding still
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45. |
The flashing stroke of lightning, save, we pray,
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46. |
Thy children from this boundless misery.
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47. |
Scatter, 0 Father, the darkness from their souls,
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48. |
Grant them to find true understanding
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49. |
On which relying thou justly rulest all-
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50. |
While we, thus honoured, in turn will honour thee,
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51. |
Hymning thy works forever, as is meet
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52. |
For mortals while no greater right
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53. |
Belongs even to the gods than evermore
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54. |
Justly to praise the universal law!
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