Analysis of Preface to God's Determinations Touching His Elect

Edward Taylor 1642 (Coventry) – 1729



Infinity, when all things it beheld
In Nothing, and of Nothing all did build,
Upon what base was fixed the lath wherein
He turned this globe and rigalled it so trim?
Who blew the bellows of His furnace vast?
Or held the mold wherein the world was cast?
Who laid its cornerstone? Or whose command?
Where stand the pillars upon which it stands?
Who laced and filleted the earth so fine,
With rivers like green ribbons smaragdine?
Who made the seas its selvedge and it locks
Like a quilt ball within a silver box?
Who spread its canopy? Or curtains spun?
Who in this bowling alley bowled the sun?
Who made it always when it rises set,
To go at once both down, and up to get?
Who the curtain rods made for this tapestry?
Who hung the twinkling lanterns in the sky?
Who? Who did this? Or who is He? Why, know
It's only Might Almighty this did do.
His hand hath made this noble work which stands,
His glorious handiwork not made by hands.
Who spake all things from nothing; and with ease.
Can speak all things to nothing, if He please.
Whose little finger at His pleasure can
Out mete ten thousand worlds with half a span:
Whose Might Almighty can by half a looks
Root up the rocks and rock the hills by the roots.
Can take this mighty world up in His hand,
And shake it like a squitchen or a wand.
Whose single frown will make the heavens shake
Like as an aspen-leaf the wind makes quake.
Oh, what a might is this Whose single frown
Doth shake the world as it would shake it down?
Which All on Nothing fet, from Nothing, All:
Hath All on Nothing set, lts Nothing fall.
Gave All to nothing-man indeed, whereby
Through nothing-man all might him glorify.
In Nothing then embossed the brightest gem
More precious than all preciousness in them.
But nothing-man did throw down all by sin:
And darkened that lightsome gem in him.
That now his brightest diamond is grown
Darker by far than any coal-pit stone.


Scheme AABCAAADEBFFGGAAHIJADDKKLLMNAAOOPPQQIIRRBCSS
Poetic Form
Metre 010011111 0100110111 0111110101 111101111 1101011101 1101010111 111101101 1101001111 1101000111 11011101 110111011 1011010101 1111001101 1011010101 111111101 1111110111 10101111100 11010010001 1111111111 1101010111 1111110111 1100101111 1111110011 1111110111 1101011101 1111011101 1101011101 11010101101 1111011011 011101101 1101110101 1111010111 1101111101 1101111111 1111011101 1111011101 1111010101 110111110 0101010101 11011101 1101111111 01011101 111101011 1011110111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 1,861
Words 355
Sentences 31
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 44
Lines Amount 44
Letters per line (avg) 34
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,489
Words per stanza (avg) 353
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 20, 2023

1:46 min read
191

Edward Taylor

Edward Taylor was an English singer, writer on music, and Gresham Professor of Music from 1837. more…

All Edward Taylor poems | Edward Taylor Books

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    The long poem “The Waste Land” was written by which poet?
    A C. S Lewis
    B W. H. Auden
    C T. S. Eliot
    D Emma Lazarus