Page:The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley (Volume 2).djvu/93

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eusebes and theosophus.
79

tion to that faith which every good man must eternally preserve, how little I am inclined to sympathize[1] with those of my religion who have pretended to prove the existence of God by the unassisted light of reason. I confess that the necessity of a revelation has been compromised by treacherous friends to Christianity, who have maintained that the sublime mysteries of the being of a God and the immortality of the soul are discoverable from other sources than itself.

I have proved, that on the principles of that philosophy to which Epicurus,[2] Lord Bacon, Newton, Locke and Hume were addicted, the existence of God is a chimera.

The Christian Religion then, alone, affords indisputable assurance that the world was created by the power, and is preserved by the Providence of an Almighty God, who, in justice has appointed a future life for the punishment of the vicious and the remuneration of the virtuous.

Now, O Theosophus, I call upon you to decide between Atheism and Christianity; to declare whether you will pursue your principles to the destruction of the bonds of civilized society, or wear the easy yoke of that Religion which proclaims "peace upon earth, good-will to all men."

THEOSOPHUS.

I am not prepared at present, I confess, to reply clearly to your unexpected arguments. I assure you that no

  1. In the original, sympathise, contrary to Shelley's practice.
  2. So in the Errata; but Epiphanes in the text.