Written on July 1769. Similar to “An Address to the Atheist” written in 1767, Wheatley urges atheist to believe in god who created the universe.
Where now shall I begin this Spacious field
 To tell what curses unbelief both yield
 Thou that dost daily feel his hand and rod—
 And dare deny the essence of a God
 If there’s no heaven whither will thou go?
 Make thy Elysium in the shades below
 If there’s no God from Whence Did all thing spring
 He made the greatest and minutest thing
 With great astonishment my Soul is struck
 O rashness great; hast thou thy sense forsook
 Hast thou forgot the preterperfect days
 They are recorded in the book of praise
 If it was not written by the hand of God
 Why was it sealed with Immanuels blood
 Tho’ tis a second point thou dost deny.
 Unmeasur’d vengeance scarlet sins do cry
 Now turn I pray thee from the dangerous road
 Rise from the dust and seek the mighty God
 By whose great mercy we do move and live
 Whose loving kindness doth our sins forgive
 “Tis Beelzebub our adversary great
 With holds from us the kingdom and the seal
 Bliss weeping waits us in her arms to fly
 To the vast regions of Felicity—
 Perhaps thy Ignorance will ask us where
 Go to the corner stone, it will declare
 Thy heart in unbelief will harder grow
 Methinks I see the consequence thou’rt blind
 Thy unbelief disturbs the peaceful mind
 The endless Scene too far for me to tread
 Too great, to accomplish from so weak a head
 If men such wise inventions then should know
 In the high Firmament who made the bow
 That covenant was mad for the ensure
 Made to establish lasting to endure
 Who made the heavens and earth? A lasting spring
 Of Admiration; to whom dost thou bring
 Thy thanks and tribute, adoration pay
 To heathens Gods? Can wise Apollo say
 Tis I that saves from the lowest Hell
 Minerva teach thee all thy days to tell
 Doth Pluto tell thee thou shalt see the shade
 Of fell perdition for thy learning made
 Doth Cupid in they breast that warmth inspire
 To love thy brother, which is gods desire
 Look thou above and see who mad the sky—
 Nothing more lucid to an atheists ey
 Look thou beneath and see each purling stream
 It surely cannot a delusion seem
 Mark rising Pheobus when he spreads his ray
 And his Commission for to guide the day
 At night keep watch and see a Cynthia bright
 And her commission for to guide the night—
 See how the stars when they do sing his praise
 Witness his essence in celestial Lays.


