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     From "Poetical Sketches"
       " "

     1. Song
     1. .  . . 
      . . 
     2.  Spring
     2.  .  . . 
     3.  Summer
     3.  .  . . 
     4.  Autumn
     4.  .  . . 
     5.  Winter
     5.  .  . . 
     6. Mad Song
     6.  .  . . 
     7.  the Muses
     7.  .  . . 
     8. Blind Man's Buff
     8.   .  . . 
     9. Gwin, King of Norway
     9.  . .  . . 
     10. From "King Edward the Third"
     10.  .  . 

     From "An Island in the Moon"
       "  "

     11. To be or not to be
     11.    ,   ...  . . 
     12. Leave,  leave me to my sorrows
     12.   ...  . . 

     Songs of Innocence and of Experience Shewing the Two Contrary States of
the Human Soul
        ,     
 

     Songs of Innocence
      

     13. Introduction
     13. .  . . 
      . . 
     14. The Shepherd
     14. .  . . 
     15. The Echoing Green
     15.  ay.  . . 
      . . 
     16. The Lamb
     16* .  . . 
      . . 
     17. The Little Black Boy
     17. .  . . 
      . . 
     18. The Blossom
     18. .  . . 
     19. The Chimney Sweeper
     19/  .  . . 
      . . 
     20. The Little Boy Lost
     20.*  .  . . 
      . . 
     21. The Little Boy Found
     21.*  .  . . 
      . . 
     22. Laughing Song
     22.  .  . . 
     23. A Cradle Song
     23.  .  . . 
     24. The Divine Image
     24.    .  . . 
     25. Holy Thursday
     25.  .  . . 
      . . 
     26. Night
     26. .  . . 
     *  . . 
     27. Spring
     27. .  . . 
     28. Nurse's Song
     28.  .  . . 
     29. Infant Joy
     29. -.  . . 
     30. A Dream
     30. .  . . 
     31. On Another's Sorrow
     31.   .  . . 

     Songs of Experience
      

     32. Introduction
     32. .  . . 
     33. Earth's Answer
     33.  .  . . 
     34. The Clod and the Pebble
     34.    .  . . 
     35. Holy Thursday
     35.*  .  . . 
      . . 
     36. The Little Girl Lost
     36.  .  . . 
     37. The Little Girl Found
     37.  .  . . 
     38. The Chimney Sweeper
     38.  .  . . 
     39. Nurse's Song
     39.  .  . . 
     40. The Sick' Rose
     40.  .  . . 
      . . 
     41. The Fly
     41.* .  . . 
      . . 
     42. The Angel
     42. .  . . 
     43. The Tyger
     43. .  . . 
      . . 
      . . 
     44. My Pretty Rose-Tree
     44.   .  . . 
     45. Ah! Sun-flower! weary of time
     45. ! !   ...  . .  .
     46. The Lily
     46. .  . . 
      . . 
      . . 
     47. The Garden of Love
     47.*  .  . . 
      . . 
     48. The Little Vagabond
     48.  .  . . 
     *  . . 
     49. London
     49. .  . . 
     *  . . 
     50. The Human Abstract
     50.  .  . . 
     51. Infant Sorrow
     51. -.  . . 
     52. A Poison Tree
     52.  .  . . 
     53. A Little Boy Lost
     53.  .  . . 
     54. A Little Girl Lost
     54.  .  . . 
     55.  Tirzah
     55.  .  . . 
     56. The Schoolboy
     56. .  . . 
     57. The Voice of the Ancient Bard
     57.   .  . . 

     From "The Rossetti Manuscript"
      " "

                                 (1789-1793)

     58. Never seek to tell thy love
     58.   ...  . . 
     *  . . 
     59. I saw a Chapel all of gold
     59.*    
      . . 
      . . 
     60. I asked a thief to steal me a peach
     60.     ...  . . 
     61. I heard an Angel singing
     61.    ...  . . 
     62. A Cradle Song
     62.* .  . . 
     63. I fear'd the fury of my wind
     63.  :   ...  . . 
     64. Infant Sorrow
     64. -.  . . 
     65. Thou hast a lap full of seed
     65.     ...  . . 
     66. In a Mirtle Shade
     66.   .  . . 
     67.  Nobodaddy
     67.* ,   .  . . 
      . . 
     68. The Wild Flower's Song
     68.   .  . . 
     69.  lapwing! thou fliest around the heath
     69.  !    ...  . . 
     70. Soft Snow
     70.  .  . . 
     71. Merlin's Prophecy
     71.  .  . . 
     72. Day
     72. .  . . 
     73. Why should I care for the men of Thames
     73.   .  . . 
     74. Abstinence sows sand all over
     74.     ...  . . 
     75. If you trap the moment before it's ripe
     75.      ...  . . 
     76.  who bends to himself a Joy
     76.  .  . . 
     77. Riches
     77. .  . . 
     78. An Answer to the Parson
     78.     .  . . 
     79. Soft deceit & idleness
     79.    ...  . . 
     80. Let the Brothels of Paris be opened
     80.  ,  !..  . . 

                                 (1800-1803)

     81. My Spectre around me night and day
     81.*   .  . . 
      . . 
     82. When Klopstock England defied
     82.*     ...  . . 
     83. Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau
     83. , ! , !..  . . 
     84. When a man has married a wife
     84.   ...  . . 
     85. On the Virginity of the Virgin Mary and Johanna Southcott
     85.           .    .  .

     86. Morning
     86. .  . . 
     87. Now Art has lost its mental charms
     87.*   ...  . . 

                                 (1808-1811)

     88.  F[laxman]
     88.  .  . . 
     89. Here lies John Trot, the friend of all mankind
     89.     ,  ...  . . 
     90. I was buried near this dyke
     90. .  . . 
     91. My title as a genius thus is prov'd
     91.   ,       ...    .  .

     92. Grown old in Love
     92.     ...  . . 
     93. All pictures that's panted with sense and with thought
     93.      ...  . . 
     94. Why was Cupid a boy
     94. .  . . 
     95. I asked my dear friend Orator Prig
     95.   ?..  . . 
     96. Having given great offence by writing in prose
     96.     .  . . 
     97. Some people admire the work of a fool
     97.      ...  . . 
     98. Since all the riches of this world
     98.  .  . . 
     99. I rose up at the dawn of day
     99.  ,   ...  . . 

     The Pickering Manuscript
      

                                 (1800-1803)

     100. The Smile
     100. .  . . 
     *  . . 
     101. The Golden Net
     101.  .  . . 
     102. The Mental Traveller
     102. .  . . 
     103. The Land of Dreams
     103.  .  . . 
     104. Mary
     104. .  . . 
     105. The Crystal Cabinet
     105.*  .  . . 
      . . 
     106. The Grey Monk
     106.  .  . . 
     107. Auguries of Innocence
     107.*  .  . . 
     108. Long John Brown and Little Mary Bell
     108.       .  . . 
     109. William Bond
     109.  .  . . 

     The Book of Thel
      .  . . 

     The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
        .  . . 

     Visions of the Daughters of Albion
       .  . . 

     The French Revolution
     *  .  . . 

     America
     * .  . . 

     Europe
     * .  . . 

     From "Milton
       "".  . . 

     
         


                               Selected verse
                                   


                        " "



                   How sweet I roam'd from field to field
                   And tasted all the summer's pride,
                   Till I the Prince of Love beheld
                   Who in the sunny beams did glide!

                   He show'd me lilies for my hair,
                   And blushing roses for my brow;
                   He led me through his gardens fair
                   Where all his golden pleasures grow.

                   With sweet May dews my wings were wet,
                   And Phoebus fir'd my vocal rage;
                   He caught me in his silken net,
                   And shut me in his golden cage.

                   He loves to sit and hear me sing,
                   Then, laughing, sports and plays with me -
                   Then stretches out my golden wing,
                   And mocks my loss of liberty.



                            ,
                              ,
                           
                            .

                             ,
                          ,
                            ,
                            .

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                             ,
                          .

                             .
                            ,
                           
                           .

                         . . 




                 thou with dewy locks, who lookest down
                Thro' the clear windows of the morning, turn
                Thine angel eyes upon our western isle,
                Which in full choir hails thy approach,  Spring!

                The hills tell each other, and the list'ning
                Valleys hear; all our longing eyes are turned
                Up to thy bright pavilions: issue forth,
                And let thy holy feet visit our clime.

                Come o'er the eastern hills, and let our winds
                Kiss thy perfumed garments; let us taste
                Thy morn and evening breath; scatter thy pearls
                Upon our love-sick land that mourns for thee.

                 deck her forth with thy fair fingers; pour
                Thy soft kisses on her bosom; and put
                Thy golden crown upon her languish'd head,
                Whose modest tresses were bound up for thee.



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                     . . 




                 thou who passest thro' our valleys in
                Thy strength, curb thy fierce steeds, allay the heat
                That flames from their large nostrils! thou,  Summer,
                Oft pitched'st here thy golden tent, and oft
                Beneath our oaks hast slept, while we beheld
                With joy thy ruddy limbs and flourishing hair.

                Beneath our thickest shades we oft have heard
                Thy voice, when noon upon his fervid car
                Rode o'er the deep of heaven; beside our springs
                Sit down, and in our mossy valleys, on
                Some bank beside a river clear, throw thy
                Silk draperies off, and rush into the stream:
                Our valleys love the Summer in his pride.

                Our bards are fam'd who strike the silver wire:
                Our youth are bolder than the southern swains:
                Our maidens fairer in the sprightly dance:
                We lack not songs, nor instruments of joy,
                Nor echoes sweet, nor waters clear as heaven,
                Nor laurel wreaths against the sultry heat.



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                      . . 




                Autumn, laden with fruit, and stained
               With the blood of the grape, pass not, but sit
               Beneath my shady roof; there thou may'st rest,
               And tune thy jolly voice to my fresh pipe,
               And all the daughters of the year shall dance!
               Sing now the lusty song of fruits and flowers.

               'The narrow bud opens her beauties to
               The sun, and love runs in her thrilling veins;
               Blossoms hang round the brows of Morning, and
               Flourish down the bright cheek of modest Eve,
               Till clust'ring Summer breaks forth into singing,
               And feather'd clouds strew flowers round her head.

               "The spirits of the air live on the smells
               Of fruit; and Joy, with pinions light, roves round
               The gardens, or sits singing in the trees.'
               Thus sang the jolly Autumn as he sat;
               Then rose, girded himself, and o'er the bleak
               Hills fled from our sight; but left his golden load.



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                 ' Winter! bar thine adamantine doors:
                 The north is thine; there hast thou built thy dark
                 Deep-founded habitation. Shake not thy roofs,
                 Nor bend thy pillars with thine iron car.'

                 He hears me not, but o'er the yawning deep
                 Rides heavy; his storms are unchain'd, sheathed
                 In ribbed steel; I dare not lift mine eyes,
                 For he hath rear'd his sceptre o'er the world.

                 Lo! now the direful monster, whose skin clings
                 To his strong bones, strides o'er the groaning rocks:
                 He withers all in silence, and in his hand
                 Unclothes the earth, and freezes up frail life.

                 He takes his seat upon the cliffs, - the mariner
                 Cries in vain. Poor little wretch, that deal'st
                 With storms! - till heaven smiles, and the monster
                 Is driv'n yelling to his caves beneath mount Hecla.



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                        . . 




                          The wild winds weep,
                          And the night is a-cold;
                          Come hither, Sleep,
                          And my griefs unfold:
                          But lo! the morning peeps
                          Over the eastern steeps,
                          And the rustling beds of dawn
                          The earth do scorn.

                          Lo! to the vault
                          Of paved heaven,
                          With sorrow fraught
                          My notes are driven:
                          They strike the ear of night,
                          Make weep the eyes of day;
                          They make mad the roaring winds,
                          And with tempests play.

                          Like a fiend in a cloud,
                          With howling woe
                          After night I do crowd,
                          And with night will go;
                          I turn my back to the east
                          From whence comforts have increas'd;
                          For light doth seize my brain
                          With frantic pain.



                             ,
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                            . . 




                      Whether on Ida's shady brow,
                      Or in the chambers of the East,
                      The chambers of the sun, that now
                      From ancient melody have ceas'd;

                      Whether in Heaven ye wander fair,
                      Or the green corners of the earth,
                      Or the blue regions of the air
                      Where the melodious winds have birth;

                      Whether on crystal rocks ye rove,
                      Beneath the bosom of the sea
                      Wand'ring in many a coral grove,
                      Fair Nine, forsaking Poetry!

                      How have you left the ancient love
                      That bards of old enjoy'd in you!
                      The languid strings do scarcely move!
                      The sound is forc'd, the notes are few!



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                         . . 


                            8. BLIND MAN'S BUFF

                  When silver snow decks Susan's clothes,
                  And jewel hangs at th' shepherd's nose,
                  The blushing bank is all my care,
                  With hearth so red, and walls so fair;
                  'Heap the sea-coal, come, heap it higher,
                  The oaken log lay on the fire.'

                  The well-wash'd stools, a circling row,
                  With lad and lass, how fair the show!

                  The merry can of nut-brown ale,
                  The laughing jest, the love-sick tale,
                  Till, tir'd of chat, the game begins.

                  The lasses prick the lads with pins;
                  Roger from Dolly twitch'd the stool,
                  She, falling, kiss'd the ground, poor fool!

                  She blush'd so red, with side-long glance
                  At hob-nail Dick, who griev'd the chance.

                  But now for Blind man's Buff they call;
                  Of each encumbrance clear the hall -
                  Jenny her silken 'kerchief folds,
                  And blear-eyed Will the black lot holds.

                  Now laughing stops, with 'Silence! hush!'
                  And Peggy Pout gives Sam a push.

                  The Blind man's arms, extended wide,
                  Sam slips between: - 'O woe betide
                  Thee, clumsy Will!' - But titt'ring Kate
                  Is penn'd up in the corner straight!

                  And now Will's eyes beheld the play;
                  He thought his face was t'other way.

                  'Now, Kitty, now! what chance hast thou,
                  Roger so near thee! - Trips, I vow!'

                  She catches him - then Roger ties
                  His own head up - but not his eyes;
                  For thro' the slender cloth he sees,
                  And runs at Sam, who slips with ease
                  His clumsy hold; and, dodging round,
                  Sukey is tumbled on the ground! -
                  'See what it is to play unfair!

                  Where cheating is, there's mischief there.'
                  But Roger still pursues the chase,-
                  'He sees! he sees!' cries, softly, Grace;
                  'O Roger, thou, unskill'd in art,
                  Must, surer bound, go thro' thy part!

                  Now Kitty, pert, repeats the rimes,
                  And Roger turns him round three times,
                  Then pauses ere he starts-but Dick
                  Was mischief bent upon a trick;
                  Down on his hands and knees he lay
                  Directly in the Blind man's way,
                  Then cries out 'Hem!' Hodge heard, and ran
                  With hood-wink'd chance - sure of his man;
                  But down he came. - Alas, how frail
                  Our best of hopes, how soon they fail!

                  With crimson drops he stains the ground;
                  Confusion startles all around.

                  Poor piteous Dick supports his head,
                  And fain would cure the hurt he made;
                  But Kitty hasted with a key,
                  And down his back they straight convey
                  The cold relief; the blood is stay'd
                  And Hodge again holds up his head.
                  Such are the fortunes of the game,
                  And those who play should stop the same
                  By wholesome laws; such as all those
                  Who on the blinded man impose
                  Stand in his stead; as, long a-gone,
                  When men were first a nation grown,
                  Lawless they liv'd, till wantonness
                  And liberty began t' increase,
                  And one man lay in another's way:
                  Then laws were made to keep fair play.




                             
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                         . . 




                    Come, kings, and listen to my song:
                    When Gwin, the son of Nore,
                    Over the nations of the North
                    His cruel sceptre bore;

                    The nobles of the land did feed
                    Upon the hungry poor;
                    They tear the poor man's lamb, and drive
                    The needy from their door.

                    'The land is desolate; our wives
                    And children cry for bread;
                    Arise, and pull the tyrant down!
                    Let Gwin be humbled!'

                    Gordred the giant rous'd himself
                    From sleeping in his cave;
                    He shook the hills, and in the clouds
                    The troubl'd banners wave.

                    Beneath them roll'd, like tempests black,
                    The num'rous sons of blood;
                    Like lions' whelps, roaring abroad,
                    Seeking their nightly food.

                    Down Bleron's hills they dreadful rush,
                    Their cry ascends the clouds;
                    The trampling horse and clanging arms
                    Like rushing mighty floods!

                    Their wives and children, weeping loud,
                    Follow in wild array,
                    Howling like ghosts, furious as wolves
                    In the bleak wintry day.

                    'Pull down the tyrant to the dust,
                    Let Gwin be humbled,'
                    They cry, 'and let ten thousand lives
                    Pay for the tyrant's head.'

                    From tow'r to tow'r the watchmen cry,
                    'O Gwin, the son of Nore,
                    Arouse thyself! the nations, black
                    Like clouds, come rolling o'er!'

                    Gwin rear'd his shield, his palace shakes,
                    His chiefs come rushing round;
                    Each, like an awful thunder cloud,
                    With voice of solemn sound:

                    Like reared stones around a grave
                    They stand around the King!
                    Then suddenly each seiz'd his spear,
                    And clashing steel does ring.

                    The husbandman does leave his plough
                    To wade thro' fields of gore;
                    The merchant binds his brows in steel,
                    And leaves the trading shore;

                    The shepherd leaves his mellow pipe,
                    And sounds the trumpet shrill;
                    The workman throws his hammer down
                    To heave the bloody bill.

                    Like the tall ghost of Barraton
                    Who sports in stormy sky,
                    Gwin leads his host, as black as night
                    When pestilence does fly,

                    With horses and with chariots -
                    And all his spearmen bold
                    March to the sound of mournful song,
                    Like clouds around him roll'd.

                    Gwin lifts his hand-the nations halt,
                    'Prepare for war!' he cries -
                    Gordred appears! - his frowning brow
                    Troubles our northern skies.

                    The armies stand, like balances
                    Held in th' Almighty's hand; -
                    'Gwin, thou hast fill'd thy measure up:
                    Thou'rt swept from out the land.'

                    And now the raging armies rush'd
                    Like warring mighty seas;
                    The heav'ns are shook with roaring war,
                    The dust ascends the skies!

                    Earth smokes with blood, and groans and shakes
                    To drink her children's gore,
                    A sea of blood; nor can the eye
                    See to the trembling shore!

                    And on the verge of this wild sea
                    Famine and death doth cry;
                    The cries of women and of babes
                    Over the field doth fly.

                    The King is seen raging afar,
                    With all his men of might;
                    Like blazing comets scattering death
                    Thro' the red fev'rous night.

                    Beneath his arm like sheep they die,
                    And groan upon the plain;
                    The battle faints, and bloody men
                    Fight upon hills of slain.

                    Now death is sick, and riven men
                    Labour and toil for life;
                    Steed rolls on steed, and shield on shield,
                    Sunk in this sea of strife!

                    The god of war is drunk with blood;
                    The earth doth faint and fail;
                    The stench of blood makes sick the heav'ns;
                    Ghosts glut the throat of hell!

                     what have kings to answer for
                    Before that awful throne;
                    When thousand deaths for vengeance cry,
                    And ghosts accusing groan!

                    Like blazing comets in the sky
                    That shake the stars of light,
                    Which drop like fruit unto the earth
                    Thro' the fierce burning night;

                    Like these did Gwin and Gordred meet,
                    And the first blow decides;
                    Down from the brow unto the breast
                    Gordred his head divides!

                    Gwin fell: the sons of Norway fled,
                    All that remain'd alive;
                    The rest did fill the vale of death,
                    For them the eagles strive.

                    The river Dorman roll'd their blood
                    Into the northern sea;
                    Who mourn'd his sons, and overwhelm'd
                    The pleasant south country.




                                  

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                           . . 




                 sons of Trojan Brutus, cloth'd in war,
                Whose voices are the thunder of the field,
                Rolling dark clouds o'er France, muffling the sun
                In sickly darkness like a dim eclipse,
                Threatening as the red brow of storms, as fire
                Burning up nations in your wrath and fury!

                Your ancestors came from the fires of Troy,
                (Like lions rous'd by light'ning from their dens,
                Whose eyes do glare against the stormy fires),
                Heated with war, fill'd with the blood of Greeks,
                With helmets hewn, and shields covered with gore,
                In navies black, broken with wind and'tide:

                They landed in firm array upon the rocks
                Of Albion; they kiss'd the rocky shore;
                'Be thou our mother and our nurse,' they said;
                'Our children's mother, and thou shalt be our grave,
                The sepulchre of ancient Troy, from whence
                Shall rise cities, and thrones, and arms, and awful pow'rs.'

                Our fathers swarm from the ships. Giant voices
                Are heard from the hills, the enormous sons
                Of Ocean run from rocks and caves, wild men,
                Naked and roaring like lions, hurling rocks,
                And wielding knotty clubs, like oaks entangled
                Thick as a forest, ready for the axe.

                Our fathers move in firm array to battle;
                The savage monsters rush like roaring fire,
                Like as a forest roars with crackling flames,
                When the red lightning, borne by furious storms,
                Lights on some woody shore; the parched heavens
                Rain fire into the molten raging sea.

                The smoking trees are strewn upon the shore,
                Spoil'd of their verdure.  how oft have they
                Defy'd the storm that howled o'er their heads!
                Our fathers, sweating, lean on their spears, and view
                The mighty dead: giant bodies streaming blood.
                Dread visages frowning in silent death.

                Then Brutus spoke, inspir'd; our fathers sit
                Attentive on the melancholy shore:
                Hear ye the voice of Brutus-'The flowing waves
                Of time come rolling o'er my breast,' he said;
                'And my heart labours with futurity:
                Our sons shall rule the empire of the sea.

                'Their mighty wings shall stretch from east to west.
                Their nest is in the sea, but they shall roam
                Like eagles for the prey; nor shall the young
                Crave or be heard; for plenty shall bring forth,
                Cities shall sing, and vales in rich array
                Shall laugh, whose fruitful laps bend down with fulness.

                'Our sons shall rise from thrones in joy,
                Each one buckling on his armour; Morning
                Shall be prevented by their swords gleaming,
                And Evening hear their song of victory:
                Their towers shall be built upon the rocks,
                Their daughters shall sing, surrounded with shining spears.

                'Liberty shall stand upon the cliffs of Albion,
                Casting her blue eyes over the green ocean;
                Or, tow'ring, stand upon the roaring waves,
                Stretching her mighty spear o'er distant lands;
                While, with her eagle wings, she covereth
                Fair Albion's shore, and all her families.'




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                      . 






                     11. To be or not to be
                         Of great capacity,
                         Like Sir Isaac Newton,
                         Or Locke, or Doctor South,
                         Or Sherlock upon Death -
                         I'd rather be Sutton!

                         For he did build a house
                         For aged men and youth,
                         With walls of brick and stone;
                         He furnish'd it within
                         With whatever he could win,
                         And all his own.

                         He drew out of the Stocks
                         His money in a box,
                         And sent his servant
                         To Green the Bricklayer,
                         And to the Carpenter;
                         He was so fervent.

                         The chimneys were threescore,
                         The windows many more;
                         And, for convenience,
                         He sinks and gutters made,
                         And all the way he pav'd
                         To hinder pestilence.

                         Was not this a good man -
                         Whose life was but a span,
                         Whose name was Sutton -
                         As Locke, or Doctor South,
                         Or Sherlock upon Death,
                         Or Sir Isaac Newton?






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                   12. Leave, O leave me to my sorrows;
                       Here I'll sit and fade away,
                       Till I'm nothing but a spirit,
                       And I lose this form of clay.

                       Then if chance along this forest
                       Any walk in pathless way,
                       Thro' the gloom he'll see my shadow
                       Hear my voice upon the breeze.



                    12.   !
                        , ,  .
                           -  ! -
                             .

                          , -
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                           .

                         . . 



             Shewing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul





                       Piping down the valleys wild,
                       Piping songs of pleasant glee,
                       On a cloud I saw a child,
                       And he laughing said to me:

                       'Pipe a song about a Lamb!'
                       So I piped with merry cheer.
                       'Piper, pipe that song again;'
                       So I piped: he wept to hear.

                       'Drop thy pipe, thy happy pipe;
                       Sing thy songs of happy cheer:'
                       So I sang the same again,
                       While he wept with joy to hear.

                       'Piper, sit thee down and write
                       In a book, that all may read.'
                       So he vanish'd from my sight,
                       And I pluck'd a hollow reed,

                       And I made a rural pen,
                       And I stain'd the water clear,
                       And I wrote my happy songs
                       Every child may joy to hear.



                    
                              





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                           . . 




                   How sweet is the Shepherd's sweet lot!
                   From the morn to the evening he strays;
                   He shall follow his sheep all the day,
                   And his tongue shall be filled with praise.

                   For he hears the lamb's innocent call,
                   And he hears the ewe's tender reply;
                   He is watchful while they are in peace,
                   For they know when their Shepherd is nigh.




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                         The Sun does arise,
                         And make happy the skies;
                         The merry bells ring
                         To welcome the Spring;
                         The skylark and thrush,
                         The birds of the bush,
                         Sing louder around
                         To the bells' cheerful sound,
                         While our sports shall be seen
                         On the Echoing Green.

                         Old John, with white hair,
                         Does laugh away care,
                         Sitting under the oak,
                         Among the old folk.
                         They laugh at our play,
                         And soon they all say:
                         'Such, such were the joys
                         When we all, girls and boys,
                         In our youth time were seen
                         On the Echoing Green.'

                         Till the little ones, weary,
                         No more can be merry;
                         The sun does descend,
                         And our sports have an end.
                         Round the laps of their mothers
                         Many sisters and brothers,
                         Like birds in their nest,
                         Are ready for rest,
                         And sport no more seen
                         On the darkening Green.




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                              . . 




                            Little Lamb, who made thee?
                            Dost thou know who made thee?
                       Gave thee life, and bid thee feed,
                       By the stream and o'er the mead;
                       Gave thee clothing of delight,
                       Softest clothing, woolly, bright,
                       Gave thee such a tender voice,
                       Making all the vales rejoice?
                            Little Lamb, who made thee?
                            Dost thou know who made thee?

                            Little Lamb, I'll tell thee,
                            Little Lamb, I'll tell thee:
                       He is called by thy name,
                       For He calls Himself a Lamb.
                       He is meek, and He is mild;
                       He became a little child.
                       I a child, and thou a lamb,
                       We are called by His name.
                            Little Lamb, God bless thee!
                            Little Lamb, God bless thee!




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                           . . 




                  My mother bore me in the southern wild,
                  And I am black, but O! my soul is white;
                  White as an angel is the English child,
                  But I am black, as if bereav'd of light.

                  My mother taught me underneath a tree,
                  And, sitting down before the heat of day,
                  She took me on her lap and kissed me,
                  And, pointing to the east, began to say:

                  'Look on the rising sun,-there God does live,
                  And gives His light, and gives His heat away;
                  And flowers and trees and beasts and men receive
                  Comfort in morning, joy in the noonday.

                  'And we are put on earth a little space,
                  That we may learn to bear the beams of love;
                  And these black bodies and the sunburnt face
                  Is but a cloud, and like a shady grove.

                  'For when our souls have learn'd the heat to bear,
                  The cloud will vanish; we shall hear His voice,
                  Saying: "Come out from the grove, My love and care,
                  And round My golden tent like lambs rejoice."'

                  Thus did my mother say, and kissed me;
                  And thus I say to little English boy.
                  When I from black and he from white cloud free,
                  And round the tent of God like lambs we joy,

                  I'll shade him from the heat, till he can bear
                  To lean in joy upon our Father's knee;
                  And then I'll stand and stroke his silver hair,
                  And be like him, and he will then love me.




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                           Merry, merry sparrow!
                           Under leaves so green,
                           A happy blossom
                           Sees you, swift as arrow,
                           Seek your cradle narrow
                           Near my bosom.

                           Pretty, pretty robin!
                           Under leaves so green,
                           A happy blossom
                           Hears you sobbing, sobbing,
                           Pretty, pretty robin,
                           Near my bosom.




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                When my mother died I was very young,
                And my father sold me while yet my tongue
                Could scarcely cry "weep! 'weep! 'weep!'
                So your chimneys I sweep, and in soot I sleep.

                There's little Tom Dacre, who cried when his head,
                That curl'd like a lamb's back, was shav'd: so I said
                'Hush, Tom! never mind it, for when your head's bare
                You know that the soot cannot spoil your white hair.'

                And so he was quiet, and that very night,
                As Tom was a-sleeping, he had such a sight!-
                That thousands of sweepers, Dick, Joe, Ned, and Jack,
                Were all of them lock'd up in coffitfs of black.

                And by came an Angel who had a bright key,
                And he open'd the coffins and set them all free;
                Then down a green plain leaping, laughing, they run,
                And wash in a river, and shine in the sun.

                Then naked and white, all their bags left behind,
                They rise upon clouds and sport in the wind;
                And the Angel told Tom, if he'd be a good boy,
                He'd have God for his father, and never want joy.

                And so Tom awoke; and we rose in the dark,
                And got with our bags and our brushes to work.
                Tho' the morning was cold, Tom was happy and warm;
                So if all do their duty they need not fear harm.



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                   'Father! father! where are you going?
                    do not walk so fast.
                   Speak, father, speak to your little boy,
                   Or else I shall be lost.'

                   The night was dark, no father was there;
                   The child was wet with dew;
                   The mire was deep, and, the child did weep,
                   And away the vapour flew.



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                   The little boy lost in the lonely fen,
                   Led by the wand'ring light,
                   Began to cry; but God, ever nigh,
                   Appear'd like his father, in white.

                   He kissed the child, and by the hand led,
                   And to his mother brought,
                   Who in sorrow pale, thro' the lonely dale,
                   Her little boy weeping sought.



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             When the green woods laugh with the voice of joy,
             And the dimpling stream runs laughing by;
             When the air does laugh with our merry wit,
             And the green hill laughs with the noise of it;

             When the meadows laugh with lively green,
             And the grasshopper laughs in the merry scene,
             When Mary and Susan and Emily
             With their sweet round mouths sing 'Ha, Ha, He!'

             When the painted birds laugh in the shade,
             Where our table with cherries and nuts is spread,
             Come live, and be merry, and join with me,
             To sing the sweet chorus of 'Ha, Ha, He!'



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                       Sweet dreams, form a shade
                       O'er my lovely infant's head;
                       Sweet dreams of pleasant streams
                       By happy, silent, moony beams.

                       Sweet sleep, with soft down
                       Weave thy brows an infant crown.
                       Sweet sleep, Angel mild,
                       Hover o'er my happy child.

                       Sweet smiles, in the night
                       Hover over my delight;
                       Sweet smiles, mother's smiles,
                       All the livelong night beguiles.


                       Sweet moans, dovelike sighs,
                       Chase not slumber from thy eyes.
                       Sweet moans, sweeter smiles,
                       All the dovelike moans beguiles.

                       Sleep, sleep, happy child,
                       All creation slept and smil'd;
                       Sleep, sleep, happy sleep,
                       While o'er thee thy mother weep.

                       Sweet babe, in thy face
                       Holy image I can trace.
                       Sweet babe, once like thee,
                       Thy Maker lay and wept for me,

                       Wept for me, for thee, for all,
                       When He was an infant small.
                       Thou His image ever see,
                       Heavenly face that smiles on thee,

                       Smiles on thee, on me, on all;
                       Who became an infant small.
                       Infant smiles are His own smiles;
                       Heaven and earth to peace beguiles.



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                      To Mercy, Pity, Peace, and Love
                      All pray in their distress;
                      And to these virtues of delight
                      Return their thankfulness.

                      For Mercy, Pity, Peace, and Love
                      Is God, our Father dear,
                      And Mercy, Pity, Peace, and Love
                      Is man, His child and care.

                      For Mercy has a human heart,
                      Pity a human face,
                      And Love, the human form divine,
                      And Peace, the human dress.

                      Then every man, of every clime,
                      That prays in his distress,
                      Prays to the human form divine,
                      Love, Mercy, Pity, Peace.

                      And all must love the human form,
                      In heathen, Turk, or Jew;
                      Where Mercy, Love, and Pity dwell
                      There God is dwelling too.



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        'Twas on a Holy Thursday, their innocent faces clean,
        The children walking two and two, in red and blue and green,
        Grey-headed beadles walk'd before, with wands as white as snow,
        Till into the high dome of Paul's they like Thames' waters flow.

         what a multitude they seem'd, these flowers of London town!
        Seated in companies they sit with radiance all their own.
        The hum of multitudes was there, but multitudes of lambs,
        Thousands of little boys and girls raising their innocent hands.

        Now like a mighty wind they raise to Heaven the voice of song,
        Or like harmonious thunderings the seats of Heaven among.
        Beneath them sit the aged men, wise guardians of the poor;
        Then cherish pity, lest you drive an angel from your door.



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                      The sun descending in the west,
                      The evening star does shine;
                      The birds are silent in their nest,
                      And I must seek for mine.
                      The moon, like a flower,
                      In heaven's high bower,
                      With silent delight
                      Sits and smiles on the night.

                      Farewell, green fields and happy groves,
                      Where flocks have took delight.
                      Where lambs have nibbled, silent moves
                      The feet of angels bright;
                      Unseen they pour blessing,
                      And joy without ceasing,
                      On each bud and blossom,
                      And each sleeping bosom.

                      They look in every thoughtless nest,
                      Where birds are cover'd warm;
                      They visit caves of every beast,
                      To keep them all from harm.
                      If they see any weeping
                      That should have been sleeping,
                      They pour sleep on their head,
                      And sit down by their bed.

                      When wolves and tigers howl for prey,
                      They pitying stand and weep;
                      Seeking to drive their thirst away,
                      And keep them from the sheep.
                      But if they rush dreadful,
                      The angels, most heedful,
                      Receive each mild spirit,
                      New worlds to inherit.

                      And there the lion's ruddy eyes
                      Shall flow with tears of gold,
                      And pitying the tender cries,
                      And walking round the fold,
                      Saying 'Wrath, by His meekness,
                      And, by His health, sickness
                      Is driven away
                      From our immortal day.

                      'And now beside thee, bleating lamb,
                      I can lie down and sleep;
                      Or think on Him who bore thy name,
                      Graze after thee and weep.
                      For, wash'd in life's river
                      My bright mane for ever
                      Shall shine like the gold
                      As I guard o'er the fold.'



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                      Sound the flute!
                      Now it's mute.
                      Birds delight
                      Day and night;
                      Nightingale
                      In the dale,
                      Lark in sky,
                      Merrily,
                 Merrily, merrily, to welcome in the year.

                      Little boy,
                      Full of joy;
                      Little girl,
                      Sweet and small;
                      Cock does crow,
                      So do you;
                      Merry voice,
                      Infant noise,
                 Merrily, merrily, to welcome in the year.

                      Little lamb,
                      Here I am;
                      Come and lick
                      My white neck;
                      Let me pull
                      Your soft wool;
                      Let me kiss
                      Your soft face:
                 Merrily, merrily, we welcome in the year.



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                              28. NURSE'S SONG

                When the voices of children are heard on the green,
                And laughing is heard on the hill,
                My heart is at rest within my breast,
                And everything else is still.

                'Then come home, my children, the sun is gone down,
                And the dews of night arise;
                Come, come, leave off play, and let us away
                Till the morning appears in the skies.'

                'No, no, let us play, for it is yet day,
                And we cannot go to sleep;
                Besides, in the sky the little birds fly,
                And the hills are all cover'd with sheep.'

                'Well, well, go and play till the light fades away,

                And then go home to bed.'
                The little ones leaped and shouted and laugh'ed
                And all the hills echoed.



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                          'I have no name:
                          I am but two days old.'
                          What shall I call thee?
                          'I happy am,
                          Joy is my name.'
                          Sweet joy befall thee!

                          Pretty Joy!
                          Sweet Joy, but two days old.
                          Sweet Joy I call thee
                          Thou dost smile,
                          I sing the while,
                          Sweet joy befall thee!



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                       Once a dream did weave a shade
                       O'er my Angel-guarded bed,
                       That an emmet lost its way
                       Where on grass methought I lay.

                       Troubled, 'wilder'd, and forlorn,
                       Dark, benighted, travel-worn,
                       Over many a tangled spray,
                       AH heart-broke I heard her say:

                       'O, my children! do they cry?
                       Do they hear their father sigh?
                       Now they look abroad to see:
                       Now return and weep for me.'

                       Pitying, I dropp'd a tear;
                       But I saw a glow-worm near,
                       Who replied: 'What wailing wight
                       Calls the watchman of the night?

                       'I am set to light the ground,
                       While the beetle goes his round:
                       Follow now the beetle's hum;
                       Little wanderer, hie thee home.'



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                          31. ON ANOTHER'S SORROW

                        Can I see another's woe,
                        And not be in sorrow too?
                        Can I see another's grief,
                        And not seek for kind relief?

                        Can I see a falling tear,
                        And not feel my sorrow's share?
                        Can a father see his child
                        Weep, nor be with sorrow fill'd?

                        Can a mother sit and hear
                        An infant groan, an infant fear?
                        No, no! never can it be!
                        Never, never can it be!

                        And can He who smiles on all
                        Hear the wren with sorrows small,
                        Hear the small bird's grief and care,
                        Hear the woes that infants bear,

                        And not sit beside the nest,
                        Pouring pity in their breast;
                        And not sit the cradle near,
                        Weeping tear on infant's tear;

                        And not sit both night and day,
                        Wiping all our tears away?
                        O, no! never can it be!
                        Never, never can it be!

                        He doth give His joy to all;
                        He becomes an infant small;
                        He becomes a man of woe;
                        He doth feel the sorrow too.

                        Think not thou canst sigh a sigh,
                        And thy Maker is not by;
                        Think not thou canst weep a tear,
                        Arid thy Maker is not near.

                        O! He gives to us His joy
                        That our grief He may destroy;
                        Till our grief is fled and gone
                        He doth sit by us and moan.



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                    Hear the voice of the Bard!
                    Who present, past, and future, sees;
                    Whose ears have heard
                    The Holy Word
                    That walk'd among the ancient trees,

                    Calling the lapsed soul,
                    And weeping in the evening dew;
                    That might control
                    The starry pole,
                    And fallen, fallen light renew!

                    'O Earth,  Earth, return!
                    Arise from out the dewy grass;
                    Night is worn,
                    And the morn
                    Rises from the slumberous mass.

                    'Turn away no more;
                    Why wilt thou turn away.
                    Die starry floor,
                    The wat'ry shore,
                    Is giv'n thee till the break of day.'





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                             33. EARTH'S ANSWER

                     Earth rais'd up her head
                     From the darkness dread and drear.
                     Her light fled,
                     Stony dread!
                     And her locks cover'd with grey despair.

                     'Prison'd on wat'ry shore,
                     Starry Jealousy does keep my den:
                     Cold and hoar,
                     Weeping o'er,
                     I hear the Father of the Ancient Men.

                     'Selfish Father of Men!
                     Cruel, jealous, selfish Fear!
                     Can delight,
                     Chain'd in night,
                     The virgins of youth and morning bear?

                     'Does spring hide its joy
                     When buds and blossoms grow?
                     Does the sower
                     Sow by night,
                     Or the ploughman in darkness plough?

                     'Break this heavy chain
                     That does freeze my bones around.
                     Selfish! vain!
                     Eternal bane!
                     That free Love with bondage bound.'



                             
                            
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                    'Love seeketh not itself to please,
                    Nor for itself hath any care,
                    But for another gives its ease,
                    And builds a Heaven in Hell's despair.'

                    So sung a little Clod of Clay,
                    Trodden with the cattle's feet,
                    But a Pebble of the brook
                    Warbled out these metres meet:

                    'Love seeketh only Self to please,
                    To bind another to its delight,
                    Joys in another's loss of ease,
                    And builds a Hell in Heaven's despite.'



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                        Is this a holy thing to see
                        In a rich and fruitful land,
                        Babes reduc'd to misery,
                        Fed with cold and usurious hand?

                        Is that trembling cry a song?
                        Can it be a song of joy?
                        And so many children poor?
                        It is a land of poverty!

                        And their sun does never shine,
                        And their fields are bleak and bare,
                        And their ways are fill'd with thorns:
                        It is eternal winter there.

                        For where'er the sun does shine,
                        And where'er the rain does fall,
                        Babe can never hunger there,
                        Nor poverty the mind appal.



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                           In futurity
                           I prophetic see
                           That the earth from sleep
                           (Grave the sentence deep)

                           Shall arise and seek
                           For her Maker meek;
                           And the desert wild
                           Become a garden mild.

                           In the southern clime,
                           Where the summer's prime
                           Never fades away,
                           Lovely Lyca lay.

                           Seven summers old
                           Lovely Lyca told;
                           She had wander'd long
                           Hearing wild birds' song.

                           'Sweet sleep, come to me
                           Underneath this tree.
                           Do father, mother, weep?
                           Where can Lyca sleep?

                           'Lost in desert wild
                           Is your little child.
                           How can Lyca sleep
                           If her mother weep?

                           'If her heart does ache
                           Then let Lyca wake;
                           If my mother sleep,
                           Lyca shall not weep.

                           'Frowning, frowning night,
                           O'er this desert bright,
                           Let thy moon arise
                           While I close my eyes.'

                           Sleeping Lyca lay
                           While the beasts of prey,
                           Come from caverns deep,
                           View'd the maid asleep.

                           The kingly lion stood,
                           And the virgin view'd,
                           Then he gamboll'd round
                           O'er the hallow'd ground.

                           Leopards, tigers, play
                           Round her as she lay,
                           While the lion old
                           Bow'd his mane of gold

                           And her bosom lick,
                           And upon her neck
                           From his eyes of flame
                           Ruby tears there came;

                           While the lioness
                           Loos'd her slender dress,
                           And naked they convey'd
                           To caves the sleeping maid.



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                         All the night in woe
                         Lyca's parents go
                         Over valleys deep,
                         While the deserts weep.

                         Tired and woe-begone,
                         Hoarse with making moan,
                         Arm in arm seven days
                         They trac'd the desert ways.

                         Seven nights they sleep
                         Among shadows deep,
                         And dream they see their child
                         Starv'd in desert wild.

                         Pale, thro' pathless ways
                         The fancied image strays
                         Famish'd, weeping, weak.
                         With hollow piteous shriek.

                         Rising from unrest,
                         The trembling woman prest
                         With feet of weary woe:
                         She could no further go.

                         In his arms he bore
                         Her, arm'd with sorrow sore;
                         Till before their way
                         A couching lion lay.

                         Turning back was vain:
                         Soon his heavy mane
                         Bore them to the ground.
                         Then he stalk'd around,

                         Smelling to his prey;
                         But their fears allay
                         When he licks their hands,
                         And silent by them stands.

                         They look upon his eyes
                         Fill'd with deep surprise;
                         And wondering behold
                         A spirit arm'd in gold.

                         On his head a crown;
                         On his shoulders down
                         Flow'd his golden hair.
                         Gone was all their care.

                         'Follow me,' he said;
                         'Weep not for the maid;
                         In my palace deep
                         Lyca lies asleep.'

                         Then they followed
                         Where the vision led,
                         And saw their sleeping child
                         Among tigers wild.

                         To this day they dwell
                         In a lonely dell;
                         Nor fear the wolfish howl
                         Nor the lions' growl.



                                
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                  A little black thing among the snow,
                  Crying ' 'weep! 'weep!' in notes of woe!
                  'Where are thy father and mother, say?' -
                  'They are both gone up to the Church to pray.

                  'Because I was happy upon the heath,
                  And smil'd among the winter's snow,
                  They clothed me in the clothes of death,
                  And taught me to sing the notes of woe.

                  'And because I am happy and dance and sing,
                  They think they have done me no injury,
                  And are gone to praise God and His Priest and King,
                  Who make up a Heaven of our misery.'



                       , -  ,  , -
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                       . . 


                              39. NURSE'S SONG

                When the voices of children are heard on the green
                And whisp'rings are in the dale,
                The days of my youth rise fresh in my mind,
                My face turns green and pale.

                Then come home, my children, the sun is gone down,
                And the dews of night arise;
                Your spring and your day are wasted in play,
                And your winter and night in disguise.



                         
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                       , !
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                            Rose, thou art sick!
                           The invisible worm,
                           That flies in the night,
                           In the howling storm,

                           Has found out thy bed
                           Of crimson joy;
                           And his dark secret love
                           Does thy life destroy.



                            ,  !
                              
                             
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                              ,
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                             Little Fly,
                             Thy summer's play
                             My thoughtless hand
                             Has brush'd away.

                             Am not I
                             A fly like thee?
                             Or art not thou
                             A man like me?

                             For I dance,
                             And drink, and sing,
                             Till some blind hand
                             Shall brush my wing.

                             If thought is life
                             And strength and breath,
                             And the want
                             Of thought is death;

                             Then am I
                             A happy fly,
                             If I live
                             Or if I die.



                                !
                                
                                
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                    I dreamt a dream! what can it mean?
                    And that I was a maiden Queen,
                    Guarded by an Angel mild:
                    Witless woe was ne'er beguil'd!

                    And I wept both night and day,
                    And he wip'd my tears away,
                    And I wept both day and night,
                    And hid from him my heart's delight.

                    So he took his wings and fled;
                    Then the morn blush'd rosy red;
                    I dried my tears, and arm'd my fears
                    With ten thousand shields and spears.


                    Soon my Angel came again:
                    I was arm'd, he came in vain;
                    For the time of youth was fled,
                    And grey hairs were on my head.



                        -  !
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                      Tyger! Tyger! burning bright
                      In the forests of the night,
                      What immortal hand or eye
                      Could frame thy fearful symmetry?

                      In what distant deeps or skies
                      Burnt the fire of thine eyes?
                      On what wings dare he aspire?
                      What the hand dare seize the fire?

                      And what shoulder, and what art,
                      Could twist the sinews of thy heart?
                      And when thy heart began to beat,
                      What dread hand? and what dread feet?

                      What the hammer? what the chain?
                      In what furnace was thy brain?
                      What the anvil? what dread grasp
                      Dare its deadly terrors clasp?

                      When the stars threw down their spears,
                      And water'd heaven with their tears,
                      Did he smile his work to see?
                      Did he who made the Lamb make thee?

                      Tyger! Tyger! burning bright
                      In the forests of the night,
                      What immortal hand or eye,
                      Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?



                       ,  !  ,
                           ,
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                         ?

                            ,
                        
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                       ,  !  ,
                           ,
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                          ?

                        . . 




                      A flower was offer'd to me,
                      Such a flower as May never bore;
                      But I said 'I've a pretty Rose-tree,'
                      And I passed the sweet flower o'er.

                      Then I went to my pretty Rose-tree,
                      To tend her by day and by night,
                      But my Rose turn'd away with jealousy,
                      And her thorns were my only delight.



                           . , ,
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                 45. Ah, Sun-flower! weary of time,
                     Who countest the steps of the sun;
                     Seeking after that sweet golden clime,
                     Where the traveller's journey is done;

                     Where the Youth pined away with desire,
                     And the pale Virgin shrouded in snow,
                     Arise from their graves, and aspire
                     Where my Sun-flower wishes to go.



                     45. ! !   
                            
                             
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                         ,     ,
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                  The modest Rose puts forth a thorn,
                  The humble Sheep a threat'ning horn;
                  While the Lily white shall in love delight,
                  Nor a thorn, nor a threat, stain her beauty bright.



                        , .
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                    I went to the Garden of Love,
                    And saw what I never had seen:
                    A Chapel was built in the midst,
                    Where I used to play on the green.

                    And the gates of this Chapel were shut,
                    And 'Thou shalt not' writ over the door;
                    So I turn'd to the Garden of Love
                    That so many sweet flowers bore;

                    And I saw it was filled with graves,
                    And tomb-stones where flowers should be;
                    And priests in black gowns were walking their rounds,
                    And binding with briars my joys and desires.



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               Dear mother, dear mother, the Church is cold,
               But the Ale-house is healthy and pleasant and warm;
               Besides I can tell where I am used well,
               Such usage in Heaven will never do well.

               But if at the Church they would give us some ale,
               And a pleasant fire our souls to regale,
               We'd sing and we'd pray all the livelong day,
               Nor ever once wish from the Church to stray.

               Then the Parson might preach, and drink, and sing,
               And we'd be as happy as birds in the spring;
               And modest Dame Lurch, who is always at church,
               Would not have bandy children, nor fasting, nor birch.

               And God, like a father, rejoicing to see
               His children as pleasant and happy as He,
               Would have no more quarrel with the Devil or the barrel,
               But kiss him, and give him both drink and apparel.



                     , ,      .
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                   I wander thro' each charter'd street,
                   Near where the charter'd Thames does flow,
                   And mark in every face I meet
                   Marks of weakness, marks of woe.

                   In every cry of every Man,
                   In every Infant's cry of fear,
                   In every voice, in every ban,
                   The mind-forg'd manacles I hear.

                   How the chimney-sweeper's cry
                   Every black'ning church appals;
                   And the hapless soldiers sigh

                   Runs in blood down palace walls.

                   But most thro' midnight streets I hear
                   How the youthful harlot's curse
                   Blasts the new-born infant's tear,
                   And blights with plagues the marriage hearse.



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                      Pity would be no more
                      If we did not make somebody poor;
                      And Mercy no more could be
                      If all were as happy as we.

                      And mutual fear brings peace,
                      Till the selfish loves increase:
                      Then Cruelty knits a snare,
                      And spreads his baits with care.

                      He sits down with holy fears,
                      And waters the ground with tears;
                      Then Humility takes its root
                      Underneath his foot.

                      Soon spreads the dismal shade
                      Of Mystery over his head;
                      And the caterpillar and fly
                      Feed on the Mystery.

                      And it bears the fruit of Deceit,
                      Ruddy and sweet to eat;
                      And the raven his nest has made
                      In its thickest shade.

                      The Gods of the earth and sea
                      Sought thro' Nature to find this tree;
                      But their search was all in vain:
                      There grows one in the Human brain.



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                     My mother groan'd, my father wept,
                     Into the dangerous world I leapt;
                     Helpless, naked, piping loud,
                     Like a fiend hid in a cloud.

                     Straggling in my father's hands,
                     Striving against my swaddling-bands,
                     Bound and weary, I thought best
                     To sulk upon my mother's breast.



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                       I was angry with my friend:
                       I told my wrath, my wrath did end.
                       I was angry with my foe:
                       I told it not, my wrath did grow.

                       And I water'd it in fears,
                       Night and morning with my tears;
                       And I sunned it with smiles,
                       And with soft deceitful wiles.

                       And it grew both day and night,
                       Till it bore an apple bright;
                       And my foe behold it shine,
                       And he knew that it was mine,

                       And into my garden stole
                       When the night had veil'd the pole:
                       In the morning glad I see
                       My foe outstretch'd beneath the tree.



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                      'Nought loves another as itself,
                      Nor venerates another so,
                      Nor is it possible to Thought
                      A greater than itself to know:

                      'And, Father, how can I love you
                      Or any of my brothers more?.
                      I love you like the little bird
                      That picks up crumbs around the door.'

                      The Priest sat by and heard the child,
                      In trembling zeal he seiz'd his hair:
                      He led him by his little coat,
                      And all admir'd the priestly care.

                      And standing on the altar high,
                      'Lo! what a fiend is here,' said he,
                      'One who sets reason up for judge
                      Of our most holy Mystery.'

                      The weeping child could not be heard,
                      The weeping parents wept in vain;
                      They stripp'd him to his little shirt,
                      And bound him in an iron chain;

                      And burn'd him in a holy place,
                      Where many had been burn'd before:
                      The weeping parents wept in vain.
                      Are such things done on Albion's shore?



                          "   
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                               ,
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                             -    -
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                            , ?

                           . . 



                                      Children of the future age,
                                      Reading this indignant page,
                                      Know that in a former time,
                                      Love, sweet Love, was thought a crime!

                          In the Age of Gold,
                          Free from winter's cold,
                          Youth and maiden bright
                          To the holy light,
                          Naked in the sunny beams delight.

                          Once a youthful pair,
                          Fill'd with softest care,
                          Met in garden bright
                          Where the holy light
                          Had just remov'd the curtains of the night.

                          There, in rising day,
                          On the grass they play;
                          Parents were afar,
                          Strangers came not near,
                          And the maiden soon forgot her fear.

                          Tired with kisses sweet,
                          They agree to meet
                          When the silent sleep
                          Waves o'er heaven's deep,
                          And the weary tired wanderers weep.

                          To her father white
                          Came the maiden bright;
                          But his loving look,
                          Like the holy book,
                          All her tender limbs with terror shook.

                          'Ona! pale and weak!
                          To thy father speak:
                          O! the trembling fear,
                          ! the dismal care,
                          That shakes the blossoms of my hoary hair!'



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                             ",   !
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                             ,  !
                              
                             ,  ,   !"

                              . . 




                      Whate'er is born of mortal birth
                      Must be consumed with the earth,
                      To rise from generation free:
                      Then what have I to do with thee?

                      The sexes sprung from shame and pride,
                      Blow'd in the morn; in evening died;
                      But Mercy chang'd death into sleep;
                      The sexes rose to work and weep.

                      Thou, Mother of my mortal part,
                      With cruelty didst mould my heart,
                      And with false self-deceiving tears
                      Didst bind my nostrils, eyes, and ears;

                      Didst close my tongue in senseless clay,
                      And me to mortal life betray:
                      The death of Jesus set me free:
                      Then what have I to do with thee?



                            
                             ;
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                     I love to rise in a summer morn
                     When the birds sing on every tree;
                     The distant huntsman winds his horn,
                     And the skylark sings with me.
                     O! what sweet company.

                     But to go to school in a summer morn,
                     O! it drives all joy away;
                     Under a cruel eye outworn,
                     The little ones spend the day

                     In sighing and dismay.

                     Ah! then at times I drooping sit,
                     And spend many an anxious hour,
                     Nor in my book can I take delight,
                     Nor sit in learning's bower,
                     Worn thro' with the dreary shower.

                     How can the bird that is born for joy
                     Sit in a cage and sing?
                     How can a child, when fears annoy,
                     But droop his tender wing,
                     And forget his youthful spring?

                     O! father and mother, if buds are nipp'd
                     And blossoms blown away,
                     And if the tender plants are stripp'd
                     Of their joy in the springing day,
                     By sorrow and care's dismay,

                     How shall the summer arise in joy,
                     Or the summer fruits appear?
                     Or how shall we gather what griefs destroy,
                     Or bless the mellowing year,
                     When the blasts of winter appear?



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                  Youth of delight, come hither,
                  And see the opening morn,
                  Image of truth new-born.
                  Doubt is fled, and clouds of reason,
                  Dark disputes and artful teasing.
                  Folly is an endless maze,
                  Tangled roots perplex her ways.
                  How many have fallen there!
                  They stumble all night over bones of the dead,
                  And feel they know not what but care,
                  And wish to lead others, when they should be led.



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                                 (1789-1793)



                    58. Never seek to tell thy love,
                        Love that never told can be;
                        For the gentle wind does move
                        Silently, invisibly.

                        I told my love, I told my love,
                        I told her all my heart;
                        Trembling, cold, in ghastly tears,
                        Ah! she doth depart.

                        Soon as she was gone from me,
                        A traveller came by,
                        Silently, invisibly:
                        He took her with a sigh.


                                 (1789-1793)



                      58.   
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                   59. I saw a Chapel all of gold
                       That none did dare to enter in,
                       And many weeping stood without,
                       Weeping, mourning, worshipping.

                       I saw a Serpent rise between
                       The white pillars of the door,
                       And he forc'd and forc'd and forc'd;
                       Down the golden hinges tore,

                       And along the pavement sweet,
                       Set with pearls and rubies bright,
                       All his shining length he drew,
                       Till upon the altar white

                       Vomiting his poison out
                       On the Bread and on the Wine.
                       So I turn'd into a sty,
                       And laid me down among the swine.



                  59.     -
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                    60. I asked a thief to steal me a peach.
                        He turned up his eyes.
                        I ask'd a lithe lady to lie her down:
                        Holy and meek, she cries.

                        As soon as I went
                        An Angel came:
                        He wink'd at the thief,
                        And smil'd at the dame;

                        And without one word said
                        Had a peach from the tree,
                        And still as a maid
                        Enjoy'd the lady.




                   60.     .
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                      61. I heard an Angel singing
                          When the day was springing:
                          'Mercy, Pity, Peace
                          Is the world's release.'

                          Thus he sang all day
                          Over the new-mown hay,
                          Till the sun went down,
                          And haycocks looked brown.

                          I heard a Devil curse
                          Over the heath and the furze:
                          'Mercy could be no more
                          If there was nobody poor,

                          'And Pity no more could be,
                          If all were as happy as we.'
                          At his curse the sun went down,
                          And the heavens gave a frown.

                          [Down pour'd the heavy rain
                          Over the new reap'd grain;
                          And Misery's increase
                          Is Mercy, Pity, Peace.]



                     61.    ,
                            - :
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                      Sleep! sleep! beauty bright,
                      Dreaming o'er the joys of night;
                      Sleep! sleep! in thy sleep
                      Little sorrows sit and weep.

                      Sweet Babe, in thy face
                      Soft desires I can trace,
                      Secret joys and secret smiles,
                      Little pretty infant wiles.

                      As thy softest limbs I feel,
                      Smiles as of the morning steal
                      O'er thy cheek, and o'er thy breast
                      Where thy little heart does rest.

                      O! the cunning wiles that creep
                      In thy little heart asleep.
                      When thy little heart does wake
                      Then the dreadful lightnings break,

                      From thy cheek and from thy eye,
                      O'er the youthful harvests nigh.
                      Infant wiles and infant smiles
                      Heaven and Earth of peace beguiles.



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                  63. I fear'd the fury of my wind
                      Would blight all blossoms fair and true;
                      And my sun it shin'd and shin'd,
                      And my wind it never blew.

                      But a blossom fair or true
                      Was not found on any tree;
                      For all blossoms grew and grew
                      Fruitless, false, tho' fair to see.



                    63.  :   
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                                     i

                     My mother groan'd, my father wept;
                     Into the dangerous world I leapt,
                     Helpless, naked, piping loud,
                     Like a fiend hid in a cloud.

                                     ii

                     Struggling in my father's hands,
                     Striving against my swaddling-bands,
                     Bound and weary, I thought best
                     To sulk upon my mother's breast,

                                    iii

                     When I saw that rage was vain,
                     And to sulk would nothing gain,
                     Turning many a trick and wile
                     I began to soothe and smile,

                                     iv

                     And I sooth'd day after day,
                     Till upon the ground I stray;
                     And I smil'd night after night,
                     Seeking only for delight,

                                     v

                     And I saw before me shine
                     Clusters of the wand'ring vine;
                     And, beyond, a Myrtle-tree
                     Stretch'd its blossoms out to me.

                                     vi

                     But a Priest with holy look,
                     In his hands a holy book,
                     Pronounced curses on his head
                     Who the fruits or blossoms shed

                                    vii

                     I beheld the Priest by night;
                     He embrac'd my Myrtle bright:
                     I beheld the Priest by day,
                     Where beneath my vines he lay.

                                    viii

                     Like a serpent in the day
                     Underneath my vines he lay:
                     Like a serpent in the night
                     He embrac'd my Myrtle bright.

                                     ix

                     So I smote him, and his gore
                     Stain'd the roots my Myrtle bore;
                     But the time of youth is fled,
                     And grey hairs are on my head.



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                   65. Thou hast a lap full of seed,
                       And this is a fine country.
                       Why dost thou not cast thy seed,
                       And live in it merrily?

                       Shall I cast it on the sand
                       And turn it into fruitful land?
                       For on no other ground
                       Can I sow my seed,
                       Without tearing up
                       Some stinking weed.



                     65.-     ,
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                       Why should I be bound to thee,
                        my lovely mirtle tree?
                       Love, free love, cannot be bound
                       To any tree that grows on ground.

                       O, how sick & weary I
                       Underneath my mirtle lie,
                       Like to dung upon the ground
                       Underneath my mirtle bound.

                       Oft my mirtle sign'd in vain
                       To behold my heavy chain;
                       Oft my father saw us sigh,
                       And laugh'd at our simplicity.

                       So I smote him & his gore
                       Stain'd the roots my mirtle bore.
                       But the time of youth is fled,
                       And grey hairs are on my head.



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                    Why art thou silent and invisible,
                    Father of Jealousy?
                    Why dost thou hide thyself in clouds
                    From every searching eye?

                    Why darkness and obscurity
                    In all thy words and laws,
                    That none dare eat the fruit but from
                    The wily Serpent's jaws?
                    Or is it because secrecy gains females' loud applause?



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                           ,
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                            ?

                          . . 


                         68. THE WILD FLOWER'S SONG

                         As I wander'd the forest,
                         The green leaves among,
                         I heard a Wild Flower
                         Singing a song.

                         'I slept in the earth
                         In the silent night,
                         I murmur'd my fears
                         And I felt delight.

                         'In the morning I went,
                         As rosy as morn,
                         To seek for new joy;
                         But I met with scorn.'



                              
                             
                              
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            69.  lapwing! thou fliest around the heath,
                Nor seest the net that is spread beneath.
                Why dost thou not fly among the corn fields?
                They cannot spread nets where a harvest yields.



               69.  !    .
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                    . . 




                   I walked abroad on a snowy day:
                   I ask'd the soft Snow with me to play:
                   She play'd and she melted in all her prime;
                   And the Winter call'd it a dreadful crime.



                        .
                   -   ! -   .
                    -  ...  
                    ,  .

                    . . 


                           71. MERLIN'S PROPHECY

                The harvest shall flourish in wintry weather
                When two Virginities meet together:
                The king and the priest must be tied in a tether
                Before two Virgins can meet together.



              ,  -  ,
                .
                   ,
                  .

             . . 




                   The sun arises in the East,
                   Cloth'd in robes of blood and gold;
                   Swords and spears and wrath increas'd
                   All around his bosom roll'd,
                   Crown'd with warlike fires and raging desires.



                              .
                           ,  -   !
                              .
                               .
                            -
                       ,  .

                       . . 




              73. Why should I care for the men of Thames,
                  Or the cheating waves of charter'd streams;
                  Or shrink at the little blasts of fear
                  That the hireling blows into my ear?

                  Tho' born on the cheating banks of Thames,
                  Tho' his waters bathed my infant limbs,
                  The Ohio shall wash his stains from me:
                  I was born a slave, but I go to be free 



                   , -     , -
                 ,  , ?
                     
                 ,      ?

                     
                     ,
                , ,     !
                  ,   .

                 . . 




                 74. Abstinence sows sand all over
                     The ruddy limbs and flaming hair,
                     But Desire gratified
                     Plants fruits of life and beauty there.



                   74.     
                         .
                          
                          .

                        . . 




             75. If you trap the moment before it's ripe,
                 The tears of repentence you'll certainly wipe;
                 But if once you let the ripe moment go
                 You can never wipe off the tears of woe.



              75.      ,
                    .
                  ,   , -  
                  :    .

                   . . 




                    76. He who bends to himself a Joy
                        Doth the winged life destroy;
                        But he who kisses the Joy as it flies
                        Lives in Eternity's sunrise.



                            ,
                           .

                             -
                           !

                          . . 




                   The countless gold of a merry heart,
                   The rubies and pearls of a loving eye,
                   The indolent never can bring to the mart,
                   Nor the secret hoard up in his treasury.



                          ,
                          
                             ,
                           .

                        .  




                  Why of the sheep do you not learn peace?
                  Because I don't want you to shear my fleece.



                   -  ,    !..
                   - ,     , !

                    . . 




                     79. Soft deceit & idleness
                         These are beauties sweetest dress.



                    79.     -
                          .

                         . . 




              80. "Let the Brothels of Paris be opened
                  With many an alluring dance
                  To awake the Pestilence thro' the city,"
                  Said the beautiful Queen of France.

                  The King awoke on his couch of gold,
                  As soon as he heard these tidings told:
                  "Arise & come, both fife & drum,
                  And the Famine shall eat both crust & crumb."

                  Then he swore a great & solemn Oath:
                  "To kill the people I am loth,
                  But if they rebel, they must go to hell:
                  They shall have a Priest & a passing bell."

                  Then old Nobodaddy aloft

                  Farted & belch'd & cough'd,

                  And said, "I love hanging & drawing & quartering
                  Every bit as well as war & slaughtering.
                  Damn praying & singing,
                  Unless they will bring in
                  The blood of ten thousand by fighting or swinging."

                  The Queen of France just touched this Globe,
                  And the Pestilence darted from her robe;
                  But our good Queen quite grows to the ground,
                  And a great many suckers grow all around.

                  Fayette beside King Lewis stood;
                  He saw him sign his hand;
                  And soon he saw the famine rage

                  About the fruitful land.

                  Fayette beheld the Queen to smile
                  And wink her lovely eye;
                  And soon he saw the pestilence
                  From street to street to fly.

                  Fayette beheld the King & Queen
                  In tears & iron bound;
                  But mute Fayette wept tear for tear,
                  And guarded them around.

                  Fayette, Fayette, thou'rt bought & sold,
                  And sold is thy happy morrow;
                  Thou gavest the tears of Pity away
                  In exchange for the tears of sorrow.

                  Who will exchange his own fire side
                  For the steps of another's door?
                  Who will exchange his wheaten loaf
                  For the links of a dungeon floor?

                  O, who would smile on the wintry seas,
                  & Pity the stormy roar?
                  Or who will exchange his new born child
                  For the dog at the wintry door?



                 80. " ,  !
                         ,
                        ", -
                       .

                         ,
                      ,    :
                     ", ,  ,
                           !"

                          :
                     "    ,
                           -
                          !"

                          
                     ,     :
                     " , , ,
                        .
                        ,
                       
                        !"

                        , -
                         .
                           -
                       .

                       
                        -
                        ,
                       .

                       
                       -
                        ,
                        .

                       
                         -
                            ,
                        .

                       , ,
                       :
                       
                        .

                        
                        ?
                        
                       ?

                        
                       ?
                         
                      ,    ?

                      . . 


                                 (1800-1803)



                                     i

                  81. My Spectre around me night and day
                      Like a wild beast guards my way;
                      My Emanation far within
                      Weeps incessantly for my sin.

                                     ii

                      'A fathomless and boundless deep,
                      There we wander, there we weep;
                      On the hungry craving wind
                      My Spectre follows thee behind.

                                    iii

                      'He scents thy footsteps in the snow,
                      Wheresoever thou dost go,
                      Thro' the wintry hail and rain.
                      When wilt thou return again?

                                     iv

                      'Dost thou not in pride and scorn
                      Fill with tempests all my morn,
                      And with jealousies and fears
                      Fill my pleasant nights with tears?

                                     v

                      'Seven of my sweet loves thy knife
                      Has bereaved of their life.
                      Their marble tombs I built with tears,
                      And with cold and shuddering fears.

                                     vi

                      'Seven more loves weep night and day
                      Round the tombs where my loves lay,
                      And seven more loves attend each night
                      Around my couch with torches bright.

                                    vii

                      'And seven more loves in my bed
                      Crown with wine my mournful head,
                      Pitying and forgiving all
                      Thy transgressions great and small.

                                    viii

                      'When wilt thou return and view
                      My loves, and them to life renew?
                      When wilt thou return and live?
                      When wilt thou pity as I forgive?'

                                     a

                      ['O'er my sins thou sit and moan:
                      Hast thou no sins of thy own?
                      O'er my sins thou sit and weep,
                      And lull thy own sins fast asleep.]

                                     b

                      ['What transgressions I commit
                      Are for thy transgressions fit.
                      They thy harlots, thou their slave;
                      And my bed becomes their grave.]

                                     ix

                      'Never, never, I return:
                      Still for victory I burn.
                      Living, thee alone I'll have;
                      And when dead I'll be thy grave.

                                     x

                      'Thro' the Heaven and Earth and Hell
                      Thou shalt never, never quell:
                      I will fly and thou pursue:
                      Night and morn the flight renew.'

                                     

                      ['Poor, pale, pitiable form
                      That I follow in a storm;
                      Iron tears and groans of lead
                      Bind around my aching head.]

                                     xi

                      'Till I turn from Female love
                      And root up the Infernal Grove,
                      I shall never worthy be
                      To step into Eternity.

                                    xii

                      'And, to end thy cruel mocks,
                      Annihilate thee on the rocks,
                      And another form create
                      To be subservient to my fate.

                                    xiii

                      'Let us agree to give up love,
                      And root up the Infernal Grove;
                      Then shall we return and see
                      The worlds of happy Eternity.

                                    xiv

                      'And throughout all Eternity
                      I forgive you, you forgive me.
                      As our dear Redeemer said:
                      "This the Wine, and this the Bread."'

                                 (1800-1803)



                           ,
                        ,  ,
                         ,
                       ,  .

                       "   ,
                         ,
                           -
                             .

                         -     ,
                          , -
                        ,    .
                           ?

                          ,    
                          ,
                         ,   
                          ?

                            
                          ?
                          ,   
                         ?

                           , ,
                           ,
                            
                           .

                           ,
                        ,
                          ,
                            .

                          ,  
                        ,   ?
                          ,  -
                          -  ?"

                        ("   ,
                         -  ?
                         -  ,
                        -   ".)

                        ("  ,   ,
                         ?
                             -
                         ".)

                       "  ,  
                          -  !
                          -
                          !

                       ,   
                         , .
                         
                        !"

                        (", , 
                           ,
                         ,   ,
                           ".)

                       "   
                       ,   
                          , -
                         .

                           ,
                            
                       ,    ,
                          .

                          
                       ,   ,
                           -
                           .

                       ,  ,
                           -
                         
                          ".

                        . . 




                 82. When Klopstock England defied,
                     Uprose William Blake in his pride;
                     For old Nobodaddy aloft
                     ...and belch'd and cough'd;
                     Then swore a great oath that made Heaven quake,
                     And call'd aloud to English Blake.
                     Blake was giving his body ease,
                     At Lambeth beneath the poplar trees.
                     From his seat then started he
                     And turn'd him round three times three.
                     The moon at that sight blush'd scarlet red,
                     The stars threw down their cups and fled,
                     And all the devils that were in hell,
                     Answered with a ninefold yell.
                     Klopstock felt the intripled turn,
                     And all his bowels began to churn,
                     And his bowels turn'd round three times three,
                     And lock'd in his soul with a ninefold key;...
                     Then again old Nobodaddy swore
                     He ne'er had seen such a thing before,
                     Since Noah was shut in the ark,
                     Since Eve first chose her hellfire spark,
                     Since 'twas the fashion to go naked,
                     Since the old Anything was created...



                82.     ,
                          ;
                        
                    ...    ;
                      
                     ,   .
                       
                      ,  .
                         -
                        , -
                        ,
                        .
                         ,
                     ;   ,
                       
                       .
                    ,     ,
                         ,
                          ,
                            ...
                        
                    ,      
                      ,     ,
                      ,     ,
                      ,      ,
                      ,    ...
                     ,   ,
                        ...
                      , ,
                        , !

                     . . 




                83. Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau:
                    Mock on, mock on; tis all in vain!
                    You throw the sand against the wind,
                    And the wind blows it back again.

                    And every sand becomes a gem
                    Reflected in the beams divine;
                    Blown back they blind the mocking eye,
                    But still in Israel's paths they shine.

                    The Atoms of Democritus
                    And Newton's Particles of Light
                    Are sands upon the Red Sea shore,
                    Where Israel's tents do shine so bright.



                    83. , ! , !
                        ,  !
                           ,
                            .

                          - ,
                             ...
                        !   
                            !

                          ,
                            ...
                           ,
                           .

                         . . 




           84. When a man has married a wife, he finds out whether
               Her knees and elbows are only glued together.



                 84.   ,    ,
                           .

                      . . 




                  Whate'er is done to her she cannot know,
                  And if you'll ask her she will swear it so.
                  Whether 'tis good or evil none's to blame:
                  No one can take the pride, no one the shame.



                           ?
                        ;  .
                           :
                        ,   .

                       . . 




                       To find the Western path,
                       Right thro' the Gates of Wrath
                       I urge my way;
                       Sweet Mercy leads me on
                       With soft repentant moan:
                       I see the break of day.

                       The war of swords and spears,
                       Melted by dewy tears,
                       Exhales on high;
                       The Sun is freed from fears,
                       And with soft grateful tears
                       Ascends the sky.

                                 86. <>

                            ,
                            
                           .
                            
                         ,   .
                            .

                             
                           ,
                          ,  .
                          ,   ,
                            ,
                            .

                          . . 




              87. 'Now Art has lost its mental charms
                  France shall subdue the world in arms.'
                  So spoke an Angel at my birth;
                  Then said 'Descend thou upon earth;
                  Renew the Arts on Britain's shore,
                  And France shall fall down and adore.
                  With works of art their armies meet
                  And War shall sink beneath thy feet.
                  But if thy nation Arts refuse,
                  And if they scorn the immortal Muse,
                  France shall the arts of peace restore
                  And save thee from the ungrateful shore.'

                  Spirit who lov'st Britannia's Isle
                  Round which the fiends of commerce smile -



                    87.   
                          ,
                           , -
                            . -
                         ,  , 
                           .
                             -
                          -  .
                           
                         -   
                          ,
                          ,   ...

                         ,  ,
                          ...

                         . . 


                                 (1808-1811)

                             88. TO F [LAXMAN]

                I mock thee not, though I by thee am mocked;
                Thou call'st me madman, but I call thee blockhead.

                                 (1808-1811)



                          ,
                          .
                         ,
                         .

                      . . 



            89. Here lies John Trot, the friend of all mankind:
                He has not left one enemy behind.
                Friends were quite hard to find, old authors say;
                But now they stand in everybody's way.



               89.     ,  ,
                        .
                   " - !" -     .
                        .

                    . . 




                90. I was buried near this dyke,
                    That my friends may weep as much as they like.



                      ,
                         .

                  . . 





              91. My title as a genius thus is prov'd:
                  Not prais'd by Hayley, nor by Flaxman lov'd.



             91.   ,    :
                ,  -  .

              . . 




          92. Grown old in Love from Seven till Seven times Seven
              I oft have wish'd for Hell, for Ease from Heaven.



                92.     ,
                        ,    .

                     . . 




         93. All pictures that's panted with sense and with thought
             Are panted by madmen, as sure as a groat;
             For the greater the fool is the pencil more blest,
             As when they are drunk they always pant best.
             They never can Raphael it, Fuseli it, nor Blake it;
             If they can't see an outline, pray how can they make it?
             When men will draw outlines begin you to jaw them;
             Madmen see outlines and therefore they draw them.



               93.      
                   ,    .
                      -   .
                    ,   -  .
                       -    ,
                    ,  ,  .
                         ,
                          .

                    . . 




                    94. Why was Cupid a boy,
                        And why a boy was he?
                        He should have been a girl,
                        For aught that I can see.

                        For he shoots with his bow,
                        And the girl shoots with her eye,
                        And they both are merry and glad,
                        And laugh when we do cry.


                        And to make Cupid a boy
                        Was the Cupid girl's mocking plan;
                        For a boy can't interpret the thing
                        Till he is become a man.

                        And then he's so pierc'd with cares,
                        And wounded with arrowy smarts,
                        That the whole business of his life
                        Is to pick out the heads of the darts.

                        'Twas the Greeks' love of war
                        Turn'd Love into a boy,
                        And woman into a statue of stone -
                        And away fled every joy.



                            , 
                            ?
                             ,
                            !

                             ,
                            - ,
                            , 
                            .

                            -  
                          ,    :
                           ,  
                            .

                              -  
                             ,
                              
                            -  .

                             ,
                              
                             -
                             .

                           . . 




           95. I asked my dear friend Orator Prig:
               'What's the first part of oratory?' He said: 'A great wig.'
               'And what is the second?' Then, dancing a jig
               And bowing profoundly, he said: 'A great wig.'
               'And what is the third?' Then he snored like a pig,
               And, puffing his cheeks out, replied: 'A great wig.'
               So if a great panter with questions you push,
               'What's the first part of panting?' he'll say 'A pant-brush.'
               'And what is the second?' with most modest blush,
               He'll smile like a cherub, and say: 'A pant-brush.'
               'And what is the third?' he'll bow like a rush,
               With a leer in his eye, he'll reply: 'A pant-brush.'
               Perhaps this is all a panter can want:
               But, look yonder-that house is this house of Rembrandt!



               95. -   ?  ?
                   - , -  . -  !
                   -  ? -    
                    : -    .
                   -  ? -     
                    : - ,  !

                   - , ,    ?
                    : -   .
                   -  ? - ,   ,
                   : - ,  .
                   -  ? -   ,
                    : -   !

                    . . 




           96. Having given great offence by writing in prose,
               I'll write in verse as soft as Bartoloze.
               Some blush at what others can see no crime in;
               But nobody sees any harm in riming.
               Dryden, in rime, cries 'Milton only plann'd':
               Every fool shook his bells throughout the land.
               Tom Cooke cut Hogarth down with his clean graving:
               Thousands of connoisseurs with joy ran raving.
               Thus, Hayley on his toilette seeing the soap,
               Cries, 'Homer is very much improv'd by Pope.'
               Some say I've given great provision to my foes,
               And that now I lead my false friends by the nose.
               Flaxman and Stothard, smelling a.sweet savour,
               Cry 'Blakified drawing spoils painter and engraver';
               While I, looking up to my umbrella,
               Resolv'd to be a very contrary fellow,
               Cry, looking quite from skumference to centre:
               'No one can finish so high as the original Inventor.'
               Thus poor Schiavonetti died of the Cromek-
               A thing that's tied around the Examiner's neck!
               This is my sweet apology to my friends,
               That I may put them in mind of their latter ends.
               If men will act like a maid smiling over a churn,
               They ought not, when it comes to another's turn,
               To grow sour at what a friend may utter,
               Knowing and feeling that we all have need of butter.
               False friends, fie! fie! Our friendship you shan't sever;
               In spite we will be greater friends than ever.



                   ,
              ,    .
                 .
                  .
            "   !" - 
                                          ,
                   .
                .
               ,   .
            ,   ,   :
            ", -  , -   !"
                , ,  
              ,    .
                 :
            ",     
                                         !"
             ,  ,   
                   .
             ,   ,  ,
             : "   
                                       !"
             , -   :
               -     !
                -  
                    ?
             ,     ,
              ,     ,
                ,    ,
             ,      !
               ,   ,
                  !

             . . 




              97. Some people admire the work of a fool,
                  For it's sure to keep your judgement cool;
                  It does not reproach you with want of wit;
                  It is not like a lawyer serving a writ.



              97.      .
                        .
                       ;  ,
                   , -    .

                   . . 




               98. Since all the riches of this world
                   May be gifts from the Devil and earthly kings,
                   I should suspect that I worshipp'd the Devil
                   If I thank'd my God for worldly things.



                          
                         .
                         ,
                       , - .

                      . . 




                99. I rose up at the dawn of day -
                    'Get thee away! get thee away!
                    Pray'st thou for riches? Away! away!
                    This is the Throne of Mammon grey.'

                    Said I: This, sure, is very odd;
                    I took it to be the Throne of God.
                    For everything besides I have:
                    It is only for riches that I can crave.

                    I have mental joy, and mental health,
                    And mental friends, and mental wealth;
                    I've a wife I love, and that loves me;
                    I've all but riches bodily.

                    I am in God's presence night and day,
                    And He never turns His face away;
                    The accuser of sins by my side doth stand,
                    And he holds my money-bag in his hand.

                    For my worldly things God makes him pay,
                    And he'd pay for more if to him I would pray;
                    And so you may do the worst you can do;
                    Be assur'd, Mr. Devil, I won't pray to you.

                    Then if for riches I must not pray,
                    God knows, I little of prayers need say;
                    So, as a church is known by its steeple,
                    If I pray it must be for other people.

                    He says, if I do not worship him for a God,
                    I shall eat coarser food, and go worse shod;
                    So, as I don't value such things as these,
                    You must do, Mr. Devil, just as God please.



                  99.  ,   .
                      -   !   !
                         , 
                         ?

                          -
                       , -   .
                        ,  
                         .

                          ,
                       ,  ,
                         .
                          .

                           .
                            .
                         :
                         .

                         .
                          ,
                          .
                        ,   .

                      ,    .
                            ?
                         ,
                           .

                          
                      ,   , -
                           ...
                        , ,  !

                       . . 



                                 (1800-1803)



                      There is a smile of love,
                      And there is a smile of deceit,
                      And there is a smile of smiles
                      In which these two smiles meet.

                      And there is a frown of hate,
                      And there is a frown of disdain,
                      And there is a frown of frowns
                      Which you strive to forget in vain,

                      For it sticks in the heart's deep core
                      And it sticks in the deep backbone -
                      And no smile that ever was smil'd,
                      But only one smile alone,

                      That betwixt the cradle and grave
                      It only once smil'd can be;
                      And, when it once is smil'd,
                      There's an end to all misery.


                                 (1800-1803)



                          ,
                           ,
                           -
                            .

                          ,
                          ,
                          ,
                            ,

                             
                            ;
                           
                           

                           
                           ;
                            --
                            .

                         . . 




                    Three Virgins at the break of day: -
                    'Whither, young man, whither away?
                    Alas for woe! alas for woe!'
                    They cry, and tears for ever flow.
                    The one was cloth'd in flames of fire,
                    The other cloth'd in iron wire,
                    The other cloth'd in tears and sighs
                    Dazzling bright before my eyes.
                    They bore a Net of golden twine
                    To hang upon the branches fine.
                    Pitying I wept to see the woe
                    That Love and Beauty undergo,
                    To be consum'd in burning fires
                    And in ungratified desires,
                    And in tears cloth'd night and day
                    Melted all my soul away.
                    When they saw my tears, a smile
                    That did Heaven itself beguile,
                    Bore the Golden Net aloft,
                    As on downy pinions soft,
                    Over the Morning of my day.
                    Underneath the net I stray,
                    Now entreating Burning Fire
                    Now entreating Iron Wire,
                    Now entreating Tears and Sighs -
                    O! when will the morning rise?



                           :
                       " , ,  ?
                        , !"  
                           .
                        -   ,
                        -   .
                         -  ,
                           .
                           
                       , ,   .
                         ,  
                          :
                          .
                         .
                            , -
                            .
                            ,
                            , -
                       ,   
                       ,  , 
                          
                       ,     .
                          ,
                         ,
                          :
                       -    ?

                        . . 




                    I travell'd thro' a land of men,
                    A land of men and women too;
                    And heard and saw such dreadful things
                    As cold earth-wanderers never knew.

                    For there the Babe is born in joy
                    That was begotten in dire woe;
                    Just as we reap in joy the fruit
                    Which we in bitter tears did sow.

                    And if the Babe is born a boy
                    He's given to a Woman Old,
                    Who nails him down upon a rock,
                    Catches his shrieks in cups of gold.

                    She binds iron thorns around his head,
                    She pierces both his hands and feet,
                    She cuts his heart out at his side,
                    To make it feel both cold and heat.

                    Her fingers number every nerve,
                    Just as a miser counts his gold;
                    She lives upon his shrieks and cries,
                    And she grows young as he grows old.

                    Till he becomes a bleeding Youth,
                    And she becomes a Virgin bright;
                    Then he rends up his manacles,
                    And binds her down for his delight.

                    He plants himself in all her nerves,
                    Just as a husbandman his mould;
                    And she becomes his dwelling-place
                    And garden fruitful seventyfold.

                    An aged Shadow, soon he fades,
                    Wandering round an earthly cot,
                    Full filled all with gems and gold
                    Which he by industry had got.

                    And these are the gems of the human soul,
                    The rubies and pearls of a love-sick eye,
                    The countless gold of the aching heart,
                    The martyr's groan and the lover's sigh.

                    They are his meat, they are his drink;
                    He feeds the beggar and the poor
                    And the wayfaring traveller:
                    For ever open is his door.

                    His grief is their eternal joy;
                    They make the roofs and walls to ring;
                    Till from the fire on the hearth
                    A little Female Babe does spring.

                    And she is all of solid fire
                    And gems and gold, that none his hand
                    Dares stretch to touch her baby form,
                    Or wrap her in his swaddling-band.

                    But she comes to the man she loves,
                    If young or old, or rich or poor;
                    They soon drive out the Aged Host,
                    A beggar at another's door.

                    He wanders weeping far away,
                    Until some other take him in;
                    Oft blind and age-bent, sore distrest,
                    Until he can a Maiden win.

                    And to allay his freezing age,
                    The poor man takes her in his arms;
                    The cottage fades before his sight,
                    The garden and its lovely charms.

                    The guests are scatter'd thro' the land,
                    For the eye altering alters all;
                    The senses roll themselves in fear,
                    And the flat earth becomes a ball;

                    The stars, sun, moon, all shrink away,
                    A desert vast without a bound,
                    And nothing left to eat or drink,
                    And a dark desert all around.

                    The honey of her infant lips,
                    The bread and wine of her sweet smile,
                    The wild game of her roving eye,
                    Does him to infancy beguile;

                    For as he eats and drinks he grows
                    Younger and younger every day;
                    And on the desert wild they both
                    Wander in terror and dismay.

                    Like the wild stag she flees away,
                    Her fear plants many a thicket wild;
                    While he pursues her night and day,
                    By various arts of love beguil'd;

                    By various arts of love and hate,
                    Till the wide desert planted o'er
                    With labyrinths of wayward love,
                    Where roam the lion, wolf, and boar.

                    Till he becomes a wayward Babe,
                    And she a weeping Woman Old.
                    Then many a lover wanders here;
                    The sun and stars are nearer roll'd;

                    The trees bring forth sweet ecstasy
                    To all who in the desert roam;
                    Till many a city there is built,
                    And many a pleasant shepherd's home.

                    But when they find the Frowning Babe,
                    Terror strikes thro' the region wide:
                    They cry 'The Babe! the Babe is born!'
                    And flee away on every side.

                    For who dare touch the Frowning Form,
                    His arm is wither'd to its root;
                    Lions, boars, wolves, all howling flee,
                    And every tree does shed its fruit.

                    And none can touch that Frowning Form,
                    Except it be a Woman Old;
                    She nails him down upon the rock,
                    And all is done as I have told.



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                      Awake, awake, my little boy!
                      Thou wast thy mother's only joy;
                      Why dost thou weep in thy gentle sleep?
                      Awake! thy father does thee keep.

                      'O, what land is the Land of Dreams?
                      What are its mountains, and what are its streams?
                      O father! I saw my mother there,
                      Among the lilies by waters fair.

                      'Among the lambs, clothed in white,
                      She walk'd with her Thomas in sweet delight.
                      I wept for joy, like a dove I mourn;
                      O! when shall I again return?'

                      Dear child, I also by pleasant streams
                      Have wander'd all night in the Land of Dreams;
                      But tho' calm and warm the waters wide, -
                      I could not get to the other side.

                      'Father,  father! what do we here
                      In this land of unbelief and fear?
                      The Land of Dreams is better far,
                      Above the light of the morning star.'



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                         . . 




               Sweet Mary, the first time she ever was there,
               Came into the ball-room among the fair;
               The young men and maidens around her throng,
               And these are the words upon every tongue:

               'An Angel is here from the heavenly climes,
               Or again does return the golden times;
               Her eyes outshine every brilliant ray,
               She opens her lips-'tis the Month of May.'

               Mary moves in soft beauty and conscious delight,
               To augment with sweet smiles all the joys of the night,
               Nor once blushes t6 own to the rest of the fair
               That sweet Love and Beauty are wortriy our care.

               In the morning the villagers rose with delight,
               And repeated with pleasure the joys of the night,
               And Mary arose among friends to be free, 
               But no friend from henceforward thou, Mary, shalt see.

               Some said she was proud, some call'd her a whore,
               And some, when she passed by, shut to the door;
               A damp cold came o'er her, her blushes all fled;
               Her lilies and roses are blighted and shed.

               'O, why was I born with a different face?
               Why was I not born like this envious race?
               Why did Heaven adorn me with bountiful hand,
               And then set me down in an envious land?

               'To be weak as a lamb and smooth as a dove,
               And not to raise envy, is call'd Christian love;
               But if you raise envy your merit's to blame
               For planting such spite in the weak and the tame.

               'I will humble my beauty, I will not dress fine,
               I will keep from the ball, and my eyes shall not shine;
               And if any girl's lover forsakes her for me
               I'll refuse him my hand, and from envy be free.'

               She went out in morning attir'd plain and neat;
               'Proud Mary's gone mad,' said the child in the street;
               She went out in morning in plain neat attire,
               And came home in evening bespatter'd with mire.

               She trembled and wept, sitting on the bedside,
               She forgot it was night, and she trembled and cried;
               She forgot it was night, she forgot it was morn,
               Her soft memory imprinted with faces of scorn;

               With faces of scorn and with eyes of disdain,
               Like foul fiends inhabiting Mary's mild brain;
               She remembers no face like the Human Divine;
               All faces have envy, sweet Mary, but thine;

               And thine is a face of sweet love in despair,
               And thine is a face of mild sorrow and care,
               And thine is a face of wild terror and fear
               That shall never be quiet till laid on its bier.



                      
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                     The Maiden caught me in the wild,
                     Where I was dancing merrily;
                     She put me into her Cabinet,
                     And lock'd me up with a golden key,

                     This Cabinet is form'd of gold
                     And pearl and crystal shining bright,
                     And within it opens into a world
                     And a little lovely moony night.

                     Another England there I saw,
                     Another London with its Tower,
                     Another Thames and other hills,
                     And another pleasant Surrey bower.

                     Another Maiden like herself,
                     Translucent, lovely, shining clear,
                     Threefold each in the other clos'd -
                     O, what a pleasant trembling fear!

                     O, what a smile! a threefold smile
                     Fill'd me, that like a flame I burn'd;
                     I bent to kiss the lovely Maid,
                     And found a threefold kiss return'd.

                     I strove to seize the inmost form
                     With ardour fierce and hands of flame,
                     But burst the Crystal Cabinet,
                     And like a weeping Babe became-

                     A weeping Babe upon the wild,
                     And weeping Woman pale reclin'd,
                     And in the outward air again
                     I fill'd with woes the passing wind.



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                    'I die, I die!' the Mother said,
                    'My children die for lack of bread.
                    What more has the merciless tyrant said?'
                    The Monk sat down on the stony bed.

                    The blood red ran from the Grey Monk's side,
                    His hands and feet were wounded wide,
                    His body bent, his arms and knees
                    Like to the roots of ancient trees.

                    His eye was dry; no tear could flow:
                    A hollow groan first spoke his woe.
                    He trembled and shudder'd upon the bed;
                    At length with a feeble cry he said:

                    'When God commanded this hand to write
                    In the studious hours of deep midnight,
                    He told me the writing I wrote should prove
                    The bane of all that on Earth I love.

                    'My brother starv'd between two walls,
                    His children's cry my soul appalls;
                    I mock'd at the wrack and griding chain,
                    My bent body mocks their torturing pain.

                    'Thy father drew his sword in the North,
                    With his thousands strong he marched forth;
                    Thy brother has arm'd himself in steel,
                    To avenge the wrongs thy children feel.

                    'But vain the sword and vain the bow,
                    They never can War's overthrow.
                    The hermit's prayer and the widow's tear
                    Alone can free the world from fear.

                    'For a tear is an intellectual thing,
                    And a sigh is the sword of an Angel King,
                    And the bitter groan of the martyr's woe
                    Is an arrow from the Almighty's bow.

                    'The hand of Vengeance found the bed
                    To which the purple tyrant fled;
                    The iron hand crush'd the tyrant's head,
                    And became a tyrant in his stead.'



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                  To see a World in a grain of sand,
                  And a Heaven in a wild flower,
                  Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand,
                  And Eternity in an hour.
                  A robin redbreast in a cage
                  Puts all Heaven in a rage.
                  A dove-house fill'd with doves and pigeons
                  Shudders Hell thro' all its regions.
                  A dog starv'd at his master's gate
                  Predicts the ruin of the State.
                  A horse misus'd upon the road
                  Calls to Heaven for human blood.
                  Each outcry of the hunted hare
                  A fibre from the brain does tear.
                  A skylark wounded in the wing,
                  A cherubim does cease to sing.
                  The game-cock dipt and arm'd for fight
                  Does the rising sun affright.
                  Every wolfs and lion's howl
                  Raises from Hell a Human soul.
                  The wild deer, wandering here and there,
                  Keeps the Human soul from care.
                  The lamb misus'd breeds public strife,
                  And yet forgives the butcher's knife.
                  The bat that flits at close of eve
                  Has left the brain that won't believe.
                  The owl that calls upon the night
                  Speaks the unbeliever's fright.
                  He who shall hurt the little wren
                  Shall never be belov'd by men.
                  He who the ox to wrath has mov'd
                  Shall never be by woman lov'd.
                  The wanton boy that kills the fly
                  Shall feel the spider's enmity.
                  He who torments the chafer's sprite
                  Weaves a bower in endless night.
                  The caterpillar on the leaf
                  Repeats to thee thy mother's grief.
                  Kill not the moth nor butterfly,
                  For the Last Judgement draweth nigh.
                  He who shall train the horse to war
                  Shall never pass the polar bar.
                  The beggar's dog and widow's cat,
                  Feed them, and thou wilt grow fat.
                  The gnat that sings his summer's song
                  Poison gets from Slander's tongue.
                  The poison of the snake and newt
                  Is the sweat of Envy's foot.
                  The poison of the honey-bee
                  Is the artist's jealousy.
                  The prince's robes and beggar's rags
                  Are toadstools on the miser's bags.
                  A truth that's told with bad intent
                  Beats all the lies you can invent.
                  It is right it should be so;
                  Man was made for joy and woe;
                  And when this we rightly know,
                  Thro' the world we safely go.
                  Joy and woe are woven fine,
                  A clothing for the soul divine;
                  Under every grief and pine
                  Runs a joy with silken twine.
                  The babe is more than swaddling-bands;
                  Throughout all these human lands
                  Tools were made, and born were hands,
                  Every farmer understands. -
                  Every tear from every eye
                  Becomes a babe in Eternity;
                  This is caught by Females bright,
                  And return'd to its own delight.
                  The bleat, the bark, bellow, and roar
                  Are waves that beat on Heaven's shore.
                  The babe that weeps the rod beneath
                  Writes revenge in realms of death.
                  The beggar's rags, fluttering in air,
                  Does to rags the heavens tear.
                  The soldier, arm'd with sword and gun,
                  Palsied strikes the summer's sun.
                  The poor man's farthing is worth more
                  Than all the gold on Afric's shore.
                  One mite wrung from the labourer's hands
                  Shall buy and sell the miser's lands
                  Or, if protected from on high,
                  Does that whole nation sell and buy.
                  He who mocks the infant's faith
                  Shall be mock'd in Age and Death.
                  He who shall teach the child to doubt
                  The rotting grave shall ne'er get out.
                  He who respects the infant's faith
                  Triumphs over Hell and Death.
                  The child's toys and the old man's reasons
                  Are the fruits of the two seasons.
                  The questioner, who sits so sly,
                  Shall never know how to reply.
                  He who replies to words of Doubt
                  Doth put the light of knowledge out.
                  The strongest poison ever known
                  Came from Caesar's laurel crown.
                  Nought can deform the human race
                  Like to the armour's iron brace.
                  When gold and gems adorn the plough
                  To peaceful arts shall Envy bow.
                  A riddle, or the cricket's cry,
                  Is to Doubt a fit reply.
                  The emmet's inch and eagle's mile
                  Make lame Philosophy to smile.
                  He who doubts from what he sees
                  Will ne'er believe, do what you please.
                  If the Sun and Moon should doubt,
                  They'd immediately go out.
                  To be in a passion you good may do,
                  But no good if a passion is in you.
                  The whore and gambler, by the state
                  Licensed, build that nation's fate.
                  The harlot's cry from street to street
                  Shall weave Old England's winding-sheet
                  The winner's shout, the loser's curse,
                  Dance before dead England's hearse.
                  Every night and every morn
                  Some to misery are born.
                  Every morn and every night
                  Some are born to sweet delight.
                  Some are born to sweet delight,
                  Some are born to endless night.
                  We are led to believe a lie
                  When we see not thro' the eye,
                  Which was born in a night, to perish in a night,
                  When the Soul slept in beams of light.
                  God appears, and God is Light,
                  To those poor souls who dwell in Night;
                  But does a Human Form display
                  To those who dwell in realms of Day.




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                 Little Mary Bell had a Fairy in a nut,
                 Long John Brown had the Devil in his gut;
                 Long John Brown lov'd little Mary Bell,
                 And the Fairy drew the Devil into the nutshell.

                 Her Fairy skipp'd out and her Fairy skipp'd in;

                 He laugh'd at the Devil, saying 'Love is a sin.'
                 The Devil he raged, and the Devil he was wroth,
                 And the Devil enter'd into the young man's broth.

                 He was soon in the gut of the loving young swain,
                 For John ate and drank to drive away love's pain;

                 But all he could do he grew thinner and thinner,
                 Tho' he ate and drank as much as ten men for his dinner.

                 Some said he had a wolf in his stomach day and night,
                 Some said he had the Devil, and they guess'd right;
                 The Fairy skipp'd about in his glory, joy and pride,
                 And he laugh'd at the Devil till poor John Brown died.

                 Then the Fairy skipp'd out of the old nutshell,
                 And woe and alack for pretty Mary Bell!
                 For the Devil crept in when the Fairy skipp'd out,
                 And there goes Miss Bell with her fusty old nut.



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                  I wonder whether the girls are mad,
                  And I wonder whether they mean to kill,
                  And I wonder if William Bond will die,
                  For assuredly he is very ill.

                  He went to church in a May morning,
                  Attended by Fairies, one, two, and three;
                  But the Angels of Providence drove them away,
                  And he return'd home in misery.

                  He went not out to the field nor fold,
                  He went not out to the village nor town,
                  But he came home in a black, black cloud,
                  And took to his bed, and there lay down.

                  And an Angel of Providence at his feet,
                  And an Angel of Providence at his head,
                  And in the midst a black, black cloud,
                  And in the midst the sick man on his bed.

                  And on his right hand was Mary Green,
                  And on his left hand was his sister Jane,
                  And their tears fell thro' the black, black cloud
                  To drive away the sick man's pain.

                  'O William, if thou dost another love,
                  Dost another love better than poor Mary,
                  Go and take that other to be thy wife,
                  And Mary Green shall her servant be.'

                  'Yes, Mary, I do another love,
                  Another I love far better than thee,
                  And another I will have for my wife;
                  Then what have I to do with thee?

                  'For thou art melancholy pale,
                  And on thy head is the cold moon's shine,
                  But she is ruddy and bright as day,
                  And the sunbeams dazzle from her eyne.'

                  Mary trembled and Mary chill'd,
                  And Mary fell down on the right-hand floor,
                  That William Bond and his sister Jane
                  Scare could recover Mary more.

                  When Mary woke and found her laid
                  On the right hand of her William dear,
                  On the right hand of his loved bed,
                  And saw her William Bond so near,

                  The Fairies that fled from William Bond
                  Danced around her shining head;
                  They danced over the pillow white,
                  And the Angels of Providence left the bed.

                  I thought Love lived in the hot sunshine,
                  But  he lives in the moony light!
                  I thought to find Love in the heat of day,
                  But sweet Love is the comforter of night.

                  Seek Love in the pity of others' woe,
                  In the gentle relief of another's care,
                  In the darkness of night and the winter's snow,
                  In the naked and outcast, seek Love there!



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                        . . 




                                THEL'S MOTTO

                   Does the Eagle know what is in the pit
                   Or wilt thou go ask the Mole?
                   Can Wisdom be put in a silver rod,
                   Or Love in a golden bowl?



       The daughters of [the] Seraphim led round their sunny flocks -
       All but the youngest: she in paleness sought the secret air,
       To fade away like morning beauty from her mortal day:
       Down by the river of Adona her soft voice is heard,
       And thus her gentle lamentation falls like morning dew: -

       'O life of this our spring! why fades the lotus of the water?
       Why fade these children of the spring, born but to smile and fall?
       Ah! Thel is like a wat'ry bow, and like a parting cloud;
       Like a reflection in a glass; like shadows in the water;
       Like dreams of infants, like a smile upon an infant's face;
       Like the dove's voice; like transient day; like music in the air.
       Ah! gentle may I lay me down, and gentle rest my head,
       And gentle sleep the sleep of death, and gentle hear the voice
       Of Him that walketh in the garden in the evening time.'

       The Lily of the Valley, breathing in the humble grass,
       Answered the lovely maid and said: I am a wat'ry weed,
       And I am very small, and love to dwell in lowly vales;
       So weak, the gilded butterfly scarce perches on my head.
       Yet I am visited from heaven, and He that smiles on all
       Walks in the valley, and each morn over me spreads His hand,
       Saying, "Rejoice, thou humble grass, thou new-born lily-flower,
       Thou gentle maid of silent valleys and of modest brooks;
       For thou shalt be clothed in light, and fed with morning manna,
       Till summer's heat melts thee beside the fountains and the springs,
       To flourish in eternal vales." Then why should Thel complain?
       Why should the mistress of the vales of Har utter a sigh?'

       She ceas'd, and smil'd in tears, then sat down in her silver shrine.

       Thel answer'd: 'O thou little Virgin of the peaceful valley,
       Giving to those that cannot crave, the voiceless, the o'ertired;
       Thy breath doth nourish the innocent lamb, he smells thy milky garments,
       He crops thy flowers while thou sittest smiling in his face,
       Wiping his mild and meeking mouth from all contagious taints.
       Thy wine doth purify the golden honey; thy perfume,
       Which thou dost scatter on every little'blade of grass that springs,
       Revives the milked cow, and tames the fire-breathing steed.
       But Thel is like a faint cloud kindled at the rising sun:
       I vanish from my pearly throne, and who shall find my place?'

       'Queen of the vales,' the Lily answer'd, 'ask the tender Cloud,
       And it shall tell thee why it glitters in the morning sky.
       And why it scatters its bright beauty thro' the humid air.
       Descend,  little Cloud, and hover before the eyes of Thel.'

       The Cloud descended, and the Lily bowed her modest head,
       And went to mind her numerous charge among the verdant grass.



       'O little Cloud,' the Virgin said, T charge thee tell to me
       Why thou complainest not, when in one hour thou fade away:
       Then we shall seek thee, but not find. Ah! Thel is like to thee:
       I pass away: yet I complain, and no one hears my voice.'
       The Cloud then show'd his golden head and his bright form emerg'd,
       Hovering and glittering on the air before the face of Thel.

       'O Virgin, know'st thou not our steeds drink of the golden springs
       Where Luvah doth renew his horses? Look'st thou on my youth,
       And fearest thou, because I vanish and am seen no more,
       Nothing remains?  Maid, I tell thee, when I pass away,
       It is to tenfold life, to love, to peace, and raptures holy:
       Unseen descending, weigh my light wings upon balmy flowers,
       And court the fair-eyed dew, to take me to her shining tent:
       The weeping virgin, trembling, kneels before the risen sun,
       Till we arise link'd in a golden band and never part,
       But walk united, bearing food to all out tender flowers.'

       'Dost thou,  little Cloud? I fear that I am not like thee,
       For I walk thro' the vales of Har, and smell the sweetest flowers,
       But I feed not the little flowers; I hear the warbling birds,
       But I feed not the warbling birds; they fly and seek their food:
       But Thel delights in these no more, because I fade away;
       And all shall say, "Without a use this shining woman liv'd,
       Or did she only live to be at death the food of worms?" '

       The Cloud reclin'd upon his airy throne, and answer'd thus: -

       'Then if thou art the food of worms,  Virgin of the skies,
       How great thy use, how great thy blessing! Everything that lives
       Lives not alone nor for itself. Fear not, and I will call
       The weak Worm from its lowly bed, and thou shalt hear its voice.
       Come forth, Worm of the silent valley, to thy pensive Queen.'
       The helpless Worm arose, and sat upon the Lily's leaf,
       And the bright Cloud sail'd on, to find his partner in the vale.



       Then Thel astonish'd view'd the Worm upon its dewy bed.

       'Art thou a Worm? Image of weakness, art thou but a Worm?
       I see thee like an infant wrapped in the Lily's leaf.
       Ah! weep not, little voice, thou canst not speak, but thou canst weep.
       Is this a Worm? I see thee lay helpless and naked, weeping,
       And none to answer, none to cherish thee with mother's smiles.'

       The Clod of Clay heard the Worm's voice and rais'd her pitying head:
       She bow'd over the weeping infant, and her life exhal'd
       In milky fondness: then on Thel she fix'd her humble eyes.

       'O Beauty of the vales of Har! we live not for ourselves.
       Thou seest me, the meanest thing, and so I am indeed.
       My bosom of itself is cold, and of itself is dark;
       But He, that loves the lowly, pours His oil upon my head,
       And kisses me, and binds His nuptial bands around my breast,
       And says: "Thou mother of my children, I have loved thee,
       And I have given thee a crown that none can take away."
       But how this is, sweet Maid, I know not, and I cannot know;
       I ponder, and I cannot ponder; yet I live and love.'

       The Daughter of Beauty wip'd her pitying tears with her white veil,
       And said: 'Alas! I knew not this, and therefore did I weep.
       That God would love a worm I knew, and punish the evil foot
       That wilful bruis'd its helpless form; but that He cherish'd it
       With milk and oil I never knew, and therefore did I weep;
       And I complain'd in the mild air, because I fade away,
       And lay me down in thy cold bed, and leave my shining lot.'

       'Queen of the vales,' the matron Clay answer'd, 'I heard thy sighs,
       And all thy moans flew o'er my roof, but I have call'd them down.
       Wilt thou,  Queen, enter my house? "Tis given thee to enter
       And to return: fear nothing, enter with thy virgin feet.'



       The eternal gates' terrific Porter lifted the northern bar:
       Thel enter'd in and saw the secrets of the Jand unknown.
       She saw the couches of the dead, and where the fibrous roots
       Of every heart on earth infixes deep its restless twists:
       A land of sorrows and of tears where never smile was seen.

       She wander'd in the land of clouds thro' valleys dark, list'ning
       Dolours and lamentations; waiting oft beside a dewy grave
       She stood in silence, list'ning to the voices of the ground,
       Till to her own grave-plot she came, and there she sat down,
       And heard this voice of sorrow breathed from the hollow pit.

       'Why cannot the Ear be closed to its own destruction?
       Or the glist'ning Eye to the poison of a smile?
       Why are Eyelids stor'd with arrows ready drawn,
       Where a thousand fighting men in ambusji lie,
       Or an Eye of gifts and graces show'rhig fruits and coined gold?
       Why a Tongue impress'd with honey from every wind?
       Why an Ear, a whirlpool fierce to draw creations in?
       Why a Nostril wide inhaling terror, trembling, and affrigfit?
       Why a tender curb upon the youthful, burning boy?
       Why a little curtain of flesh on the bed of our desire?'

       The Virgin started from her seat, apd with a shriek
       Fled back unhinder'd till she came into the vales of Har.







                                ,    ?
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                                   ,
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                . . 






                    Rintrah roars, and shakes his fires
                         in the burden'd air;
                    Hungry clouds swag on the deep.

                    Once meek, and in a perilous path,
                    The just man kept his course along
                    The vale of death.
                    Roses are planted where thorns grow,
                    And on the barren heath
                    Sing the honey bees.

                    Then the perilous path was planted,
                    And a river and a spring
                    On every cliff and tomb,
                    And on the bleached bones
                    Red clay brought forth;

                    Till the villain left the paths of ease,
                    To walk in perilous paths, and drive
                    The just man into barren climes.

                    Now the sneaking serpent walks
                    In mild humility,
                    And the just man rages in the wilds
                    Where lions roam.

                    Rintrah roars, and shakes his fires in the burden'd air;
                    Hungry clouds swag on the deep.

                                   -----





                         
                             ;
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                        .

                           :
                          
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                            ;
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                                   -----

     As  a  new  heaven is begun, and it is now thirty-three years since its
advent, the Eternal Hell revives. And lo! Swedenborg is the Angel sitting at
the  tomb: his writings are the linen clothes folded up. Now is the dominion
of  Edom,  and  the  return of Adam into Paradise. See Isaiah xxxiv and xxxv
chap.
     Without   Contraries  is  no  progression.  Attraction  and  Repulsion,
Reason and Energy, Love and Hate, are necessary to Human existence.
     From  these  contraries  spring  what the religious call Good and Evil.
Good  is  the  passive  that obeys Reason. Evil is the active springing from
Energy.
     Good is Heaven. Evil is Hell.

                                   -----



     All  Bibles  or  sacred  codes  have  been  the causes of the following
Errors: -
     1. That Man has two real existing principles, viz. a Body and a Soul.
     2.  That  Energy, call'd Evil, is alone from the Body; and that Reason,
call'd Good, is alone from the Soul.
     3. That God will torment Man in Eternity for following his Energies.
     But the following Contraries to these are True: -
     1.  Man  has  no Body distinct from his Soul; for that call'd Body is a
portion  of  Soul  discern'd by the five Senses, the chief inlets of Soul in
this age.
     2.  Energy  is  the  only life, and is from the Body; and Reason is the
bound or outward circumference of Energy.
     3. Energy is Eternal Delight.

                                   -----

                 . 
:  ,    ,      ,       - 
.    ,     ;  
,  XXXIV  XXXV.
         .   , 
 ,       .
         ,         .
    .      .
      -  .  -  .

                                   -----



     -    -   :

     1.       .

     2.  ,   ,  ;  ,   ,  .

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:

     1.      ,   -      
  .

     2.    -          ,    
    .
     3.  -  .

                                   -----

     Those  who  restrain  Desire, do so because theirs is weak enough to be
restrained;  and  the  restrainer or Reason usurps its place and governs the
unwilling.
     And  being  restrained,  it by degrees becomes passive, till it is only
the shadow of Desire.
     The  history  of  this  is written in _Paradise Lost_, and the Governor
or Reason is call'd Messiah.
     And  the  original  Archangel,  or  possessor  of  the  command  of the
Heavenly Host, is call'd the Devil or Satan, and his children are call'd Sin
and Death.
     But in the Book of Job, Milton's Messiah is called Satan.
     For this history has been adopted by both parties.
     It indeed appear'd to Reason as if Desire was cast out; but the Devil's
account is, that the Messiah fell, and formed a Heaven of what he stole from
the Abyss.
     This  is  shown in the Gospel, where he prays to the Father to send the
Comforter, or Desire, that Reason may have Ideas to build on; the Jehovah of
the Bible being no other than he who dwells in flaming fire.
     Know that after Christ's death, he became Jehovah.
     But  in  Milton,  the  Father  is  Destiny, the Son a Ratio of the five
senses, and the Holy-ghost Vacuum!
     Note.  The  reason  Milton wrote in fetters when he wrote of Angels and
God,  and at liberty when of Devils and Hell, is because he was a true Poet,
and of the Devil's party without knowing it.

                                   -----

         ,      :    
    .

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    ,          ,       ,
 .

                                   -----



     As I was walking among the fires of Hell, delighted with the enjoyments
of  Genius, which to Angels look like torment and insanity, I collected some
of  their  Proverbs;  thinking that as the sayings used in a nation mark its
character, so the Proverbs of Hell show the nature of Infernal wisdom better
than any description of buildings or garments.
     When  I came home, on the abyss of the five senses, where a flat- sided
steep  frowns  over the present world, I saw a mighty Devil, folded in black
clouds, hovering on the sides of the rock: with corroding fires he wrote the
following  sentence  now  perceived by the minds of men, and read by them on
earth: -

          _How do you know but ev'ry Bird that cuts the airy way,
          Is an immense World of Delight, clos'd by your senses five_?


                                   -----



         ,       
;        ,      
,        ,  
  .
      ,    ,     
        -     
,     :

             , ,  ,      
               ,   !

                                   -----



     In seed time learn, in harvest teach, in winter enjoy.
     Drive your cart and your plough over the bones of the dead.
     The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.
     Prudence is a rich, ugly old maid courted by Incapacity.

     He who desires but acts not, breeds pestilence.
     The cut worm forgives the plough.
     Dip him in the river who loves water.
     A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees.

     He whose face gives no light, shall never become a star.
     Eternity is in love with the productions of time.
     The busy bee has no time for sorrow.
     The  hours  of folly are measur'd by the clock; but of wisdom, no clock
can measure.
     All wholesome food is caught without a net or a trap.
     Bring out number, weight, and measure in a year of dearth.
     No bird soars too high, if he soars with his own wings.

     A dead body revenges not injuries.
     The most sublime act is to set another before you.
     If the fool would persist in his folly he would become wise.
     Folly is the cloak of knavery.
     Shame is Pride's cloak.
     Prisoners  are  built  with  stones  of  Law,  brothels  with bricks of
Religion.
     The pride of the peacock is the glory of God.
     The lust of the goat is the bounty of God.
     The wrath of the lion is the wisdom of God.
     The nakedness of woman is the work of God.
     Excess of sorrow laughs. Excess of joy weeps.
     The  roaring  of lions, the howling of wolves, the raging of the stormy
sea,  and  the  destructive sword are portions of eternity too great for the
eye of man.
     The fox condemns the trap, not himself.
     Joys impregnate. Sorrows bring forth.
     Let man wear the fell of the lion, woman the fleece of the sheep.
     The bird a nest, the spider a web, man friendship.
     The  selfish, smiling fool, and the sullen, frowning fool shall be both
thought wise, that they may be a rod.
     What is now proved was once only imagin'd.
     The  rat, the mouse, the fox, the rabbit watch the roots; the lion, the
tiger, the horse, the elephant watch the fruits.
     The cistern contains: the fountain overflows.
     One thought fills immensity.
     Always be ready to speak your mind, and a base man will avoid you.
     Everything possible to be believ'd is an image of truth.
     The  eagle never lost so much time as when he submitted to learn of the
crow.
     The fox provides for himself; but God provides for the lion.
     Think in the morning. Act in the noon. Eat in the evening. Sleep in the
night.
     He who has suffer'd you to impose on him, knows you.
     As the plough follows words, so God rewards prayers.
     The tigers of wrath are wiser than the horses of instruction.
     Expect poison from the standing water.
     You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough.
     Listen to the fool's reproach! it is a kingly title!
     The  eyes  of  fire, the nostrils of air, the mouth of water, the beard
of earth.
     The weak in courage is strong in cunning.
     The  apple  tree never asks the beech ftow he shall grow; nor the lion,
the horse, how he shall take his prey.
     The thankful receiver bears a plentiful harvest.
     If others had not been foolish, we should be so.
     The soul of sweet delight can never be defil'd.
     When  thou  seest an eagle, thou seest a portion of Genius; lift up thy
head!
     As  the  caterpillar  chooses the fairest leaves to lay her eggs on, so
the priest lays his curse on the fairest joys.
     To create a little flower is the labour of ages.
     Damn braces. Bless relaxes.
     The best wine is the oldest, the best water the newest.

     Prayers plough not! Praises reap not!
     Joys laugh not! Sorrows weep not!
     The  head Sublime, the heart Pathos, the genitals Beauty, the hands and
feet Proportion.
     As  the  air  to  a  bird  or  the sea to a fish, so is contempt to the
contemptible.
     The  crow  wish'd  everything  was  black,  the owl that everything was
white.
     Exuberance is Beauty.
     If the lion was advised by the fox, he would be cunning.
     Improvement  makes  straight  roads;  but  the  crooked  roads  without
improvement are roads of Genius.
     Sooner murder an infant in its cradle than nurse unacted desires.
     Where man is not, nature is barren.
     Truth can never be told so as to be understood, and not be believ'd.
     Enough! or Too much.

                                   -----



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     ! -   , : !

                                   -----

     The  ancient Poets animated all sensible objects with Gods or Geniuses,
calling  them  by  the names and adorning them with the properties of woods,
rivers,  mountains,  lakes, cities, nations, and whatever their enlarged and
numerous senses could perceive.
     And  particularly  they  studied  the  Genius of each city and country,
placing it under its Mental Deity;
     Till  a  System  was formed, which some took advantage of, and enslav'd
the  vulgar  by  attempting  to  realise or abstract the Mental Deities from
their objects-thus began Priesthood;

     Choosing forms of worship from poetic'tales.
     And at length they pronounc'd that the Gods had order'd such things.
     Thus men forgot that All Deities reside in the Human breast.

                                   -----

          ,     
,                , , ,
, ,       ,  .
                   
    .
              ;         
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,              :    
;
         ,  .
       ,      .

       ,       .

                                   -----



     The  Prophets  Isaiah  and  Ezekiel dined with me, and I asked them how
they dared so roundly to assert that God spoke to them; and whether they did
not  think at the time that they would be misunderstood, and so be the cause
of imposition.
     Isaiah  answer'd:  'I  saw no God, nor heard any, in a finite organical
perception;  but  my  senses discover'd the infinite in everything, and as I
was  then  persuaded,  and  remain  confirm'd,  that  the  voice  of  honest
indignation is the voice of God, I cared not for consequences, but wrote.'
     Then I asked: 'Does a firm persuasion that a thing is so, make it so?'
     He replied: 'All Poets believe that it does, and in ages of imagination
this  firm  persuasion removed mountains; but many are not capable of a firm
persuasion of anything.'
     Then  Ezekiel  said:  'The  philosophy  of  the  East  taught the first
principles  of  human  perception.  Some  nations held one principle for the
origin, and some another: we of Israel taught that the Poetic Genius (as you
now  call  it) was the first principle and all the others merely derivative,
which  was  the cause of our despising the Priests and Philosophers of other
countries,  and  prophesying  that  all  Gods  would  at  last  be proved to
originate  in  ours  and  to be the tributaries of the Poetic Genius. It was
this  that  our  great poet, King David, desired so fervently and invokes so
pathetically,  saying  by this he conquers enemies and governs kingdoms; and
we  so  loved  our  God,  that  we  cursed  in  his  name all the Deities of
surrounding  nations,  and  asserted  that  they  had  rebelled.  From these
opinions  the vulgar came to think that all nations would at last be subject
to the Jews.'
     'This,'  said  he, 'like all firm persuasions, is come to pass; for all
nations  believe  the Jews' code and worship the Jews' god, and what greater
subjection can be?'
     I  heard  this  with  some  wonder, and must confess my own conviction.
After dinner I ask'd Isaiah to favour the world with his lost works; he said
none of equal value was lost. Ezekiel said the same of his.

     I also asked Isaiah what made him go naked and barefoot three years. He
answer'd: 'The same that made our friend Diogenes, the Grecian.'
     I  then  asked  Ezekiel  why  he ate dung, and lay so long on his right
and  left  side.  He  answer'd,  'The  desire  of  raising  other men into a
perception  of the infinite: this the North American tribes practise, and is
he  honest who resists his genius or conscience only for the sake of present
ease or gratification?'

                                   -----



             ,   ,  
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                                   -----

     The  ancient  tradition that the; world will be consumed in fire at the
end of six thousand years is true^as I have heard from Hell.
     For  the cherub with his flaming sword is hereby commanded to leave his
guard at tree of life; and when he does, the whole creation will be consumed
and appear infinite and holy, whereas it now appears finite and corrupt.
     This will come to pass by an improvement of sensual enjoyment.
     But  first  the notion that man has a body distinct from his soul is to
be  expunged;  this  I  shall  do  by  printing  in  the infernal method, by
corrosives,  which  in  Hell  are  salutary  and medicinal, melting apparent
surfaces away, and displaying the infinite which was hid.

     If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to man
as it is, infinite.
     For  man  has  closed  himself  up till he sees all things thro' narrow
chinks of his cavern.

                                   -----

           ,         
, -     .
               , 
      ,     .

         -    .

        ,     ;    
        ,      ,  
        .

          ,    .
                  .

                                   -----



     I  was  in  a  Printing-house  in  Hell,  and  saw  the method in which
knowledge is transmitted from generation to generation.

     In the first chamber was a Dragon-Man, clearing away the rubbish from a
cave's mouth; within, a number of Dragons were hollowing the cave.
     In  the second chamber was a Viper folding round the rock and the cave,
and others adorning it with gold, silver, and precious stones.
     In  the  third  chamber was an Eagle with wings and feathers of air: he
caused  the  inside  of  the  cave  to  be  infinite. Around were numbers of
Eagle-like men who built palaces in the immense cliffs.
     In  the  fourth  chamber  were Lions of flaming fire, raging around and
melting the metals into living fluids.
     In the fifth chamber were Unnamed forms, which cast the metals into the
expanse.
     There  they  were  received  by Men who occupied the sixth chamber, and
took the forms of books and were arranged in libraries.

                                   -----



         ,       .

           -        ,  
  .

       -    ,    , 
 .

         -       , 
  -     .

        -        
.

             .

       -   ,   ,  .

                                   -----

     The  Giants  who  formed this world into its sensual existence, and now
seem  to  live  in it in chains, are in truth the causes of its life and the
sources  of  all  activity;  but the chains are the cunning of weak and tame
minds  which have power to resist energy. According to the proverb, the weak
in courage is strong in cunning.

     Thus  one portion of being is the Prolific, the other the Devouring. To
the  Devourer  it  seems as if the producer was in his chains; but it is not
so, he only takes portions of existence and fancies that the whole.
     But  the  Prolific would cease to be Prolific unless the Devourer, as a
sea, received the excess of his delights.
     Some  will  say:  'Is  not God alone the Prolific?' I answer: 'God only
Acts and Is, in existing beings or Men.'
     These  two  classes  of  men  are always upon earth, and they should be
enemies: whoever tries to reconcile them seeks to destroy existence.

     Religion is an endeavour to reconcile the two.
     _Note_. Jesus Christ did not wish to unite, but to separate them, as in
the  Parable of sheep and goats! And He says: 'I came not to send Peace, but
a Sword.'

     Messiah  or  Satan  or  Tempter  was  formerly thought to be one of the
Antediluvians who are our Energies.

                                   -----

                     
       ;   -    ,
   ,          ;    
:    .

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     ,      ,    -   , 
  .

                                   -----



     An  Angel  came  to  me  and  said:  'O  pitiable, foolish young man! 
horrible!    dreadful  state!  Consider  the  hot, burning dungeon thou art
preparing  for  thyself  to  all  Eternity,  to which thou art going in such
career.'
     I  said:  'Perhaps  you  will be willing to show me my eternal lot, and
we  will  contemplate  together upon it, and see whether your lot or mine is
most desirable.'
     So  he  took  me  thro' a stable, and thro' a church, and down into the
church  vault,  at  the end of which was a mill. Thro' the mill we went, and
came  to  a  cave. Down the winding cavern we groped our tedious way, till a
void boundless as a nether sky appear'd beneath us, and we held by the roots
of  trees, and hung over this immensity. But I said: 'If you please, we will
commit  ourselves  to this void, and see whether Providence is here also. If
you will not, I will.' But he answer'd: 'Do not presume,  young man, but as
we  here  remain,  behold  thy  lot which will soon appear when the darkness
passes away.'
     So  I  remain'd with him, sitting in the twisted root of an oak. He was
suspended in a fungus, which hung with the head downward into the deep.
     By  degrees  we  beheld  the  infinite  Abyss,  fiery as the smoke of a
burning  city;  beneath  us,  at an immense distance, was the sun, black but
shining;  round  it  were  fiery  tracks  on  which  revolv'd  vast spiders,
crawling after their prey, which flew, or rather swum, in the infinite deep,
in  the  most terrific shapes of animals sprung from corruption; and the air
was  full  of  them,  and  seem'd composed of them-these are Devils, and are
called Powers of the Air. I now asked my companion which was my eternal lot?
He said: 'Between the black and white spiders.'
     But  now,  from  between  the black and white spiders, a cloud and fire
burst  and rolled thro' the deep, blackening all beneath; so that the nether
deep  grew  black as a sea, and rolled with a terrible noise. Beneath us was
nothing  now  to  be seen but a black tempest, till looking East between the
clouds  and  the  waves  we saw a cataract of blood mixed with fire, and not
many  stones'  throw  from  us  appear'd  and sunk again the scaly fold of a
monstrous  serpent.  At  last,  to  the  East,  distant about three degrees,
appear'd  a  fiery  crest  above the waves. Slowly it reared like a ridge of
golden  rocks, till we discover'd two globes of crimson fire, from which the
sea  fled  away  in  clouds  of  smoke;  and  now  we saw it was the head of
Leviathan.  His  forehead  was divided into streaks of green and purple like
those  on  a tiger's forehead. Soon we saw his mouth and red gills hang just
above the raging foam, tinging the black deep with beams of blood, advancing
toward us with all the fury of a Spiritual Existence.

                                   -----



           : "  !  !  !
        ".

      : "   ,    ,   ,
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                                   -----

     My  friend  the  Angel  climb'd  up  from  his station into the mill: I
remain'd  alone,  and  then  this appearance was no more; but I found myself
sitting  on  a pleasant bank beside a river, by moonlight, hearing a harper,
who  sung  to  the  harp;  and  his theme was: "The man who never alters his
opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind.'
     But  I  arose and sought for the mill, and there I found my Angel, who,
surprised, asked me how I escaped.
     I  answer'd:  'All  that we saw was owing to your metaphysics; for when
you  ran  away,  I found myself on a bank by moonlight hearing a harper. But
now  we  have seen my eternal lot, shall I show you yours?' He laugh'd at my
proposal; but I, by force, suddenly caught him in my arms, and flew westerly
thro'  the  night,  till  we  were elevated above the earth's shadow; then I
flung  myself  with  him  directly  into the body of the sun. Here I clothed
myself  in  white, and taking in my hand Swedenborg's volumes, sunk from the
glorious  clime,  and  passed all the planets till we came to Saturn. Here I
stay'd  to  rest, and then leap'd into the void between Saturn and the fixed
stars.
     'Here,' said I, 'is your lot, in this space-if space it may be call'd.'
Soon  we  saw  the  stable  and  the church, and I took him to the altar and
open'd  the  Bible,  and  lo!  it  was  a  deep pit, into which I descended,
driving  the  Angel  before  me.  Soon  we saw seven houses of brick. One we
enter'd;  in  it were a number of monkeys, baboons, and all of that species,
chain'd  by  the middle, grinning and snatching at one another, but withheld
by  the  shortness  of their chains. However, I saw that they sometimes grew
numerous,  and  then the weak were caught by the strong, and with a grinning
aspect,  first  coupled  with,  and then devour'd, by plucking off first one
limb  and then another, till the body was left a helpless trunk. This, after
grinning  and  kissing it with seeming fondness, they devour'd too; and here
and  there I saw one savourily picking the flesh off of his own tail. As the
stench  terribly  annoy'd  us  both, we went into the mill, and I in my hand
brought the skeleton of a body, which in the mill was Aristotle's Analytics.
     So  the  Angel  said:  'Thy  phantasy  has  imposed  upon  me, and thou
oughtest to be ashamed.'
     I  answer'd:  'We  impose  on  one  another, and it is but lost time to
converse with you whose works are only Analytics.'

                                   -----

               ;    ,   
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                                   -----

     I  have always found that Angels have the vanity to speak of themselves
as  the  Only  Wise.  This they do with a confident insolence sprouting from
systematic reasoning.
     Thus  Swedenborg  boasts  that  what  he writes is new; tho' it is only
the Contents or Index of already publish'd books.
     A  man  carried  a monkey about for a show, and because he was a little
wiser  than  the monkey, grew vain, and conceiv'd himself as much wiser than
seven  men.  It  is  so with Swedenborg: he shows the folly of churches, and
exposes hypocrites, till he imagines that all are religious, and himself the
single one on earth that ever broke a net.
     Now  hear  a  plain fact: Swedenborg has not written one new truth. Now
hear another: he has written all the old falsehoods.
     And  now  hear  the  reason.  He  conversed  with  Angels  who  are all
religious,  and  conversed not with Devils who all hate religion, for he was
incapable thro' his conceited notions.
     Thus  Swedenborg's  writings  are  a  recapitulation of all superficial
opinions, and an analysis of the more sublime-but no further.
     Have  now  another  plain fact. Any man of mechanical talents may, from
the  writings of Paracelsus or Jacob Behmen, produce ten thousand volumes of
equal  value  with  Swedenborg's,  and  from those of Dante or Shakespear an
infinite number.
     But  when  he  has done this, let him not say that he knows better than
his master, for he only holds a candle in sunshine.

                                   -----

          ,            ;  
 -   .

         ,     ,     -
    .
           ,          ,  
        .  : 
            ,    
    .
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 -  .
        :    ,   ,
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               - 
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            ,  
    -   .
     ,  ,   ,    ,  
      .

                                   -----



     Once  I  saw a Devil in a flame of fire, who arose before an Angel that
sat on a cloud, and the Devil utter'd these words: -
     'The  worship  of  God  is:  Honouring  his  gifts  in  other men, each
according to his genius, and loving the greatest men best: those who envy or
calumniate great men hate God; for there is no other God.'

     The  Angel  hearing  this  became almost blue; but mastering himself he
grew yellow, and at last white, pink, and smiling, and then replied: -
     'Thou  Idolater!  is  not  God  One?  and  is  not  he visible in Jesus
Christ?  and  has  not  Jesus  Christ  given  his sanction to the law of ten
commandments? and are not all other men fools, sinners, and nothings?'

     The  Devil answer'd: 'Bray a fool in a mortar with wheat, yet shall not
his  folly  be  beaten  out of him. If Jesus Christ is the greatest man, you
ought  to  love  Him  in  the greatest degree. Now hear how He has given His
sanction to the law of ten commandments. Did He not mock at the sabbath, and
so  mock  the  sabbath's God; murder those who were murder'd because of Him;
turn  away  the  law  from  the woman taken in adultery; steal the labour of
others  to  support Him; bear false witness when He omitted making a defence
before  Pilate; covet when He pray'd for His disciples, and when He bid them
shake  off  the  dust of their feet against such as refused to lodge them? I
tell you, no virtue can exist without breaking these ten commandments. Jesus
was all virtue, and acted from impulse, not from rules.'

     When  he had so spoken, I beheld the Angel, who stretched out his arms,
embracing the flame of fire, and he was consumed, and arose as Elijah.
     _Note_.  -  This  Angel,  who  is  now become a Devil, is my particular
friend.  We  often  read  the  Bible  together in its infernal or diabolical
sense, which the world shall have if they behave well.

     I  have also The Bible of Hell, which the world shall have whether they
will or no.

                                   -----



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                                   -----

     One Law for the Lion and Ox is Oppression.

      -      .



     1. The Eternal Female groan'd! it was heard over all the Earth.

     2. Albion's coast is sick, silent; the American meadows faint!

     3.  Shadows  of  Prophecy shiver along by the lakes and the rivers; and
mutter across the ocean: France, rend down thy dungeon!

     4. Golden Spain, burst the barriers of old Rome!

     5.  Cast thy keys,  Rome, into the deep down falling, even to eternity
down falling.

     6. And weep.

     7. In her trembling hand she took the new born terror, howling.

     8. On those infinite mountains of light, now barr'd out by the Atlantic
sea, the new born fire stood before the starry king!

     9.  Flag'd  with  grey brow'd snows and thunderous visages, the jealous
wings wav'd over the deep.

     10.  The speary hand burned aloft, unbuckled was the shield; forth went
the  hand of jealousy among the flaming hair, and hurl'd the new born wonder
thro' the starry night.

     11. The fire, the fire is falling!

     12.  Look  up! look up!  citizen of London, enlarge thy countenance! 
Jew,  leave  counting  gold!  return  to  thy oil and wine.  African! black
African! (go, winged thought, widen his forehead.)

     13.  The  fiery limbs, the flaming hair, shot like the sinking sun into
the western sea.

     14. Wak'd from his eternal sleep, the hoary element roaring fled away.

     15.  Down rush'd, beating his wings in vain, the jealous king; his grey
brow'd  councellors,  thunderous warriors, curl'd veterans, among helms, and
shields,  and  chariots,  horses,  elephants,  banners, castles, slings, and
rocks.

     16. Falling, rushing, running! buried in the ruins, on Urthona's dens;

     17.  All  night  beneath  the  ruins;  then, their sullen flames faded,
emerge round the gloomy king.

     18.  With  thunder  and  fire, leading his starry hosts thro' the waste
wilderness,  he  promulgates  his  ten commands, glancing his beamy eye-lids
over the deep in dark dismay.

     19.  Where  the  son  of  fire  in his eastern cloud, while the morning
plumes her golden breast,

     20.  Spurning  the  clouds written with curses, stamps the stony law to
dust, loosing the eternal horses from the dens of night, crying:


                    AND NOW THE LION & WOLF SHALL CEASE

                                   Chorus

     Let  the  Priests of the Raven of dawn no longer, in deadly black, with
hoarse note curse the sons of joy. Nor his accepted brethren - whom, tyrant,
he  calls  free-lay the bound or build the roof. Nor pale religious letchery
call that virginity that wishes but acts not!

     For every thing that lives is Holy.




     1.   !    .

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        .

      . . 



                            

                     The Eye sees more than
                     the Heart Knows


                       ,
                       .



                       I loved Theotormon,
                       And I was not ashamed;
                       I trembled in my virgin fears,
                       And I hid in Leutha's vale!

                       I plucked Leutha's flower,
                       And I rose up from the vale;
                       But the terrible thunders tore
                       My virgin mantle in twain.



                         
                         ,  ;
                           
                           .

                           
                            ;
                           
                         .



     Enslav'd, the Daughters of Albion weep; a trembling lamentation
     Upon their mountains; in their valleys, sighs toward America.

     For the soft soul of America, Oothoon, wander'd in woe
     Along the vales of Leutha, seeking flowers to comfort her;
     And thus she spoke to the bright Marigold of Leutha's vale; -

     'Art thou a flower? art thou a nymph? I see thee now a flower,
     Now a nymph! I dare not pluck thee from thy dewy bed!'

     The Golden nymph replied: 'Pluck thou my flower, Oothoon the mild!
     Another flower shall spring, because the soul of sweet delight
     Can never pass away.' She ceas'd, and clos'd her golden shrine.

     Then Oothoon pluck'd the flower, saying: 'I pluck thee from thy bed,
     Sweet flower, and put thee here to glow between my breasts;
     And thus I turn my face to where my whole soul seeks.'

     Over the waves she went in wing'd exulting swift delight,
     And over Theotormon's reign took her impetuous course.

     Bromion rent her with his thunders; on his stormy bed
     Lay the faint maid, and soon her woes appall'd his thunders hoarse.

     Bromion spoke: 'Behold this harlot here on Bromion's bed,
     And let the jealous dolphins sport around the lovely maid!
     Thy soft American plains are mine, and mine thy north and south:
     Stamp'd with my signet are the swarthy children of the sun;
     They are obedient, they resist not, they obey the scourge;
     Their daughters worship terrors and obey the violent.
     Now thou may'st marry Bromion's harlot, and protect the child
     Of Bromion's rage, that Oothoon shall put forth in nine moons' time.'

     Then storms rent Theotormon's limbs: he roll'd his waves around
     And folded his black jealous waters round the adulterate pair.
     Bound back to back in Bromion's caves, terror and meekness dwell:
     At entrance Theotormon sits, wearing the threshold hard
     With secret tears; beneath him sound like waves on a desert shore
     The voice of slaves beneath the sun, and children bought with money,
     That shiver in religious caves beneath the burning fires
     Of lust, that belch incessant from the summits of the earth.

     Oothoon weeps not; she cannot weep, her tears are locked up;
     But she can howl incessant, writhing her soft snowy limbs,
     And calling Theotormon's Eagles to prey upon her flesh.

     'I call with holy voice! Kings of the sounding air,
     Rend away this defiled bosom that I may reflect
     The image of Theotormoti on my pure transparent breast.'

     The Eagles at her call descend and rend their bleeding prey:
     Theotormon severely smiles; her soul reflects the smile,
     As the clear spring, muddied with feet of beasts, grows pure and smiles.

     The Daughters of Albion hear her woes, and echo back her sighs.

     'Why does my Theotormon sit weeping upon the threshold,
     And Oothoon hovers by his side, persuading him in vain?
      cry: Arise,  Theotormon! for the village dog
     Barks at the breaking day; the nightingale has done lamenting;
     The lark does rustle in the ripe corn, and the eagle returns
     From nightly prey, and lifts his golden beak to the pure east,
     Shaking the dust from his immortal pinions to awake
     The sun that sleeps too long. Arise, my Theotormon! I am pure,
     Because the night is gone that clos'd me in its deadly black.
     They told me that the night and day were all that I could see;
     They told me that I had five senses to enclose me up;
     And they enclos'd my infinite brain into a narrow circle,
     And sunk my heart into the Abyss, a red, round globe, hot burning,
     Till all from life I was obliterated and erased.
     Instead of morn arises a bright shadow, like an eye
     In the eastern cloud; instead of night a sickly charnel-house,
     That Theotormon hears me not. To him the night and morn
     Are both alike; a night of sighs, a morning of fresh tears;
     And none but Bromion can hear my lamentations.

     'With what sense is it that the chicken shuns the ravenous hawk?
     With what sense does the tame pigeon measure out the expanse?
     With what sense does the bee form cells? Have not the mouse and frog
     Eyes and ears and sense of touch? Yet are their habitations
     And their pursuits as different as their forms and as their joys.
     Ask the wild ass why he refuses burdens, and the meek camel
     Why he loves man. Is it because of eye, ear, mouth, or skin,
     Or breathing nostrils? No! for these the wolf and tiger have.
     Ask the blind worm the secrets of the grave, and why her spires
     Love to curl round the bones of death; and ask the rav'nous snake
     Where she gets poison, and the wing'd eagle why he loves the sun;
     And then tell me the thoughts of man, that have been hid of old.

     'Silent I hover all the night, and all day could be silent,
     If Theotormon once would turn his loved eyes upon me.
     How can I be defil'd when I reflect thy image pure?
     Sweetest the fruit that the worm feeds on, and the soul prey'd on by woe,
     The new-wash'd lamb ting'd with the village smoke, and the bright swan
     By the red earth of our immortal river. I bathe my wings,
     And I am white and pure to hover round Theotormon's breast.'

     Then Theotormon broke his silence, and he answered: -

     'Tell me what is the night or day to one o'erflow'd with woe?
     Tell me what is a thought, and of what substance is it made?
     Tell me what is a joy, and in what gardens do joys grow?
     And in what rivers swim the sorrows? And upon what mountains
     Wave shadows of discontent? And in what houses dwell the wretched,
     Drunken with woe, forgotten, and shut up from cold despair?

     'Tell me where dwell the thoughts, forgotten till thou call them forth?
     Tell me where dwell the joys of old, and where the ancient loves,
     And when will they renew again, and the night of oblivion past,
     That I might traverse times and spaces far remote, and bring
     Comforts into a present sorrow and a night of pain?
     Where goest thou,  thought? to what remote land is thy flight?
     If thou returnest to the present moment of affliction,
     Wilt thou bring comforts on thy wings, and dews and honey and balm,
     Or poison from the desert wilds, from the eyes of the envier?'

     Then Bromion said, and shook the cavern with his lamentation: -

     'Thou knowest that the ancient trees seen by thine eyes have fruit;
     But knowest thou that trees and fruits flourish upon the earth
     To gratify senses unknown-trees, beasts, and birds unknown;
     Unknown, not unperceiv'd, spread in the infinite microscope,

     In places yet unvisited by the voyager, and in worlds
     Over another kind of seas, and in atmospheres unknown?
     Ah! are there other wars, beside the wars of sword and fire?
     And are there other sorrows beside the sorrows of poverty?
     And are there other joys beside the joys of riches and ease?
     And is there not one law for both the lion and the ox?
     And is there not eternal fire, and eternal chains
     To bind the phantoms of existence from eternal life?'

     Then Oothoon waited silent all the day and all the night;
     But when the morn arose, her lamentation renew'd:
     The Daughters of Albion hear her woes, and echo back her sighs.

     'O Urizen! Creator of men! mistaken Demon of heaven!
     Thy joys are tears, thy labour vain to form men to thine image.
     How can one joy absorb another? Are not different joys
     Holy, eternal, infinite? and each joy is a Love.

     'Does not the great mouth laugh at a gift, and the narrow eyelids mock
     At the labour that is above payment? And wilt thou take the ape
     For thy counsellor, or the dog for a schoolmaster to thy children?
     Does he who contemns poverty, and he who turns with abhorrence
     From usury feel the same passion, or are they moved alike?
     How can the giver of gifts experience the delights of the merchant?
     How the industrious citizen the pains of the husbandman?
     How different far the fat fed hireling with hollow drum,
     Who buys whole corn-fields into wastes, and sings upon the heath!
     How different their eye and ear! How different the world to them!
     With what sense does the parson claim the labour of the farmer?
     What are his nets and gins and traps; and how does he surround him
     With cold floods of abstraction, and with forests of solitude,
     To build him castles and high spires, where kings and priests may dwell;
     Till she who burns with youth, and knows no fixed lot, is bound
     In spells of law to one she loathes? And must she drag the chain
     Of life in weary lust? Must chilling, murderous thoughts obscure
     The clear heaven of her eternal spring; to bear the wintry rage
     Of a harsh terror, driv'n to madness, bound to hold a rod
     Over her shrinking shoulders all the day, and all the night
     To turn the wheel of false desire, and longings that wake her womb
     To the abhorred birth of cherubs in the human form,
     That live a pestilence and die a meteor, and are no more;
     Till the child dwell with one he hates, and do the deed he loathes,
     And the impure scourge force his seed into its unripe birth,
     Ere yet his eyelids can behold the arrows of the day?

     'Does the whale worship at thy footsteps as the hungry dog;
     Or does he scent the mountain prey because his nostrils wide
     Draw in the ocean? Does his eye discern the flying cloud
     As the raven's eye; or does he measure the expanse like the vulture?
     Does the still spider view the cliffs where eagles hide their young;
     Or does the fly rejoice because the harvest is brought in?
     Does not the eagle scorn the earth, and despise the treasures beneath?
     But the mole knoweth what is there, and the worm shall tell it thee.
     Does not the worm erect a pillar in the mouldering churchyard
     And a palace of eternity in the jaws of the hungry grave?
     Qver his porch these words are written: "Take thy bliss,  Man!
     And sweet shall be thy taste, and sweet thy infant joys renew!"

     'Infancy! Fearless, lustful, happy, nestling for delight
     In laps of pleasure: Innocence! honest, open, seeking
     The vigorous joys of morning light, open to virgin bliss,
     Who taught thee modesty, subtil modesty, child of night and sleep?
     When thou awakest wilt thou dissemble all thy secret joys,
     Or wert thou not awake when all this mystery was disclos'd?
     Then com'st thou forth a modest virgin knowing to dissemble,
     With nets found under thy night pillow, to catch virgin joy
     And brand it with the name of whore, and sell it in the night
     In silence, ev'n without a whisper, and in seeming sleep.
     Religious dreams and holy vespers light thy smoky fires:
     Qnce were thy fires lighted by the eyes of honest morn.
     And does my Theotormon seek this hypocrite modesty,
     This knowing, artful, secret, fearful, cautious, trembling hypocrite?
     Then (s Oothoon a whore indeed! and all the virgin joys,
     Of life are harlots; and Theotormon is a sick man's dream;
     And Oothoon is the crafty slave of selfish holiness.

     'But Oothoon is not so, a virgin fill'd with virgin fancies,
     Open to joy and to delight wherever beauty appears:
     If in the morning sun I find it, there my eyes are fix'd
     In happy copulation; if in evening mild, wearied with work,
     Sit on a bank and draw the pleasures of this free-born joy.

     'The moment of desire! the moment of desire! The virgin
     That pines for man shall awaken her womb to enormous joys
     In the secret shadows of her chamber: the youth shut up from
     The lustful joy shall forget to generate, and create an amorous image
     In the shadows of his curtains and in the folds of his silent pillow
     Are not these the places of religion, the rewards of continence,
     The self-enjoyings of self-denial? Why dost thou seek religion?
     Is it because acts are not lovely that thou seekes't solitude,
     Where the horrible darkness is impressed with reflections of desire?

     'Father of Jealousy, be thou accursed from the earth!
     Why hast thou taught my Theotormon this accursed thing,
     Till beauty fades from off my shoulders, darken'd and cast out,
     A solitary shadow wailing on the margin of nonentity?

     'I cry: Love! Love! Love! happy happy Love! free as the mountain wind!
     Can that be Love, that drinks another as a sponge drinks water,
     That clouds with jealousy his nights, with weepings all the day,
     To spin a web of age around him, grey and hoary, dark;
     Till his eyes sicken at the fruit that hangs before his sight?
     Such is self-love that envies all, a creeping skeleton,
     With lamplike eyes watching around the frozen marriage bed!

     'But silken nets and traps of adamant will Oothoon spread,
     And catch for thee girls of mild silver, or of furious gold.
     I'll lie beside thee on a bank, and view their wanton play
     In lovely copulation, bliss on bliss, with Theotormon:
     Red as the rosy morning, lustful as the first-born beam,
     Oothoon shall view his dear delight; nor e'er with jealous cloud
     Come in the heaven of generous love, nor selfish blightings bring.

     'Does the sun walk, in glorious raiment, on the secret floor
     Where the cold miser spreads his gold; or does the bright cloud drop
     On his stone threshold? Does his eye behold the beam that brings
     Expansion to the eye of pity; or will he bind himself
     Beside the ox to thy hard furrow? Does not that mild beam blot
     The bat, the owl, the glowing tiger, and the king of night?
     The sea-fowl takes the wintry blast for a cov'ring to her limbs,
     And the wild snake the pestilence to adorn him with gems and gold;
     And trees, and birds, and beasts, and men behold their eternal joy.
     Arise, you little glancing wings, and sing your infant joy!
     Arise, and drink your bliss, for everything that lives is holy!'
     Thus every morning wails Oothoon; but Theotormon sits
     Upon the margin'd ocean conversing with shadows dire.

     The Daughters of Albion hear her woes, and echo back her sighs.




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    The dead brood over Europe: the cloud and vision descends over
       cheerful France;
     cloud well appointed! Sick, sick, the Prince on his couch! wreath'd
       in dim
    And appalling mist; his strong hand outstretch'd, from his shoulder
       down the bone,
    Runs aching cold into the sceptre, too heavy for mortal grasp -
       no more
    To be swayed by visible hand, nor in cruelty bruise the mild flourish-
       ing mountains.
    Sick the mountains! and all their vineyards weep, in the eyes of the
       kingly mourner;
    Pale is the morning cloud in his visage. Rise, Necker! the ancient
       dawn calls us
    To awake from slumbers of five thousand years. I awake,
       but my soul is in dreams;
    From my window I see the old mountains of France, like aged men,
       fading away.
    Troubled, leaning on Necker, descends the King to his chamber of
       council; shady mountains
    In fear utter voices of thunder; the woods of France embosom
       the sound;
    Clouds of wisdom prophetic reply, and roll over the palace roof
      heavy.
    Forty men, each conversing with woes in the infinite shadows of
       his soul,
    Like our ancient fathers in regions of twilight, walk, gathering round
       the King:
    Again the loud voice of France cries to the morning; the morning
       prophesies to its clouds.
    For the Commons convene in the Hall of the Nation. France shakes!
       And the heavens of France
    Perplex'd vibrate round each careful countenance! Darkness of old
       times around them
    Utters loud despair, shadowing Paris; her grey towers groan, and the
       Bastille trembles.
    In its terrible towers the Governor stood, in dark fogs list'ning
       the horror;
    A thousand his soldiers, old veterans of France, breathing red clouds
       of power and dominion.
    Sudden seiz'd with howlings, despair, and black night, he stalk'd like
       a lion from tower
    To tower; his howlings were heard in the Louvre; from court to
       court restless he dragg'd
    His strong limbs; from court to courf curs'd the fierce torment
       unquell'd,
    Howling and giving the dark command; in his soul stood the purple
       plague,
    Tugging his iron manacles, and piercing thro' the seven towers dark
       and sickly,
    Panting over the prisoners like a wolf gorg'd. And the den nam'd
       Horror held a man
    Chain'd hand and foot; round his neck an iron band, bound to the
       impregnable wall;
    In his soul was the serpent coil'd round in his heart, hid from the
       light, as in a cleft rock:
    And the man was confin'd for a writing prophetic. In the tower nam'd
       Darkness was a man
    Pinion'd down to the stone floor, his strong bones scarce cover'd
       with sinews; the iron rings
    Were forg'd smaller as the flesh decay'd: a mask of iron on his face
       hid the lineaments
    Of ancient Kings, and the frown of the eternal lion was hid from the
       oppressed earth.
    In the tower named Bloody, a skeleton yellow remained in its chains
       on its couch
    Of stone, once a man who refus'd to sign papers of abhorrence;
       the eternal worm
    Crept in the skeleton. In the den nam'd Religion, a loathsome sick
       woman bound down
    To a bed of straw; the seven diseases of earth, like birds of prey,
       stood on the couch
    And fed on the body: she refus'd to be whore to the Minister, and
       with a knife smote him.
    In the tower nam'd Order, an old man, whose white beard cover'd
       the stone floor like weeds
    On margin of the sea, shrivell'd up by heat of day and cold of night;
       his den was short
    And narrow as a grave dug for a child, with spiders' webs wove,
       and with slime
    Of ancient horrors cover'd, for snakes and scorpions are his
       companions; harmless they breathe
    His sorrowful breath: he, by conscience urg'd, in the city of Paris
       rais'd a pulpit,
    And taught wonders to darken'd souls. In the den nam'd Destiny
       a strong man sat,
    His feet and hands cut off, and his eyes blinded; round his middle a
       chain and a band
    Fasten'd into the wall; fancy gave him to see an image of despair
       in his den,
    Eternally rushing round, like a man on his hands and knees, day
       and night without rest:
    He was friend to the favourite. In the seventh tower, nam'd the tower
       of God, was a man
    Mad, with chains loose, which he dragg'd up and down; fed with
       hopes year by year, he pined
    For liberty. - Vain hopes! his reason decay'd, and the world of
       attraction in his bosom
    Centred, and the rushing of chaos overwhelm'd his dark soul: he
       was confin'd
    For a letter of advice to a King, and his ravings in winds are heard
       over Versailles.

    But the dens shook and trembled: the prisoners look up and assay
       to shout; they listen,
    Then laugh in the dismal den, then are silent; and a light walks
       round the dark towers.
    For the Commons convene in the Hall of the Nation; like spirits of
       fire in the beautiful
    Porches of the Sun, to plant beauty in the desert craving abyss,
       they gleam
    On the anxious city: all children new-born first behold them, tears
       are fled,
    And they nestle in earth-breathing bosoms. So the city of Paris, their
       wives and children,
    Look up to the morning Senate, and visions of sorrow leave pensive
       streets.

    But heavy-brow'd jealousies lour o'er the Louvre; and terrors of
       ancient Kings
    Descend from the gloom and wander thro' the palace, and weep
       round the King and his Nobles;
    While loud thunders roll, troubling the dead. Kings are sick
       throughout all the earth!
    The voice ceas'd: the Nation sat; and the triple forg'd fetters of
       times were unloos'd.
    The voice ceas'd: the Nation sat; but ancient darkness and trembling
       wander thro' the palace.

    As in day of havoc and routed battle, among thick shades of
       discontent,
    On the soul-skirting mountains of sorrow cold waving, the Nobles
       fold round the King;
    Each stern visage lock'd up as with strong bands of iron, each strong
       limb bound down as with marble,
    In flames of red wrath burning, bound in astonishment a quarter
       of an hour.

    Then the King glow'd: his Nobles fold round, like the sun of old
       time quench'd in clouds;
    In their darkness the King stood; his heart flam'd, and utter'd a
       with'ring heat, and these words burst forth:

    'The nerves of five thousand years' ancestry tremble, shaking the
       heavens of France;
    Throbs of anguish beat on brazen war foreheads; they descend and
       look into their graves.
    I see thro' darkness, thro' clouds rolling round me, the spirits of
       ancient Kings
    Shivering over their bleached bones; round them their counsellors
       look up from the dust,
    Crying: "Hide from the living! Our bonds and our prisoners shout
       in the open field.
    Hide in the nether earth! Hide in the bones! Sit obscured in the
       hollow scull!'
    Our flesh is corrupted, and we wear away. We are not numbered
       among the living. Let us hide
    In stones, among roots of trees. The prisoners have burst their
       dens.
    Let us hide! let us hide in the dust! and plague and wrath and tempest
       shall cease."

    He ceas'd, silent pond'ring; his brows folded heavy, his forehead
       was in affliction.
    Like the central fire from the window he saw his vast armies spread
       over the hills,
    Breathing red fires from man to man, and from horse to horse: then
       his bosom
    Expanded like starry heaven; he sat down: his Nobles took their
       ancient seats.

    Then the ancientest Peer, Duke of Burgundy, rose from the Monarch's
       right hand, red as wines
    From his mountains; an odour of war, like a ripe vineyard, rose
       from his garments,
    And the chamber became as a clouded sky; o'er the Council he
       stretch'd his red limbs
    Cloth'd in flames of crimson; as a ripe vineyard stretches over .
       sheaves of corn,
    The fierce Duke hung over the Council; around him crowd, weeping
       in his burning robe,
    A bright cloud of infant souls: his words fall like purple autumn
       on the sheaves:


    'Shall this marble-built heaven become a clay cottage, this earth an
       oak stool, and these mowers
    From the Atlantic mountains mow down all this great starry harvest
       of six thousand years?
    And shall Necker, the hind of Geneva, stretch out his crook'd sickle
       o'er fertile France,
    Till our purple and crimson is faded to russet, and the kingdoms of
       earth bound in sheaves,
    And the ancient forests of chivalry hewn, and the joys of the combat
       burnt for fuel;
    Till the power and dominion is rent from the pole, sword and sceptre
       from sun and moon,
    The law and gospel from fire and air, and eternal reason and
       science
    From the deep and the solid, and man lay his faded head down
       on the rock
    Of eternity, where the eternal lion and eagle remain to devour?
    This to prevent, urg'd by cries in day, and prophetic dreams
       hovering in night,
    To enrich the lean earth that craves, furrow'd with ploughs, whose
       seed is departing from her,
    Thy Nobles have gather'd thy starry hosts round this
       rebellious city,
    To rouse up the ancient forests of Europe, with clarions of
       cloud-breathing war,
    To hear the horse neigh to the drum and trumpet, and the trumpet
       and war shout reply.
    Stretch the hand that beckons the eagles of heaven: they cry over
       Paris, and wait
    Till Fayette point his finger to Versailles-the eagles of heaven must
       have their prey!'

    He ceas'd, and burn'd silent: red clouds roll round Necker; a
       weeping is heard o'er the palace.
    Like a dark cloud Necker paus'd, and like thunder on the just man's
       burial day he paus'd.
    Silent sit the winds, silent the meadows; while the husbandman and
       woman of weakness
    And bright children look after him into the grave, and water his
       clay with love,
    Then turn towards pensive fields: so Necker paus'd, and his visage
       was cover'd with clouds.

    The King lean'd on his mountains; then lifted his head and look'd
       on his armies, that shone
    Thro' heaven, tinging morning with beams of blood; then turning to
       Burgundy, troubled: -
    'Burgundy, thou wast born a lion! My soul is o'ergrown with
       distress
    For the Nobles of France, and dark mists roll round me and blot
       the writing of God
    Written in my bosom. Necker rise! leave the kingdom, thy life is
       surrounded with snares.
    We have call'd an Assembly, but not to destroy; we have given gifts,
       not to the weak;
    I hear rushing of muskets and bright'ning of swords; and visages,
       redd'ning with war,
    Frowning and looking up from brooding villages and every dark'ning
       city.
    Ancient wonders frown over the kingdom, and cries of women and
       babes are heard,
    And tempests of doubt roll around me, and fierce sorrows, because
       of the Nobles of France.
    Depart! answer not! for the tempest must fall, as in years that are
       passed away.'

    Dropping a tear the old man his place left, and when he was
       gone out
    He set his face toward Geneva to flee; and the women and children
       of the city
    Kneel'd round him and kissed his garments and wept: he stood a
       short space in the street,
    Then fled; and the whole city knew he was fled to Geneva, and
       the Senate heard it.
    But the Nobles burn'd wrathful at Necker's departure, and wreath'd
       their clouds and waters
    In dismal volumes; as, risen from beneath, the Archbishop of Paris
       arose
    In the rushing of scales, and hissing of flames, and rolling of
       sulphurous smoke: -

    'Hearken, Monarch of France, to the terrors of heaven, and let thy
       soul drink of my counsel!
    Sleeping at midnight in my golden tower, the repose of the labours
       of men
    Wav'd its solemn cloud over my head. I awoke; a cold hand passed
       over my limbs, and behold!
    An aged form, white as snow, hov'ring in mist, weeping in the
       uncertain light.
    Dim the form almost faded, tears fell down the shady cheeks: at
       his feet many cloth'd
    In white robes, strewn in air censers and harps, silent they lay
       prostrated;
    Beneath, in the awful void, myriads descending and weeping thro'
       dismal winds;
    Endless the shady train shiv'ring desdended, from the gloom where
       the aged form wept.
    At length, trembling, the vision sighing, in a low voice like the
       voice of the grasshopper, whisper'd:
    "My groaning is heard in the abbeys, and God, so long worshipp'd,
       departs as a lamp
    Without oil; for a curse is heard hoarse thro' the land, from a
       godless race
    Descending to beasts; they look downward, and labour, and forget
       my holy law;
    The sound of prayer fails from lips of flesh, and the holy hymn
       from thicken'd tongues;
    For the bars of Chaos are burst; her millions prepare their fiery
       way
    Thro' the orbed abode of the holy dead, to root up and pull down
       and remove,
    And Nobles and Clergy shall fail from before me, and my cloud and
       vision be no more;
    The mitre become black, the crown vanish, and the sceptre and
       ivory staff
    Of the ruler wither among bones of death; they shall consume from
       the thistly field,
    And the sound of the bell, and voice of the sabbath, and singing of
       the holy choir
    Is turn'd into songs of the harlot in day, and cries of the virgin in
       night.
    They shall drop at the plough and faint at the harrow, unredeem'd,
       unconfess'd, unpardon'd;
    The priest rot in his surplice by the lawless lover, the holy beside the
       accursed,
    The King, frowning in purple, beside the grey ploughman, and their
       worms embrace together."
    The voice ceas'd: a groan shook my chamber. I slept, for the cloud
       of repose returned;
    But morning dawn'd heavy upon me. I rose to bring my Prince
       heaven-utter'd counsel.
    Hear my counsel,  King! and send forth thy Generals; the command
       of Heaven is upon thee!
    Then do thou command,  King! to shut up this Assembly in their
       final home;
    Let thy soldiers possess this city of rebels, that threaten to bathe
       their feet
    In the blood of Nobility, trampling the heart and the head; let the
       Bastille devour
    These rebellious seditious; seal them up,  Anointed! in everlasting
       chains.'
    He sat down: a damp cold pervaded the Nobles, and monsters of
       worlds unknown
    Swam round them, watching to be delivered-when Aumont, whose
       chaos-born soul
    Eternally wand'ring, a comet and swift-falling fire, pale enter'd the
       chamber.
    Before the red Council he stood, like a man that returns from hollow
       graves: -

    'Awe-surrounded, alone thro' the army, a fear and a with'ring blight
       blown by the north,
    The Abbe de Sieyes from the Nation's Assembly,  Princes and
       Generals of France,
    Unquestioned, unhindered! Awe-struck are the soldiers; a dark
       shadowy man in the form
    Of King Henry the Fourth walks before him in fires; the captains
       like men bound in chains
    Stood still as he pass'd: he is come to the Louvre,  King, with a
       message to thee!
    The strong soldiers tremble, the horses their manes bow, and the
       guards of thy palace are fled!'

    Uprose awful in his majestic beams Bourbon's strong Duke; his
       proud sword, from his thigh
    Drawn, he threw on the earth: the Duke of Bretagne and the Earl
       of Bourgogne
    Rose inflam'd, to and fro in the chamber,' like thunder-clouds ready
       to burst.

    'What damp all our fires,  spectre of Henry!' said Bourbon, 'and
       rend the flames
    From the head of our King? Rise, Monarch of France! command me,
       and I will lead
    This army of superstition at large, that the ardour of noble souls,
       quenchless,
    May yet burn in France, nor our shoulders be plough'd with the
       furrows of poverty.'

    Then Orleans, generous as mountains, arose and unfolded his robe,
       and put forth
    His benevolent hand, looking on the Archbishops, who changed as
       pale as lead,
    Would have risen but could not: his voice issued harsh grating;
       instead of words harsh hissings
    Shook the chamber; he ceas'd abash'd. Then Orleans spoke; all was
       silent.
    He breath'd on them, and said: 'O Princes of fire, whose flames are
       for growth, not consuming,
    Fear not dreams, fear not visions, nor be you dismay'd with sorrows
       which flee at the morning!
    Can the fires of Nobility ever be quench'd, or the stars by a
       stormy night?
    Is the body diseas'd when the members are healthful? can the man
       be bound in sorrow
    Whose ev'ry function is fill'd with its fiery desire? can the soul,
       whose brain and heart
    Cast their rivers in equal tides thro' the great Paradise, languish
       because the feet,
    Hands, head, bosom, and parts of love follow their high
       breathing joy?
    And can Nobles be bound when the people are free, or God weep
       when his children are happy?
    Have you never seen Fayette's forehead, or Mirabeau's eyes, or the
       shoulders of Target,
    Or Bailly the strong foot of France, or Clermont the terrible voice,
       and your robes
    Still retain their own crimson?- Mine never yet faded, for fire
       delights in its form!
    But go, merciless man, enter into the infinite labyrinth of another's
       brain
    Ere thou measure the circle that he shall run. Go, thou cold recluse,
       into the fires
    Of another's high flaming rich bosom, and return unconsum'd, and
       write laws.
    If thou canst not do this, doubt thy theories, learn to consider all
       men as thy equals,
    Thy brethren, and not as thy foot or thy hand, unless thou first
       fearest to hurt them.'

    The Monarch stood up; the strong Duke his sword to its golden
       scabbard return'd;
    The Nobles sat round like clouds on the mountains, when the storm
       is passing away: -
    'Let the Nation's Ambassador come among Nobles, like incense of
       the valley!'
    Aumont went out and stood in the hollow porch, his ivory wand
       in his hand;
    A cold orb of disdain revolv'd round him, and covered his soul
       with snows eternal.
    Great Henry's soul shuddered, a whirlwind and fire tore furious
       from his angry bosom;
    He indignant departed on horses of heav'n. Then the Abbe de
       Sieyes rais'd his feet
    On the steps of the Louvre; like a voice of God following a storm,
       the Abbe follow'd
    The pale fires of Aumont into the chamber; as a father that bows
       to his son,
    Whose rich fields inheriting spread their old glory, so the voice
       of the people bowed
    Before the ancient seat of the kingdom and mountains to be
       renewed.

    'Hear,  heavens of France! the voice of the people, arising from
       valley and hill,
    O'erclouded with power. Hear the voice of valleys, the voice of
       meek cities,
    Mourning oppressed on village and field, till the village and field
       is a waste.
    For the husbandman weeps at blights of the fife, and blasting of
       trumpets consume
    The souls of mild France; the pale mother nourishes her child to
       the deadly slaughter.
    When the heavens were seal'd with a stone, and the terrible sun
       clos'd in an orb, and the moon
    Rent from the nations, and each star appointed for watchers of
       night,
    The millions of spirits immortal were bound in the rains of sulphur
       heaven
    To wander enslav'd; black, depress'd in dark ignorance, kept in
       awe with the whip
    To worship terrors, bread from the blood of revenge and breath
       of desire
    In bestial forms, or more terrible men; till the dawn of our peaceful
       morning,
    Till dawn, till morning, till the breaking of clouds, and swelling of
       winds, and the universal voice;
    Till man raise his darken'd limbs out of the caves of night. His
       eyes and his heart
    Expand-Where is Space? where,  Sun, is thy dwelling? where
       thy tent,  faint slumb'rous Moon?
    Then the valleys of France shall cry to the soldier: "Throw down
       thy sword and musket,
    And run and embrace the meek peasant." Her Nobles shall hear
       and shall weep, and put off
    The red robe of terror, the crown of oppression, the shoes of
       contempt, and unbuckle
    The girdle of war from the desolate earth. Then the Priest in
       his thund'rous cloud
    Shall weep, bending to earth, embracing the valleys, and putting
       his hand to the plough,
    Shall say: "No more I curse thee; but now I will bless thee:
       no more in deadly black
    Devour thy labour; nor lift up a cloud in thy heavens,
        laborious plough;
    That the wild raging millions, that wander in forests, and howl
       in law-blasted wastes,
    Strength madden'd with slavery, honesty bound in the dens
       of superstition,
    May sing in the village, and shout in the harvest, and woo
       in pleasant gardens
    Their once savage loves, now beaming with knowledge, with gentle
       awe adorned;
    And the saw, and the hammer, the chisel, the pencil, the pen,
       and the instruments
    Of heavenly song sound in the wilds once forbidden, to teach
       the laborious ploughman
    And shepherd, deliver'd from clouds of war, from pestilence,
       from night-fear, from murder,
    From filling, from stifling, from hunger, from cold,
       from slander, discontent and sloth,
    That walk in beasts and birds of night, driven back by the sandy
       desert,
    Like pestilent fogs round cities of men; and the happy earth sing
       in its course,
    The mild peaceable nations be opened to heav'n, and men walk
       with their fathers in bliss."
    Then hear the first voice of the morning: "Depart,  clouds
       of night, and no more
    Return; be withdrawn cloudy war, troops of warriors depart,
       nor around our peaceable city
    Breathe fires; but ten miles from Paris let all be peace,
       nor a soldier be seen!"'

    He ended: the wind of contention arose, and the clouds cast their
       shadows; the Princes
    Like the mountains of France, whose aged trees utter an awful
       voice, and their branches
    Are shatter'd; till gradual a murmur is heard descending into
       the valley,
    Like a voice in the vineyards of Burgundy when grapes are shaken
       on grass,
    Like the low voice of the labouring man, instead of the shout
       of joy;
    And the palace appear'd like a cloud driven abroad; blood ran down
       the ancient pillars.
    Thro' the cloud a deep thunder, the Duke of Burgundy, delivers
       the King's command: -

    'Seest thou yonder dark castle, that moated around, keeps this
       city of Paris in awe?
    Go, command yonder tower, saying: "Bastille, depart! and take
       thy shadowy course;
    Overstep the dark river, thou terrible tower, and get thee up
       into the country ten miles.
    And thou black southern prison, move along the dusky road to
       Versailles; there
    Frown on the gardens" - and, if it obey and depart, then the
       King will disband
    This war-breathing army; but, if it refuse, let the Nation's
       Assembly thence learn
    That this army of terrors, that prison of horrors, are the bands
       of the murmuring kingdom.'

    Like the morning star arising above the black waves, when
       a shipwreck'd soul sighs for morning,
    Thro' the ranks, silent, walk'd the Ambassador back to the Nation's
       Assembly, and told
    The unwelcome message. Silent they heard; then a thunder roll'd
       round loud and louder;
    Like pillars of ancient halls and ruins of times remote,
       they sat.
    Like a voice from the dim pillars Mirabeau rose; the thunders
       subsided away;
    A rushing of wings around him was heard as he brighten'd,
       and cried out aloud:
    'Where is the General of the Nation?' The walls re-echo'd:
       'Where is the General of the Nation?'

    Sudden as the bullet wrapp'd in his fire, when brazen cannons
       rage in the field,
    Fayette sprung from his seat saying 'Ready!' Then bowing like
       clouds, man toward man, the Assembly
    Like a Council of Ardours seated in clouds, bending over
       the cities of men,
    And over the armies of strife, where their children are
       marshall'd together to battle,
    They murmuring divide; while the wind sleeps beneath,
       and the numbers are counted in silence,
    While they vote the removal of War, and the pestilence weighs
       his red wings in the sky.

    So Fayette stood silent among the Assembly, and the votes were
       given, and the numbers numb'red;
    And the vote was that Fayette should order the army to remove
       ten miles from Paris.

    The aged Sun rises appall'd from dark mountains, and gleams
       a dusky beam
    On Fayette; but on the whole army a shadow, for a cloud
       on the eastern hills
    Hover'd, and stretch'd across the city, and across the army,
       and across the Louvre.
    Like a flame of fire he stood before dark ranks, and before
       expecting captains:
    On pestilent vapours around him flow frequent spectres
       of religious men, weeping
    In winds; driven out of the abbeys, their naked souls shiver
       in keen open air;
    Driven out by the fiery cloud of Voltaire, and thund'rous rocks
       of Rousseau,
    They dash like foam against the ridges of the army, uttering
       a faint feeble cry.

    Gleams of fire streak the heavens, and of sulphur the earth,
       from Fayette as he lifted his hand;
    But silent he stood, till all the officers rush round him like
      waves
    Round the shore of France, in day of the British flag, when
      heavy cannons
    Affright the coasts, and the peasant looks over the sea
      and wipes a tear:
    Over his head the soul of Voltaire shone fiery; and over the army
      Rousseau his white cloud
    Unfolded, on souls of war, living terrors, silent list'ning
      toward Fayette.
    His voice loud inspir'd by liberty, and by spirits of the dead,
      thus thunder'd: -

    'The Nation's Assembly command that the Army remove ten miles
      from Paris;
    Nor a soldier be seen in road or in field, till the Nation
      command return.'

    Rushing along iron ranks glittering, the officers each to his
      station
    Depart, and the stern captain strokes his proud steed, and
      in front of his solid ranks
    Waits the sound of trumpet; captains of foot stand each by his
      cloudy drum:
    Then the drum beats, and the steely ranks move, and trumpets
      rejoice in the sky.
    Dark cavalry, like clouds fraught with thunder, ascend on the
      hills, and bright infantry, rank
    Behind rank, to the soul-shaking drum and shrill fife, along
      the roads glitter like fire.

    The noise of trampling, the wind of trumpets, smote the Palace
      walls with a blast.
    Pale and cold sat the King in midst of his Peers, and his noble
      heart sunk, and his pulses
    Suspended their motion; a darkness crept over his eyelids,
      and chill cold sweat
    Sat round his brows faded in faint death; his Peers pale like
      mountains of the dead,
    Cover'd with dews of night, groaning, shaking forests and floods.
      The cold newt,
    And snake, and damp toad on the kingly foot crawl, or croak
      on the awful knee,
    Shedding their slime; in folds of the robe the crown'd adder
      builds and hisses
    From stony brows: shaken the forests of France, sick the kings
      of the nations,
    And the bottoms of the world were open'd, and the graves
      of archangels unseal'd:
    The enormous dead lift up their pale fires and look over
      the rocky cliffs.

    A faint heat from their fires reviv'd the cold Louvre; the frozen
      blood reflow'd.
    Awful uprose the King; him the Peers foliow'd; they saw
      the courts of the Palace
    Forsaken, and Paris without a soldier, silent. For the noise
      was gone up
    And follow'd the army; and the Senate in peace sat beneath
      morning's beam.







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            . . 








       The shadowy Daughter of Urthona stood before red Ore,
       When fourteen suns had faintly journey'd o'er his dark abode:
       His food she brought in iron baskets, his drink in cups of iron.
       Crown'd with a helmet and dark hair the nameless Female stood;
       A quiver with its burning stores, a bow like that of night,
       When pestilence is shot from heaven-no other arms she need!
       Invulnerable tho' naked, save where clouds roll round her loins
       Their awful folds in the dark air: silent she stood as night;
       For never from her iron tongue could voice or sound arise,
       But dumb till that dread day when Ore ussay'd his fierce embrace.

       'Dark Virgin,' said the hairy Youth, 'Thy father stern, abhorr'd,
       Rivets my tenfold chains, while still on high my spirit soars;
       Sometimes an eagle screaming in the sky, sometimes a lion
       Stalking upon the mountains, and sometimes a whale, I lash
       The raging fathomless abyss; anon a serpent folding
       Around the pillars of Urthona, and round thy dark limbs
       On the Canadian wilds I fold; feeble my spirit folds;
       For chain'd beneath I rend these caverns: when thou bringest food
       I howl my joy, and my red eyes seek to behold thy face -
       In vain! these clouds roll to and fro, and hide thee from my sight.

       Silent as despairing love, and strong as jealousy,
       The hairy shoulders rend the links; free are the wrists of fire;
       Round the terrific loins he seiz'd the panting, struggling womb;
       It joy'd: she put aside her clouds and smiled her first-born smile,
       As when a black cloud shows its lightnings to the silent deep.
       Soon as she saw the Terrible Boy, then burst the virgin cry:-

       'I know thee, I have found thee, and I will not let thee go:
       Thou art the image of God who dwells in darkness of Africa,
       And thou art fall'n to give me life in regions of dark death.
       On my American plains I feel the struggling afflictions
       Endur'd by roots that writhe their arms into the nether deep.
       I see a Serpent in Canada who courts me to his love,
       In Mexico an Eagle, and a Lion in Peru;
       I see a Whale in the South Sea, drinking my soul away.
        what limb-rending pains I feel! thy fire and my frost
       Mingle in howling pains, in furrows by thy lightnings rent.
       This is Eternal Death, and this the torment long foretold!'

       The stern Bard ceas'd, asham'd of his own song; enrag'd he swung
       His harp aloft sounding, then dash'd its shining frame against
       A ruin'd pillar in glittering fragments; silent he turn'd away,
       And wander'd down the vales of Kent in sick & dream lamentings.









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       The Guardian Prince of Albion burns in his nightly tent:
       Sullen fires across the Atlantic glow to America's shore,
       Piercing the souls of warlike men who rise in silent night.
       Washington, Franklin, Paine, and Warren, Gates, Hancock, and Green
       Meet on the coast glowing with blood from Albion's fiery Prince.

       Washington spoke: 'Friends of America! look over the Atlantic sea;
       A bended bow is lifted in Heaven, and a heavy iron chain
       Descends, link by link, from Albion's cliffs across the sea, to bind
       Brothers and sons of America; till our faces pale and yellow,
       Heads depress'd, voices weak, eyes downcast, hands work-bruis'd,
       Feet bleeding on the sultry sands, and the furrows of the whip
       Descend to generations, that in future times forget.'

       The strong voice ceas'd; for a terrible blast swept over
          the heaving sea:
       The eastern cloud rent: on his cliffs stood Albion's wrathful Prince,
       A dragon form, clashing his scales: at midnight he arose,
       And flam'd red meteors round the land of Albion beneath;
       His voice, his locks, his awful shoulders, and his glowing eyes
       Appear to the Americans upon the cloudy night.

       Solemn heave the Atlantic waves between the gloomy nations,
       Swelling, belching from its deeps red clouds and raging fires.
       Albion is sick! America faints! Enrag'd the Zenith grew.
       As human blood shooting its veins all round the orbed heaven,
       Red rose the clouds from the Atlantic in vast wheels of blood,
       And in the red clouds rose a Wonder o'er the Atlantic sea-
       Intense! naked! a Human fire, fierce glowing, as the wedge
       Of iron heated in the furnace; his terrible limbs were fire,
       With myriads of cloudy terrors, banners dark, and towers
       Surrounded: heat but not light went thro' the murky atmosphere.

       The King of England looking westward trembles at the vision.

       Albion's Angel stood beside the Stone of Night, and saw
       The Terror like a comet, or more like the planet red,
       That once enclos'd the terrible wandering comets in its sphere.
       Then, Mars, thou wast our centre, and the planets three flew round
       Thy crimson disk; so, ere the Sun was rent from thy red sphere,
       The Spectre glow'd, his horrid length staining the temple long
       With beams of blood; and thus a voice came forth, and shook the temple: -
       'The morning comes, the night decays, the watchmen leave their
           stations;
       The grave is burst, the spices shed, the linen wrapped up;
       The bones of death, the cov'ring clay, the sinews shrunk and dry'd
       Reviving shake, inspiring move, breathing, awakening,
       Spring like redeemed captives, when their bonds and bars are burst.
       Let the slave grinding at the mill run out into the field,
       Let him look up into the heavens and laugh in the bright air;
       Let the enchained soul, shut up in darkness and in sighing,
       Whose face has never seen a smile in thirty weary years,
       Rise and look out; his chains are loose, his dungeon doors are open;
       And let his wife and children return from the oppressor's scourge.
       They look behind at every step, and believe it is a dream,
       Singing: "The Sun has left his blackness, and has found a fresher
          morning,
       And the fair Moon rejoices in the clear and cloudless night;
       For Empire is no more, and now the Lion and Wolf shall cease."'

       In thunders ends the voice. Then Albion's Angel wrathful burnt
       Beside the Stone of Night; and, like the Eternal Lion's howl
       In famine and war, reply'd: 'Art thou not Ore,
          who serpent-form'd
       Stands at the gate of Enitharmon to devour her children?
       Blasphemous Demon, Antichrist, hater of Dignities,
       Lover of wild rebellion, and transgressor of God's Law,
       Why dost thou come to Angel's eyes in this terrific form?'

       The Terror answer'd: T am Ore, wreath'd round the accursed tree:
       The times are ended; shadows pass, the morning 'gins to break;
       The fiery joy, that Urizen perverted to ten commands,
       What night he led the starry hosts thro' the wide wilderness,
       That stony Law I stamp to dust; and scatter Religion abroad
       To the four winds as a torn book, and none shall gather
          the leaves;
       But they shall rot on desert sands, and consume in bottomless
          deeps,
       To make the deserts blossom, and the deeps shrink to their
          fountains,
       And to renew the fiery joy, and burst the stony roof;
       That pale religious lechery, seeking Virginity,
       May find it in a harlot, and in coarse-clad honesty
       The underfil'd, tho' ravish'd in her cradle night and morn;
       For everything that lives is holy, life delights in life;
       Because the soul of sweet delight can never be defil'd.
       Fires enwrap the earthly globe, yet Man is not consum'd;
       Amidst the lustful fires he walks; his feet become like brass,
       His knees and things like silver, and his breast and head like gold.

       'Sound! sound! my loud war-trumpets, and alarm my Thirteen
          Angels!
       Loud howls the Eternal Wolf! the Eternal Lion lashes his tail!
       America is dark'ned; and my punishing Demons, terrified,
       Crouch howling before their caverns deep, like skins dry'd
          in the wind.
       They cannot smite the wheat, nor quench the fatness of the earth;
       They cannot smite with sorrows, nor subdue the plough and spade;
       They cannot wall the city, nor moat round the castle of princes;
       They cannot bring the stubbed oak to overgrow the hills;
       For terrible men stand on the shores, and in their robes I see
       Children take shelter from the lightnings: there stands
          Washington,
       And Paine, and Warren, with their foreheads rear'd toward
          the East -
       But clouds obscure my aged sight. A vision from afar!
       Sound! sound! my loud war-trumpets, and alarm my Thirteen Angels!
       Ah, vision from afar! Ah, rebel form that rent the ancient
       Heavens! Eternal Viper self-renew'd, rolling in clouds,
       I see thee in thick clouds and darkness on America's shore,
       Writhing in pangs of abhorred birth; red flames the crest
          rebellious
       And eyes of death; the harlot womb, oft opened in vain,
       Heaves in enormous circles: now the times are return'd upon thee,
       Devourer of thy parent, now thy unutterable torment renews.
       Sound! sound! my loud war-trumpets, and alarm my Thirteen Angels!
       Ah, terrible birth! a young one bursting! Where is the weeping
          mouth,
       And where the mother's milk? Instead, those ever-hissing jaws
       And parched lips drop with fresh gore: now roll thou in the
          clouds;
       Thy mother lays her length outstretch'd upon the shore beneath.
       Sound! sound! my loud war-trumpets, and alarm my Thirteen
          Angels!
       Loud howls the Eternal Wolf! the Eternal Lion lashes his tail!'

       Thus wept the Angel voice, and as he wept the terrible blasts
       Of trumpets blew a loud alarm across the Atlantic deep.
       No trumpets answer; no reply of clarions or of fifes:
       Silent the Colonies remain and refuse the loud alarm.
       On those vast shady hills between America and Albion's shore,
       Now barr'd out by the Atlantic sea, call'd Atlantean hills,
       Because from their bright summits you may pass to the Golden
          World,
       An ancient palace, archetype of mighty Emperies,
       Rears its immortal pinnacles, built in the forest of God
       By Ariston, the King of Beauty, for his stolen bride.

       Here on their magic seats the Thirteen Angels sat perturb'd,
       For clouds from the Atlantic hover o'er the solemn roof.

       Fiery the Angels rose, and as they rose deep thunder roll'd
       Around their shores, indignant burning with the fires of Ore;
       And Boston's Angel cried aloud as they flew thro' the dark
          night.

       He cried: 'Why trembles honesty; and, like a murderer,
       Why seeks he refuge from the frowns of his immortal station?
       Must the generous tremble, and leave his joy to the idle,
          to the pestilence
       That mock him? Who commanded this? What God? What Angel?
       To keep the gen'rous from experience till the ungenerous
       Are unrestrain'd performers of the energies of nature;
       Till pity is become a trade, and generosity a science
       That men get rich by; and the sandy desert is giv'n
          to the strong?
       What God is he writes laws of peace, and clothes him in a tempest?
       What pitying Angel lusts for tears, and fans himself with sighs?
       What crawling villain preaches abstinence and wraps himself
       In fat of lambs? No more I follow, no more obedience pay!'

       So cried he, rending off his robe and throwing down
          his sceptre
       In sight of Albion's Guardian; and all the Thirteen Angels
       Rent off their robes to the hungry wind, and threw their golden
          sceptres
       Down on the land of America; indignant they descended
       Headlong from out their heav'nly heights, descending swift
          as fires
       Over the land; naked and flaming are their lineaments seen
       In the deep gloom; by Washington and Paine and Warren they
          stood;
       And the flame folded, roaring fierce within the pitchy night,
       Before the Demon red, who burnt towards America,
       In black smoke, thunders, and loud winds, rejoicing in its terror,
       Breaking in smoky wreaths from the wild deep, and gath'ring thick
       In flames as of a furnace on the land from North to South,
       What time the Thirteen Governors, that England sent, convene
       In Bernard's house. The flames cover'd the land; they rouse;
          they cry;
       Shaking their mental chains, they rush in fury to the sea
       To quench their anguish; at the feet of Washington down fall'n
       They grovel on the sand and writhing lie, while all
       The British soldiers thro' the Thirteen States sent up a howl
       Of anguish, threw their swords and muskets to the earth, and run
       From their encampments and dark castles, seeking where to hide
       From the grim flames, and from the visions of Ore, in sight
       Of Albion's Angel; who, enrag'd, his secret clouds open'd
       From North to South, and burnt outstretch'd on wings of wrath,
          cov'ring
       The eastern sky, spreading his awful wings across the heavens.
       Beneath him roll'd his num'rous hosts, all Albion's Angels camp'd
       Darken'd the Atlantic mountains; and their trumpets shook
          the valleys,
       Arm'd with diseases of the earth to cast upon the Abyss-
       Their numbers forty millions, must'ring in the eastern sky.

       In the flames stood and view'd the armies drawn out in the sky,
       Washington, Franklin, Paine, and Warren, Allen, Gates, and Lee,
       And heard the voice of Albion's Angel give the thunderous
          command;
       His plagues, obedient to his voice, flew forth out of their
          clouds,

       Falling upon America, as a storm to cut them off,
       As a blight cuts the tender corn when it begins to appear.
       Dark is the heaven above, and cold and hard the earth beneath:
       And, as a plague-wind, fill'd with insects, cuts off man
          and beast,
       And, as a sea o'erwhelms a land in the day of an earthquake,
       Fury, rage, madness, in a wind swept through America;
       And the red flames of Ore, that folded roaring, fierce, around
       The angry shores; and the fierce rushing of th' inhabitants
          together!
       The citizens of New York close their books and lock their chests;
       The mariners of Boston drop their anchors and unlade;
       The scribe of Pennsylvania casts his pen upon the earth;
       The builder of Virginia throws his hammer down in fear.

       Then had America been lost, o'erwhelm'd by the Atlantic,
       And Earth had lost another portion of the Infinite;
       But all rush together in the night in wrath and raging fire.
       The red fires rag'd! The plagues recoil'd! Then roll'd they
          back with fury
       On Albion's Angels: then the Pestilence began in streaks of red
       Across the limbs of Albion's Guardian; the spotted plague smote
          Bristol's,
       And the Leprosy London's Spirit, sickening all their bands:
       The millions sent up a howl of anguish and threw off their
          hammer'd mail,
       And cast their swords and spears to earth, and stood, a naked
          multitude:
       Albion's Guardian writhed in torment on the eastern sky,
       Pale, quiv'ring toward the brain his glimmering eyes, teeth
          chattering,
       Howling and shuddering, his legs quivering, convuls'd each muscle
          and sinew:
       Sick'ning lay London's Guardian, and the ancient mitred York,
       Their heads on snowy hills, their ensigns sick'ning in the sky.
       The plagues creep on the burning winds, driven by flames of Ore,
       And by the fierce Americans rushing together in the night,
       Driven o'er the Guardians of Ireland, and Scotland and Wales.
       They, spotted with plagues, forsook the frontiers; and their
          banners, sear'd
       With fires of hell, deform their ancient Heavens with shame
          and woe.
       Hid in his caves the Bard of Albion felt the enormous plagues,
       And a cowl of flesh grew o'er his head, and scales on his back
          and ribs;
       And, rough with black scales, all his Angels fright their ancient
          heavens.
       The doors of marriage are open, and the Priests, in rustling
          scales,
       Rush into reptile coverts, hiding from the fires of Ore,
       That play around the golden roofs in wreaths of fierce desire,
       Leaving the Females naked and glowing with the lusts of youth.

       For the Female Spirits of the dead, pining in bonds of religion,
       Run from their fetters; reddening, and in long-drawn arches
          sitting,
       They feel the nerves of youth renew, and desires of ancient
          times
       Over their pale limbs, as a vine when the tender grape appears.
       Over the hills, the vales, the cities rage the red flames
          fierce:
       The Heavens melted from North to South; and Urizen, who sat
       Above all heavens, in thunders wrapp'd, emerg'd his leprous head
       From out his holy shrine, his tears in deluge piteous
       Falling into the deep sublime; flagg'd with grey-brow'd snows
       And thunderous visages, his jealous wings wav'd over the deep;
       Weeping in dismal howling woe, he dark descended, howling
       Around the smitten bands, clothed in tears and trembling,
          shudd'ring, cold.
       His stored snows he poured forth, and his icy magazines
       He open'd on the deep, and on the Atlantic sea, white,
          shiv'ring;
       Leprous his limbs, all over white, and hoary was his visage;
       Weeping in dismal howlings before the stern Americans,
       Hiding the Demon red with clouds and cold mists from the earth;
       Till Angels and weak men twelve years should govern o'er the
          strong;
       And then their end should come, when France receiv'd the Demon's
          light.
       Stiff shudderings shook the heav'nly thrones! France, Spain,
          and Italy
       In terror view'd the bands of Albion, and the ancient Guardians,
       Fainting upon the elements, smitten with their own plagues!
       They slow advance to shut the five gates of their law-built
          Heaven,
       Filled with blasting fancies and with mildews of despair,
       With fierce disease and lust, unable to stem the fires of Ore.
       But the five gates were consum'd, and their bolts and hinges
          melted;
       And the fierce flames burnt round the heavens, and round
          the abodes of men.




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      'Five windows light the cavern'd Man: thro' one he breathes the air;
      Thro' one hears music of the spheres; thro' one the Eternal Vine
      Flourishes, that he may receive the grapes; thro' one can look
      And see small portions of the Eternal World that ever groweth;
      Thro' one himself pass out what time he please, but he will not;
      For stolen joys are sweet, and bread eaten in secret pleasant.'

      So sang a Fairy, mocking, as he sat on a streak'd tulip,
      Thinking none saw him: when he ceas'd I started from the trees,
      And caught him in my hat, as boys knock down a butterfly.
      'How know you this,' said I, 'small Sir? where did you learn
         this song?'
      Seeing himself in my possession, thus he answer'd me:
      'My Master, I am yours! command me, for I must obey.'

      'Then tell me, what is the Material World, and is it dead?'
      He, laughing, answer'd: 'I will write a book on leaves
         of flowers,
      If you will feed me on love-thoughts, and give me now
         and then
      A cup of sparkling poetic fancies; so, when I am tipsy,
      I'll sing to you to this soft lute, and show you all alive
      The World, when every particle of dust breathes forth its joy.'

      I took him home in my warm bosom: as we went along
      Wild flowers I gathered; and he show'd me each Eternal Flower:
      He laugh'd aloud to see them whimper because they were
         pluck'd.
      They hover'd round me like a cloud of incense. When I came
      Into my parlour and sat down, and took my pen to write,
      My Fairy sat upon the table, and dictated EUROPE.






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        The nameless Shadowy Female rose from out the breast of Ore,
        Her snaky hair brandishing in the winds of Enitharmon;
        And thus her voice arose: -

        'O mother Enitharmon, wilt thou bring forth other sons,
        To cause my name to vanish, that my place may not be found?
        For I am faint with travel,
        Like the dark cloud disburden'd in the day of dismal thunder.

        'My roots are brandish'd in the heavens, my fruits in earth
        beneath
        Surge, foam, and labour into life, first born and first consum'd!
        Consumed and consuming!
        Then why shouldst thou, Accursed Mother, bring me into life?

        'I wrap my turban of thick clouds around my lab'ring head,
        And fold the sheety waters as a mantle round my limbs;
        Yet the red sun and moon
        And all the overflowing stars rain down prolific pains.

        'Unwilling I look up to heaven, unwilling count the stars:
        Sitting in fathomless abyss of my immortal shrine
        I seize their burning power,
        And bring forth howling terrors, all-devouring fiery kings,

        'Devouring and devoured, roaming on dark and desolate mountains,
        In forests of Eternal Death, shrieking in hollow trees.
        Ah, mother Enitharmon!
        Stamp not with solid form this vig'rous progeny of fires.

        'I bring forth from my teeming bosom myriads of flames,
        And thou dost stamp them with a signet; then they roam abroad,
        And leave me void as death.
        Ah! I am drown'd in shady woe and visionary joy.

        'And who shall bind the Infinite with an eternal band
        To compass it with swaddling bands? and who shall cherish it
        With milk and honey?
        I see it smile, and I roll inward, and my voice is past.'

        She ceas'd, and roll'd her shady clouds
        Into the secret place.



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           The deep of winter came,
           What time the Secret Child
           Descended through the orient gates of the Eternal day:
           War ceas'd, and all the troops like shadows fled to their
              abodes.

           Then Enitharmon saw her sons and daughters rise around;
           Like pearly clouds they meet together in the crystal
              house;
           And Los, possessor of-ihe Moon, joy'd in the peaceful night,
           Thus speaking, while his num'rous sons shook their bright fiery
              wings: -

           'Again the night is come,
           That strong Urthona takes his rest;
           And Urizen, unloos'd from chains,

           Glows like a meteor in the distant North.
           Stretch forth your hands and strike the elemental
              strings!
           Awake the thunders of the deep!

           'The shrill winds wake,
           Till all the sons of Urizen look out and envy Los.
           Seize all the spirits of life, and bind

           Their warbling joys to our loud strings!
           Bind all the nourishing sweets of earth
           To give us bliss, that we may drink the sparkling wine
              of Los!
           And let us laugh at war,
           Despising toil and care,
           Because the days and nights of joy in lucky
              hours renew.

           'Arise,  Ore, from thy deep den!
           First-born of Enitharmon, rise!
           And we will crown thy head with garlands of the ruddy vine;
           For now thou art bound,
           And I may see thee in the hour of bliss, my eldest-born.'

           The horrent Demon rose, surrounded with red stars of fire,
           Whirling about in furious circles round the Immortal Fiend.

           Then Enitharmon down descended into his red light,
           And thus her voice rose to her children: the distant heavens
              reply: -

           'Now comes the night of Enitharmon's joy!
           Who shall I call? Who shall I send,
           That Woman, lovely Woman, may have dominion?
           Arise,  Rintrah! thee I call, and Palamabron, thee!
           Go! tell the Human race that Woman's love is Sin;
           That an Eternal life awaits the worms of sixty winters,
           In an allegorical abode, where existence hath never come.
           Forbid all Joy; and, from her childhood, shall the little
              Female
           Spread nets in every secret path.

           'My weary eyelids draw towards the evening; my bliss is yet
              but new.

           'Arise! O Rintrah, eldest-born, second to none but Ore!
            lion Rintrah, raise thy fury from thy forests black!
           Bring Palamabron, horned priest, skipping upon
              the mountains,
           And silent Elynittria, the silver-bowed queen.
           Rintrah, where hast thou hid thy bride?
           Weeps she in desert shades?
           Alas! my Rintrah, bring the lovely jealous
              Ocalythron.

           'Arise, my son! bring all thy brethren,
            thou King of Fire!
           Prince of the Sun! I see thee with thy innumerable
              race,
           Thick as the summer stars;
           But each, ramping, his golden mane shakes,
           And thine eyes rejoice because of strength,  Rintrah, furious
              King!'

           Enitharmon slept
           Eighteen hundred years. Man was a dream,
           The night of Nature and their harps unstrung!
           She slept in middle of her nightly song
           Eighteen hundred years, a Female dream.

           Shadows of men in fleeting bands upon the winds
           Divide the heavens of Europe;
           Till Albion's Angel, smitten with his own plagues, fled with
              his bands.
           The cloud bears hard on Albion's shore,
           Fill'd with immortal Demons of futurity:
           In council gather the smitten Angels of Albion;
           The cloud bears hard upon the council-house,
              down rushing
           On the heads of Albion's Angels.

           One hour they lay buried beneath the ruins of that hall;
           But as the stars rise from the Salt Lake, they arise in pain,
           In troubled mists, o'erclouded by the terrors of struggling
              times.

           In thoughts perturb'd they rose from the bright ruins, silent
              following
           The fiery King, who sought his ancient temple,
              serpent-form'd,
           That stretches out its shady length along
           the Island white.
           Round him roll'd his clouds of war; silent the Angel went
           Along the infinite shores of Thames to golden
              Verulam.
           There stand the venerable porches, that high-towering
              rear
           Their oak-surrounded pillars, form'd of massy stones, uncut
           With tool, stones precious!-such eternal in the heavens,
           Of colours twelve (few known on earth) give light
              in the opaque,
           Plac'd in the order of the stars; when the five senses
              whelm'd
           In deluge o'er the earth-born man, then turn'd the fluxile
              eyes
           Into two stationary orbs, concentrating all things:
           The ever-varying spiral ascents to the Heavens of Heavens
           Were bended downward, and the nostrils' golden gates shut,
           Turn'd outward, barr'd, and petrify'd against the Infinite.

           Thought chang'd the Infinite to a Serpent, that which
              pitieth
           To a devouring flame; and Man fled from its face and hid
           In forests of night; then all the eternal forests were divided
           Into earths, rolling in circles of Space, that like an ocean
              rush'd
           And overwhelmed all except this finite wall of flesh.
           Then was the Serpent temple form'd, image of Infinite, |
           Shut up in finite revolutions, and Man became an Angel,
           Heaven a mighty circle turning, God a tyrant crown'd.

           Now arriv'd the ancient Guardian at the southern porch,
           That planted thick with trees of blackest leaf,
              and in a vale
           Obscure enclos'd the Stone of Night; oblique it stood, o'erhung
           With purple flowers and berries red, image
              of that sweet South,
           Once open to the heavens, and elevated on the human neck,
           Now overgrown with hair, and cover'd with a stony roof.
           Downward 'tis sunk beneath th' attractive North, that round
              the feet,
           A raging whirlpool, draws the dizzy enquirer to his grave.

              Albion's Angel rose upon the Stone of Night.
              He saw Urizen on the Atlantic;
              And his brazen Book,
              That Kings and Priests had copied on Earth,
              Expanded from North to South.

           And the clouds and fires pale roll'd round in the night
              of Enitharmon,
           Round Albion's cliffs and London's walls: still Enitharmon slept.
           Rolling volumes of grey mist involve Churches,
              Palaces, Towers;
           For Urizen unclasp'd his Book, feeding his soul with pity.
           The youth of England, hid in gloom, curse the pain'd heavens,
              compell'd
           Into the deadly night to see the form
              of Albion's Angel.
           Their parents brought them forth, and Aged Ignorance preaches*
              canting,
           On a vast rock, perceiv'd by those senses that are clos'd front
              thought -------
           Bleak, dark, abrupt it stands, and overshadows London city.
           They saw his bony feet on the rock, the flesh consum'd
              in flames;
           They saw the Serpent temple lifted above, shadowing the Island
              white;
           They heard the voice of Albion's Angel, howling in flames of Ork,
           Seeking the trump of the Last Doom.

           Above the rest the howl was heard from Westminster, louder and
              louder:
           The Guardian of the secret codes forsook his ancient mansion,
           Driven out by the flames of Ore; his furr'd robes
              and false locks
           Adhered and grew one with his flesh and nerves, and veins shot
              thro' them.
           With dismal torment sick, hanging upon the wind, he fled
           Grovelling, along Great George Street, thro' the Park gate:
              all the soldiers
           Fled from his sight: he dragg'd his torments to the wilderness.

           Thus was the howl thro' Europe!
           For Ore rejoie'd to hear the howling shadows;
           But Palamabron shot his lightnings, trenching down his
              wide back;
           And Rintrah hung with all his legions in the nether deep.

           Enitharmon laugh'd in her sleep to see (O woman's triumph!)
           Every house a den, every man bound: the shadows are fill'd
           With spectres, and the windows wove over with curses of iron:
           Over the doors 'Thou shalt not,' and over the chimneys 'Fear' is
              written:
           With bands of iron round their necks fasten'd into the walls
           The citizens, in leaden gyves the inhabitants of suburbs
           Walk heavy; soft and bent are the bones
              of villagers.

           Between the clouds of Urizen the flames of Ore roll heavy
           Around the limbs of Albion's Guardian, his flesh consuming:
           Howlings and hissings, shrieks and groans, and voices of despair
           Arise around him in the cloudy heavens of Albion. Furious,
           The red-limb'd Angel seiz'd in horror
              and torment
           The trump of the Last Doom; but he could not blow
              the iron tube!
           Thrice he assay'd presumptuous to awake
              the dead to Judgement.
           A mighty Spirit leap'd from the land of Albion,
           Nam'd Newton: he seiz'd the trump, and blow'd the enormous
              blast!
           Yellow as leaves of autumn, the myriads
              of Angelic hosts
           Fell thro' the wintry skies, seeking their graves,
           Rattling their hollow bones in howlings
              and lamentation.

           Then Enitharmon woke, nor knew that she had
              slept;
           And eighteen hundred years were fled
           As if they had not been.
           She call'd her sons and daughters
           To the sports of night
           Within her crystal house,
           And thus her song proceeds: -

           'Arise, Ethinthus! tho' the earth-worm call,
           Let him call in vain,
           Till the night of holy shadows
           And human solitude is past!

           'Ethinthus, Queen of Waters, how thou shinest
              in the sky!
           My daughter, how do I rejoice! for thy children flock
              around,
           Like the gay fishes on the wave, when the cold moon drink"
              dew.
           Ethinthus! thou art sweet as comforts to my
              fainting soul,
           For now thy waters warble round the feet of Enitharmon.

           'Manatha-Varcyon! I behold thee flaming in my
              halls.
           Light of thy mother's soul! I see thy lovely eagles round;
           Thy golden wings are my delight, and thy flames of soft
              delusion.

           'Where is my luring bird of Eden? Leutha,
              silent love!
           Leutha, the many-colour'd bow delights upon thy wings!
           Soft soul of flowers, Leutha!

           Sweet smiling Pestilence! I see thy blushing light;
           Thy daughters, many changing,
           Revolve like sweet perfumes ascending,  Leutha,
              Silken Queen!

           'Where is the youthful Antamon, Prince of the Pearly Dew?
            Antamon! why wilt thou leave thy mother Enitharmon?
           Alone I see thee, crystal form,
           Floating upon the bosom'd air,
           With lineaments of gratified desire.
           My Antamon! the seven churches of Leutha seek thy love.

           'I hear the soft Oothoon in Enitharmon's tents;
           Why wilt thou give up woman's secrecy,
              my melancholy child?
           Between two moments Bliss is ripe.
            Theotormon! robb'd of joy, I see thy salt
              tears flow
           Down the steps of my crystal house.

           'Sotha and Thiralatha! secret dwellers of dreamful caves,
           Arise and please the horrent Fiend with your
              melodious songs;
           Still all your thunders, golden-hoof d, and bind your horses
              black.
           Ore! smile upon my children,
           Smile, son of my afflictions!
           Arise,  Ore, and give our mountains joy
              of thy red light!

           She ceas'd; for all were forth at sport beneath the solemn moon
           Waking the stars of Utizen with their immortal
              songs;
           That Nature felt thro' all her pores the enormous revelry,
           Till Morning oped the eastern gate;
           Then every one fled to his station, and Enitharmon wept.

           But terrible Ore, when he beheld the morning
              in the East,
           Shot from the heights of Enitharmon,
           And in the vineyards of red France appear'd the light
              of his fury.

           The Sun glow'd fiery red!
           The furious Terrors flew around
           On golden chariots, raging with red wheels,
              dropping with blood!
           The Lions lash their wrathful tails!
           The Tigers couch upon the prey and suck the ruddy tide;
           And Enitharmon groans and cries in anguish and dismay.

           Then Los arose: his head he rear'd, in snaky
              thunders clad;
           And with a cry that shook all Nature
              to the utmost pole,
           Call'd all his sons to the strife of blood.



            
              
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             -  ?
              ,   
               ?

            ,   ,   
             .

          , , !
             .    ,
          -   
            -     -
             .
            ?
          , ,   ?
                ?
          ,   .  , , ,  ,
             ,  !

          ,  !
            ,  .
               !
            ,  !
              !
          ,  ,      ,
               ".
           
           :  -  !
               !
              ,
              .
              ,   
              :
            .
               :
               ,
            ,  ,     -
             .
            .
             ,   
               . 
              ;   ,
              .

            ,
             .  
             ,  ,
             , -     
              ,

                 
             
                 ,
              
             ,     .
           ,  ,   
              ,
                 
             ;
          ,  ,      ;
             - ,  ,   , -
             
             ,     
             ,
             ,    
             ,
          ,  ,      
             ,    ,  , -
            -    -   
             ;
                 ,
             ;     
               .
              
               ,

              , -  ,
          ,        ,
                 ,
             , ,   , -
              
                 .
               
             , -
           ,     
             ,
            ,  ,  - 
             .

                     
             ,
              ,  ,
                , 
             -  - ,
                ,  
           ,     , -
           ,    ,  ,
           , ,    .

            
            ,  ,
              ,
              ,    ,
             .

                  ,
               ;  .
              - ,   , -
          ,     , 
             .
               ,
             , 
           .
             ,   
          ,    ,
              , -
               ,
                ,
            ,   ,   
               ;
                ,
               .

           -      -    ;
              ;
                ,
            :    ,
               
                   
             .
                ,  
             ,  
          ;  ;     .

            , !
             , ,
             
           ;      
                 .

              (   !),
          ,    ,     
             ;
          ,    ,   -  
             ;
           " "     "!" -
              ;
                ;  
             
             ;    
              .

                , 
                 ;
            ,   ,   
               .   
                  
             
            :      -  
             !
               ,
              .

            
             -    
               !
            ,   ,
              ,
             ,      .

            ,     ,
               .
           
          ,      .
              
              
             ,
            :

          " , !    -
             ,    ,
            ,
            .

           ,  ,     
             !
           ,      
               !
               -   ,
             !
           ,   ,      -
           ,     !

          -!
            ,   .
           , ,  .
            ,  , 
               !

              , ,  
              ?
          ,    !
          ,  !
             !   !
           ,  ,
             , ,   .

            , !
             ,  !
              ?
            ,   ,
           ,     ,
             .
           !       
              !

            
              .
               ?
          ,   ,   
             .
          !  ,
           ,  ,   !

            !  ,
                 
              !
                
             !

          ,   !
          ,   !
          ,     ,
                 !

            ,       
           ,  ,   
             ,
                 ;
              - 
              .   .

             ,
           ,   .
             ,  
            ,    ,
             , .

            ,  !
            !
               
               .
               !
             ,  !
           .

             
                 
           ,   ,
            ,   
                .

           . . 








                     And did those feet in ancient time
                     Walk upon England's mountains green?
                     And was the holy Lamb of God
                     On England's pleasant pastures seen?

                     And did the Countenance Divine
                     Shine forth upon our clouded hills?
                     And was Jerusalem builded here
                     Among these dark Satanic Mills?

                     Bring me my Bow of burning gold:
                     Bring me my Arrows of desire:
                     Bring me my Spear:  clouds unfold!
                     Bring me my Chariot of fire.

                     I will not cease from Mental Fight,
                     Nor shall my Sword sleep in my hand
                     Till we have built Jerusalem
                     In England's green & pleasant Land.



                            
                           ?
                             
                          ?

                             
                            ?
                            
                           ?

                          ,   ,
                            ?
                           
                           .

                            ,
                            .
                          
                           .



           Thou hearest the Nightingale begin the Song of Spring.
           The Lark sitting upon his earthy bed, just as the morn
           Appears, listens silent; then springing from the waving
              Cornfield, loud
           He leads the Choir of Day: trill, trill, trill, trill,
           Mounting upon the wings of light into the Great Expanse,
           Reechoing against the lovely blue & shining heavenly Shell,
           His little throat labours with inspiration; every feather
           On throat & breast & wings vibrates with the effluence
              Divine
           All Nature listens silent to him, & the awful Sun
           Stands still upon the Mountain looking
              on this little Bird
           With eyes of soft humility & wonder, love & awe,
           Then loud from their green covert all the Birds begin
              their Song:
           The Thrush, the Linnet & the Goldfinch, Robin & the Wren
           Awake the Sun from his sweet reverie upon
              the Mountain.
           The Nightingale again assays his song, & thro' the day
           And thro' the night warbles luxuriant, every Bird
              of Song
           Attending his loud harmony with admiration & love.
           This is a Vision of the lamentation of Beulah
              over Ololon.



               ,      -
                     
              ,  ,   .
               ,     ,
                   -
              -, -, -, -
                   -  
                 .
                 ,  
                .   
              ,  ,   
               ,  ,     
               .  ,
              , .      
                   
               , ,   .
                -     
                  -  ,
                ,    -
                     .
                     ,
                     .
                -     -  ,
                  
                   .



        Thou perceivest the Flowers put forth their precious Odours,
        And none can tell how from so small a center comes such sweets,
        Forgetting that within that Center Eternity expands
        Its ever during doors that Og & Anak fiercely guard.
        First, e'er the morning breaks, joy opens in the flowery bosoms,
        Joy even to tears, which the Sun rising dires,
           first the Wild Thyme
        And Meadow-sweet, downy & soft waving among the reeds,
        Light springing on the air, lead the sweet Dance: they wake
        The Honeysuckle sleeping on the Oak; the flaunting beauty
        Revels along upon the wind; the White-thorn, lovely May,
        Opens her many lovely eyes listening; the Rose still sleeps
        None dare to wake her; soon she bursts her crimson curtain'd bed
        And comes forth in the majesty of beauty; every Flower,
        The Pink, the Jessamine, the Wall-flower, the Carnation,
        The Jonquil, the mild Lilly, opes her heavens; every Tree
        And Flower & Herb soon fill the air with an innumerable Dance,
        Yet all in order sweet & lovely. Men are sick with Love,
        Such is a Vision of the lamentation of Beulah over Ololon.



               ,     .
               ,      
                .  ,  ,
                  - ,   
                    .

                ,   
                 
              .   .   
                .
                                   
                , 
               ,   
                ,  ,  .
                ,    ,
              . ,   ,
               ,   ,
                 .    
                 ,   ,
                  ,
                   .

                  - ,  ,
                  -   .
               ,  , 
                  .
                  ,   . 
               ...

               . . 


                               {*}

     {*      : Damon  S.
F. The Blake Dictionary: The Ideas and Symbols of William Blake, Providence,
1965; Beer, John. Blake's Visionary Universe, Manchester, 1969; Erdman D. V.
Blake: Prophet Against Empire, N. Y., 1977.    .
   The Complete Poems  of  William  Blake,  Ed.  by  Alicia
Ostriker, Penguin Books, 1977.}

                XIX  .  
,        "  ".
                (.
, . 6-7).
            1925  .    .
,           .
                   
   .      .    
     60- :  Geoffrey  Keynes  (Ed.).
The Complete Writing of William Blake, Oxford, 1966; Geoffrey Keynes  (Ed.).
The Letters of William Blake, Hart-Davis, 1968.
               .  .
 {The Poems of William Blake, Ed.  by  W.  B.  Yeats,  Lnd.  1905),  .
 {The Portable Blake, Ed. by  A.  Kazin,  N.  Y.,  1946)    
 . .
                 1834  .,    
  ""        -    
,                
"".         1900 .  .
 (    "  ",  ,  1921).    10-
    . ,     
            
  .  1965 .     "  
    .  ".      .        
    :  "    "
("  ", ., 1975)  ,  
150-     ( .  ,  .,  1978).    
     -,    
   (            
;        ,      
 ).
             The Poetical  Works
of William Blake, Ed.  with  an  Introduction  and  Textual  Notes  by  John
Sampson, Lnd.,  Oxford  University  Press,  1934.      .  
  ,  ,     
,     ,    
 ,        .
                    
   XVIII -  XIX .     
        (art,  doth,
hast,  wilt,  canst,  seeketh    .  .;  thou,  thee,  thy,  thyself),   
    (desart, thro, giv'n,  watry,  eyne  
.),     . " "  (eye-rhyme),
        ,      '  
 .
             , 
        , 
             ("And
builds a Hell in Heavens despite"  . .).
                    
  ,           
    .      
   .        
   :  (Urizen) -    
,   ,   ,  
;  (Los,   sol - "") - " ",
   ;    (Ore,      cor  -
"") -    .       
      (.  .      "  
").
          ,        
       ,        
         .
           ,      
  (        )   ,
   .


                             

        1783 .  ,  . 
(John Flaxman)   .  (A.  S.  Mathew),      
  .  ,  
,   ,        ,
  ,        22      
      .              
    .           ;      
,         ,
   .      ,  
               ,
           
    .


                                  1. 

         , ,      
14 .
     the Prince of Love - ,  
     my  golden  wing  -  ,            ,   
         
       . :

                           
                             ,  ,
                             
                               .

                             
                                ,
                          ,     ,
                            ,   .

                            ,
                              , , -
                            ,
                               .

                              
                              ,
                            ,
                              .


                                 2.  

         . "   ",   
           :         
 ,      (.  .  
""  "   ").
     ...languish'd head  -        (John  Milton,  16081674):
"" (Comus, 1634, 1. 744); " " {Samson  Agonistes,  1671,  1.
119)


                                 5.  

     mount Hecla - ,   


                             6.  

        "  ",        .  
   (Thomas Percy,  1729-1811)  "  
" (Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, 1765),   ,  
,   ,           
 " ".      , 
     XVIII .
     ...the night is a-cold - .  " " ( III,  .  4):  "Poor
Tom's a-cold"
     Like a fiend in a cloud -    -    ,  
  (.  " " ""  "  ",  
  " " - "-")


                                 7.  

     Ida - ,   . ,   ;   ,  
          
     Fair Nine -    

                            8. BLIND MAN'S BUFF
                              8.   

                         
,       "  
" {Love's Labour's Lost, Act V, Sc. 2): "When icicles hang by the  wall
/ And Dick the shepherd blows his nail."


                               9.  

              (Thomas  Chatterton,
1752-1770),            
 .    " " (Miscellanies  in
Prose  and  Verse,  1778      "  "  (Gordred  Covan),
   ,      .  .  
,         
 1776 .     ,     
   " " (. .  "").
     Like blazing comets - ,      "
IV" ( I, . 1),     "like  the  meteors  of  a  troubled
heaven"


                            10.  

       (.  VI)        "  III",  
 ,  , " V".  
  , ,    (Thomas Cooke. Life of  King
Edward III of England, Lnd., 1734),   III  "
 " ("a gallant and illustrious Murderer"),    ,
 ,      .  
   ,   "  ":    -
 ,  -  ,   
 (.  .  "").
     Trojan Brutus -    , ,  ,    
 ,  ,      ,    
 
     prevented - . prefigured, anticipated


                       11.   "  "

           ,   
    XVIII .,      1784  .
              ,  "
      ".           
      .       9-  
11-   :        
(   )    (,     
, . .  " ").
     Sir Isaac Newton -          
       
     Doctor  South  /  Or  Sherlock  upon  Death  -    
    (1634-1716)      (1641-1707);
,    ,      A  Practical   Discourse
concerning Death, 1689.
     Sutton -   (1532-1611),  ,      
       "".


             Shewing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul


             

     "  "        1784-1790  .,
      1789  .  (31  ,    21  ).
 " ", " ",  "  "
    "  ".
     " "       17901792  .,  
      "  "    1794  .  (54   ,
 27 ).           
 .
             "  "      "
"   4  :  "  ",  "
", "", "  ".  " " 
  1803 .
       ""          
   ,      1645  .        
  L'Allegro   Penseroso,         
         .      
   (Isaac Watts, 1674-1748)   " 
    " {Divine Songs Attempted in Easy Language for the
Use of Children, 1715).    ,  ,      
    ,      .
       .       
1794 .       ,    
  .        ,    
.


                              13. INTRODUCTION
                               13. 

            :    
      .    .
:

                              ,
                            .
                         :    
                           .

                         -    ! -
                          ,   .
                         - !   ! -
                         :   .

                         -     ,
                         , ,  !
                         -  ,   .
                            .

                         -    ,
                            ! -
                             ...
                            ,

                           
                           :
                             
                           .


                               15.  

       . :

                                

                                ,
                                  .
                                .
                                 
                                
                                .
                                 
                                
                                
                               .

                                , ,
                                  ,
                                 
                                 ,
                                  
                                .
                                 .
                                 .
                                  
                                 ,
                                 
                                .

                                
                                .
                                
                                : -
                               ,   
                                 
                                 ,
                                 ,
                                 
                                 !

                                 
                                 .
                                
                                 .
                                  
                                 ,
                                 ,
                                .
                                ,  
                                 .
                                 .
                               ,  .


                                16. 

         : "   
       :   ,   
   " ( ,  I,  29).  .      
  "   " {There  is  No  Natural
Religion): "Therefore God becomes as we are, that  we  may  be  as  He  is."
 .   .
       . :

                                   

                            ,  !
                             , , ?
                               
                                ,
                               ,
                            ,   ?

                                ,  ?
                                ,  ?

                            ,  ,
                              .
                            ,  ,    .
                               .
                             - ,  - .
                             ,    .

                               ,  ,
                                 !


                               17. 

        (. .  . 503) Praise for  Birth  and
Education in a Christian Land  Praise for  the  Gospel    
      ,      ,         .
                 
.
       . :

                                

                           ,
                        -   .
                       ,  ,
                       ,    .

                         
                     ,   ,
                         
                      ,   :

                     -    -   ,
                         .
                     ,     
                         .

                       ,   
                       ,   .
                       ,    -
                          .

                          ,
                      .  : "!
                     , ,  ,
                      ,   !"

                         .
                      , ,  
                        ,  
                        , -

                          
                         ,
                     ,   ,
                          .

     to bear the beams of love - .   Grace Shining  and
Nature Fainting: "Nor is my soul refined enough / To bear the beaming of his
love, / And feel his warmer smiles."
     Is but a cloud - . .     "  ";  .
  "", II, . 122-123


                          19.  

                
     .    
          (.,    ,   "   
"      -  Charles  Lamb,   1775-1834).      1824   .
        .    
Chimney Sweepers' Friend  and  Climbing  Boys  Album.    .  
 .
       . :

                             

                     ,    .
                      ,  
                      .   ,
                      ,     .

                        ,
                      .
                     : - !    .
                   , ,    !

                    ,  ,   ,
                          :
                    , , -,   , -
                      , , .

                       , -  , -
                       ,
                          ,
                         .

                   , ,   ,
                    , ,   ,
                       : ",
                     -     !"

                          ,
                           .
                     ,    .
                   ,    ,   .

     'weep! 'weep!  'weep!  -          
    "sweep"


                         20.  

           
       ,    
     .    .
  .
       . :

                     " ,  ?    ,
                        .
                         ,  ,
                         !"

                       ,    .
                         .
                         ,
                        .

     And away the vapour flew -  "vapour"     
" ",       (.  will-o'-the  wisp),  
   "wandr'ng light"   .  ,
    ,  ,  
  :    .


                           21.  

      .   .
       . :

                      ,  
                        ,
                      .   
                        .

                          ,
                        ,
                      ,     
                       .


                              23. 

           ""    
  Cradle  Hymn.  ,          
   ,      
 ("How much better thou'rt attended / Than the Son of God  could  be...
Here's no ox anear thy bed"),       
  ("Sweet babe once like thee, / Thy maker lay and wept for me").


                          24.    

     all must love -         "must"      
,   ,     should,    
do.


                             25.  

       . :

                   , , , ,
                   - , , , ?
                  .    
                 ,   , ,   .

                   -  , !
                    ,    .
                    ,   .
                   ,   .

                 ,       ,
                ,      .
                  .   ,
                       .

     Holy Thursday -       (  
).    .            
 .
     mighty wind - . Acts, II, 2-4


                                  26. 

       . ,  :

                                    

                        ,    ,
                         .
                        ,    ,
                           .
                        ,  ,
                          
                         
                          .

                           ,
                         __ .
                         .  
                         .
                        , ,
                          
                         
                         .

                           
                           ,
                           
                           .
                          
                           -
                          
                          .

                            ,
                          
                         ,     
                           .
                            -
                          
                          ,
                          .

                              ,
                            :
                           
                          .
                        "  -
                          ,
                           -
                         !

                        , ,  
                          
                           
                          .
                          
                          ,
                          ,
                          - !"

     And now beside thee... - . ,  II,  6:  "      
  ,         ;    ,  
 ,    ,      "
     ...life's river - .   , 22,1: "  
   , ,  ,      
"


                                  30. 

               The  Ant,  or   Emmet   
      .
     hie = hasten

                          31. ON ANOTHER'S SORROW
                           31.   

     Wiping all our tears away - .     ,  7.  17:
"...       "


                                


                               32. 

               ,     
  ,                
.           ,    
 ,      .
     Calling the lapsed soul -     
     The starry pole -  .        
 .
      Earth,  Earth, return! - .    22,  29:  ",  ,  ,
!    "
     The starry floor, / The wat'ry shore -      
 ,   " (. .   .  505)  ",
  starry Jealousy  the heavy chain   

                             33. EARTH'S ANSWER
                              33.  

          :        
   ,               
.


                             35.  

         "  ".    .
  .   . :

                                

                            ,
                          
                        ,  ,
                         , ?

                          -   
                          , ?
                            .
                        ,    !

                        ,  
                           ,
                           ,
                          .

                           ,
                           , -
                           ,
                          .


                             36.  

     Grave = engrave
     And the desart  wild  /  Become  a  garden  mild  -    
,              
          ,  
         .  .  
, 35, I: "      ,      
,  ,  ".
     Lyca -          ,    ,
   (. " ").      
,  -   .


                            37.  

     allay = put to rest


                          38.  

         " ".

                              39. NURSE'S SONG
                            39.  

         " ".


                              40.  

            -        ,
   ,         
    ,       (
     ).   . :

                             ,  !
                            ,  ,
                              ,
                               

                             
                              
                                
                              .


                                41. 

      XVIII .  "fly"      .
 .      . :

                                    

                                ,
                                 
                                
                                .

                                -  :
                                 .
                                 , ,
                                ?

                                 ,
                               , 
                                
                                .

                                  ,
                                ,  ,
                                 ,
                                 , -

                                  
                                , -
                                
                                .

     Am not I / A fly like thee? - .  .  (Thomas Gray, 17161771) Ode
on the Spring: "Poor Moralist! and what art Thou? A solitary fly!"


                                 42. 

           " ".


                                  43. 

              ""       "    ".
      ""          
-.        
  ,  . .  (S.  F.  Damon):
  ,       ,
,      ,  ,
                   
,    .
       . :

                         , ,  ,
                             .
                           , ,
                           ?

                             
                            ?
                             ?
                            ?

                             
                           ?
                           
                            - ?

                           ,  ,
                            ?
                             ,
                           ?

                            , 
                            ,
                          ,    
                            , -

                         ,  ,
                            ?
                              ,
                            ?

         . :

                        ,  ,  
                           ,
                          
                          ?

                           
                           ?
                           ?
                           ?

                          ,  ,
                           
                           
                           ?

                             ?
                            ?
                           
                         ,  ?

                            
                          , -
                         , ,
                           ?

                           ,
                           
                          ,
                         ,  ?

                        ,  ,  
                           !
                          
                           ?

     forests of the night -     ("")      ("")  
   


                            45. ! !..

     Who countest the steps of the  sun  -    ""    
,        ,      ,  
      .


                                 46. 

       . :

                              ,
                             .
                             ,
                         ,  ,    .

        . :

                                   

                          .
                          
                           ,
                           .


                               47.  

      ,     ,    
   ,           
     .  .  
.
       . :

                             ,
                           , - ,
                         , ,  , -
                           .

                            ,
                         "  !" -   .
                              ,
                             .

                         ,   ,
                           , 
                            ,  
                            .


                           48.  

       . ,  :

                                  

                    ,     ,
                          ;
                       ,    
                        .

                          ,
                         ,
                        ,
                         ;

                           -
                      ,   ;
                         ,
                        .

                       ,   ,
                     ,    ,
                          ,
                        ,    !


                                 49. 

       . ,  :

                                   

                           ,
                            .
                             ,
                            .

                             ,
                            , -
                          ,   -
                           .

                           
                           ,
                           
                          -   .

                            -  
                          , 
                          -  ,
                          -   .

     each  charter'd  street  ...  charter'd  Thames  -      
    "charter",              ,
   .


                        50.  

        "   "  " ".


                               51. -

        "-"  " ".


                         53.  

            "   "      "
"  "  ".        
Obedience to Parents.


                                55.  

         " " (6, 4).     
    ""    "".       ,
,            .  
   ,      ,  
  ;    : "It is  raised  a  spiritual
body" (I Corinthians, 15, 44).


                          " "

     ,           
     1789  1811 .     1847
.      .           
  "   ",   ,   
  , ,        .      .  
         
,   .  ,   
  ,         
  .




                       58.   ...

       . ,   :

                            
                            ;
                            ,  
                            .

                             ,   
                               -
                           , ,
                             .

                              ,
                            ,
                            ,  ,
                              .


                    59.    ...

        ,   -"",  ,
    ,                   
 .
      .   .   . :

                             -
                          .   ,
                             
                         ,  .

                             
                         ,  .
                             ,
                             .

                          ,   
                         ,   .
                           , 
                            .

                             
                           .
                             .
                            .


                        61.    ...

                "    
"  " ".       
  " "  " ".


                              62. 

                ""      "
".
      .   .


                               64. -

                       "
".
     But the time of youth is fled / And grey hairs are on my head -  
   "  "       
 "" (" ").


                              67.  

             ,     
  .  Nobodaddy  -      (Daddy  Nobody  
 Father of All).
      .   .
       . :

                                 

                          ! 
                           , ,
                         ,   ,
                           ?

                            ,
                           ,  ,
                            
                           , -    ?

                          ,   
                             ?

                           71. MERLIN'S PROPHECY
                          71.  

     Merlin's Prophecy - .          
  " " ( III, . 2): "This prophecy Merlin shall make;
for I live before his time."  -     .


                             73.   

                   
 1775-1783 .             
     (.  "").
     charter'd streams - . .   ""


                  80.  ,  !..

          1789 .
     Queen of France -  -  (1755-1793),      
 XVI.     ,      
(Edmund  Burke,  1729-1797)    "           "
{Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790),     
   .
     ...old Nobodaddy - .  .      "  ".  
      ,  -
,     XVI   1789  .,    ,
  ,  1791 .    (   1795
.).
     suckers - . -
     Fayette -        (1757-1834),    
,                      
    1775-1783 .        
    ,      .   
  ,     ,
  .         ,  
     (1793-1797).  .      "
".




                           81.   

      .   .
     Spectre ...  Emanation  -      .  ,  "  
          .      
  - , . .    ,   
  "  (N.  Frye.  Fearful  Symmetry,  1947).  .  
,        .  :    
       ,        
 ()    .  ,  
, -       ,        
,         .      ""
:  "      ,         
,   ,    ,     ,
        ".      ,
,    ,      -  
  "" ,    ,    
          ,      -   
             ,    
         .  .    .  
 "".
     This the Wine, and this the Bread -  , 26, 26-28;  , 14,
22-24;  , 22, 19-20.
       . :

                               

                            
                         ,   ,
                         -  
                         .

                         ,  ,
                        ,  .
                        ,   ,
                            -

                       ,  ,
                           .
                            
                         ?

                        ,   
                          .
                       , -    , -
                          .

                           
                        ,   
                        ,   ,
                            .

                           :
                          .
                         ,  
                        ,    .

                         ,  ,
                           
                          ,  ,
                          -  !

                       ,    ,
                        -   ?
                       ,   
                          ?

                       " , -    :
                          !
                       , -    ,
                        , -   !

                        , ,   
                         -   !
                          
                          ".

                         -   
                        ,  ,
                          
                          .

                           !
                          
                       ,   ,
                          .

                        ,  ,
                            
                        ,   ,
                         .

                         -   .
                            
                        ?
                       " , -  , -  ".


                  82.   ,  ...

          (1724-1803)   
 The German Museum  1800 .      
 ,     "  "      
   .            
,     ,  ""    
.  .   .
     For old Nobodaddy aloft / ...and belch'd and cough'd -  
   "  ,    !";  Nobodaddy  -  .
.   " "
     Lambeth - ,  ,   1791-1800 .  


                    83. , ! , !..

              ,
,            1789  .     
            
 ,    .
     The Atoms of Democritus -     
(. 470  460  . . -    ),       
   ,    
     Newton's Particles -          
 


             85.       

             (1750-1814)    -          ,
    .    1813  .  ,  
    ,        .
    .


                                  86. 

     ...the Western path -          

     The war of swords and spears / Melted by dewy tears - ,  
       ,      ,
     (. "": "When the stars threw down
their spears / And water'd heaven with their tears")



     ,               "
",      . X.     ,
   ,          1809
.         (.  .    "
"), ,   ,    
  (.  , . 9,   ).


              89.   ,  ,  ...

       -  ,  


                 92.     ...

     ,       1806  .,    
 49 .

       93. ALL PICTURES THAT'S PANTED WITH SENSE AND WITH THOUGHT...
                 93.      ...

     pant = paint; ,          .  X.

     Fuseli   -         (1741-1825),   ,      
;        ;
      
     they can't see an outline -        .  
  ""        ,    
     ""        (.  
.   "    ").


                                94. 

     woman into a statue of stone -      ,  
    


                          95.   ...

     panter - . .      "        
..."


                     96.     

          1809 . (. , . 7).
     as soft as Bartoloze -      (Bartolozzi,  1727-1815),
  ,             ;   
  ;       ""   ,
       
     Dryden, in rime -  1674  .      (John  Dryden,  1631-1700)
    The  State  of  Innocence  no  
" ",        .  
         :  "
    ,          ,   
     ".
     Tom Cooke cut Hogarth down with his clean graving -      
(Cooke, 1744-1818)             
,      
     Hayley - . ; . , . 6,   
     Homer is ... improv'd by Pope -          ""  
"",           
 (1688-1744).      ,  
  .
     Stothard -   (1755-1834;, ,    
    " " ,    

     poor Schiavonetti died  of  the  Cromek  -      
(1770-1812)         .


                     99.  ,   ...

     the Throne of Mammon - mammon - - ""  (.  ,
6, 24; , 16, 9-13);        
  ,  


                             

       11 ,     1868  .      
  .                 .
.       1801-1803 .


                                100. 

       . ,  :

                                   

                           ,
                           
                             -
                             .

                            ,
                            ,
                              -
                             .

                            ,
                            
                             
                             .

                             
                             -
                            ,
                            .


                              101.  

     ""          ,      ""  
  ""     "   ":      -   
 - ,      .


                              102. 

        , ""    - 
, "" -   .     
,             
,           .    
. , ,       (,  
 ,    );   -    
  -       (  ,      
),   (,     )  -
 ,       -    ,
     , . .     ,  ",
 , ".
       , "" -     
,         .        
          .  
(Eden) -      ;    (Generation)  -
         ,      
;  (Beulah)  -          ,
            
,          ;    (Ulro)  -  
  , .       
  "":  - ,  - ,    -
  ,  -   .   ""  
     ,    
            ,
     ,      
  .      ,      
          (. .  
. 498).
     Just as we reap in joy the fruit / Which we in bitter tears did  sow  -
 : "They  that  sow  in  tears  shall  reap  in  joy"
{Psalms, 126, 5)


                         105.  

        ""  "  ".  
      (. ), 
   ,   ,  
   -  -    .    
     :     
   -   .
      .   .   . :

                              

                           
                             .
                           
                          .

                        ,  
                            :
                          
                          .

                         ,
                         , -
                           ,
                           .

                            ,
                         ,  .
                          -   .
                        ,  !

                         
                        ,  , .
                          
                         .

                           
                         -   .
                           .
                          .

                          ,  
                           .
                       ,    ,
                        ,  .

     Surrey  Dower  -               ,
   ,    ,   
 1791-1800 .
     a weeping Babe - .  ""


                         107.  

                    
  (Ch. Smart, 1722-1771) " " (A  Song  to  David,
1763) Jubilitate Agno,           
         
  .    .      .   
             
.
         . :

                         ,
                       -   ,
                        - 
                       -   .

     The game-cock dipt -        
1849 . chafer = dark beetle


                108.       

      ,    ,  
        "".


                              109.  

     Then what have I to do with thee -  .  .      "
" (" ")


                                  

         1789 .,   15 .  
""    "  ".      
,  , "", "",      ,  
  ,     .  ,    
 ,    .    ,    -
 ,           
  .              "   "
    ( -  ,  
-  ,  - ),   ,      -
 ,            
;        .
     Thel -  .-.  "",  "";  .  .    
" "  " "
     Seraphim -    -;    ,  ,    
 -   (1486-1535)    "
"  ,    ,   
  .             
   .
     the river of Adona - ,    ,      
" "    
     the voice / Of Him that walketh - cp. Genesis, 3, 8:  "And  they  heard
the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day"
     the vales of Har -   .    -  
 (Heva) -  .
     Luvah = ; .  .         -  
,       .
     Worm - . .   " "  " "
     to her own grave-plot  -  .  .        

     and there she sat down - . Psalms, 137, I: "By the rivers of Babylon,
there we sat down, yea, we wept..."


                             

        1790  .  "  "    ,  
1792-1793 .      ,    
            (1688-1722;  .
, . 12-13).  1789 .     
,       .   80-  .
    ,        
  (              
" ").        
         .
                
 .
     Rintrah - ,        (.  .    .  498),
,  ,        
 
     swag = sag, sway
     Where lions roam - .     (24)   (5 
32),    
     As a new heaven is begun, and it is now thirty-three  years  since  its
advent... -    1757 .,    ,      
     "  ".    ,
    1757 .      33  ,
. . , ,    ,   
 
     the dominion of Edom -  ,     ,  
      .   :
",      ,      "  (,
27^39-40)
     Isiah XXXIV and  XXXV  chap.  -            
             ,  
  
     Good is Heaven.  Evil  is  Hell.  -  .        
    "  ":  "Heaven  and  Hell  are   born
together."
     The Governor of Reason is call'd Messiah -  " "  
   ,     ,      
  
     Milton's Messiah is called Satan -        ,
     ,     
     This is shown in the Gospel - .  , 14, 16-17, 26
     Proverbs of  Hell  -      (Book  of  Proverbs)    
,     ,      
 "" (1788) . .  (1741-1801)
     this firm persuasion removed mountains - .    :  "  
            :  "  
",   " ( , 17, 20)
     our great poet, King David -     

     I also asked Isaiah what made him go naked and barefoot three  years  -
. , 20
     I then asked Ezekiel why he ate dung... - . , 4
     the cherub with his flaming sword -      "
            ,  
    " (, 3, 24)
     the doors of perception -      
     ...chinks  of  his  cavern  -              
("", VII)
     ...Parable of sheep and goats! - .  , 25, 32-33; 10, 34
     ...between saturn and the fixed stars  -      
     
     Paracelsus   -        (1493-1541),            
;        
     Jacob Rehmen -   (1575-1624),        (.
 , . 20)
     ...Did He not mock at the sabbath - .  ,  2,  27;    ,
8-22;  11;    ,  27,  13-14;          "
" {The Everlasting Gospel, . 1818)
     Jesus  was  all  virtue  -        "virtue"    
 ,    "vir" - ""
     A Song of  Liberty  -        (1789)    
      .    ,  
             1792  .,
 ,          
 1793 .
      ,  -  ;    ,
       ,        
.
     dungeon - 
     thy keys -       
     starry king - .       .  .
  "" (" ").
     the hoary element -  
     Urthona's dens - ,   ,    ,
;    ,     


                            

        1793 .,   17  (  -  
  " ").        :  "Visions  of  the
Daughters of Albion. The Eye sees more than  the  Heart  knows.  Printed  by
Willm Blake. 1793."
         " ":      
,   (,       
  )     ,     
     ,     
     .        
           ,      ,
  ,  ,  ,
-     ,  .    :
 (   ,        )
  (             -
       ,    ,  
,     ),  
         (  .  βρόμιος  -  "";  .  
,  ;   " " -      
).       ,    
 .
     Leutha - ,    ,    ,  
,    ,   
     Stamp'd with my signet - . .   
     Theotormon's Eagles -    ,     ;
      
     The Father of Jealousy - 
     one Law for both the lion and  the  ox?  -  .    
"   "


                            

          .     
: "The French Revolution. A Poem in  Seven  Books.  Book  the  First.
London. Printed for J. Johnson. N 72. St. Paul's Church-yard, MDCCXCI."
              ,      "   
       ", 
    ,  ,  .
           -      14
 1789 .      1789 .    ,
, ,          .    -
   -      .
      .   .
     the Prince -  XVI (1754-1793)
     Necker -      (1732-1804),  ,      
 XVI  1777-1781   1788-1790  .    .  
      1789 .
     ...five thousand years  -  ,    
,  ,            4004  .    .  .  
  6000 .  ,  1804 .    
 .   ,      ,        
 ,    .
     Forty men -     
     the Commons -           ,
     1789 .  
     in the Louvre -          ,
  
     Hide from the living - .   , 6, 15-16
     Duke of Burgundy -      
 1714 .
     Atlantic mountains = Atlantean Hills, . .  ""
     starry hosts - . .  . 535
     Fayette  -    (.  .      "  ,
 !").          15
 1789 .
     Necker... leave the kingdom -       
  11  1789 .
     the Archbishop - . , 4, 17: "   ?   
  ?"
     Aumont -   (1723-1799)        
 14 
     Abbe de Sieyes -         (1748-1836),    
    ,        "
"
     King Henry the Fourth -    IV  (1553-1610),    ,
  ;      
     Bourbon ...  Duke  of  Bretagne...  Earl  of  Bourgogne  -  
.
     Orleans  -        (1747-1793)      
   .       
  ,   .
     instead of words harsh hissings - . " ", X, 517-519
     Mirabeau ... Target ...  Bailly  ...  Clermont  -    
      :           
(1749-1791),        (1736-1793),      
- (1757-1792) , ,    (1746-1794)
     ...Great Henry's soul -     IV (. )
     ...nor a soldier be seen -      
    ,   (8  1789 .)
     black southern Prison -  ,  -  ,  
;    29 ,    11 
     the General of the Nation  -  ;  .  .    
" ,  !"
     ...ten miles from Paris -  


                                  

         1793 .,  15 .
        : "America. A Prophecy. Lambeth. Printed  by
William Blake in the year 1793."
             
   1775-1783 .,    .  
    -     -        
""  " " .  ,        
,         ,         
.           
  ,  , ,  ,    
.       ,   
   -               
  .
      .   .
     The shadowy Daughter of Urthona - .  "" Shadowy Female: 
- . .  . 547;   -      .
        .
     ...an eagle ... a lion ... a whale ... a serpent -     
 -      
     Washington ... Greene -   ,      
     :      (1732-1799),
    (17061790),      (1737-1809),     
(1741-1775),   (17287-1806),    (1737-1793),  
 (1742-1786).
     The morning  comes...  -              
   "  ",    
  ,   
     Lion and Wolf -   
     Ore  ...  serpent-form'd  -        ,   
      
     Enitharmon - . .  "  "
     Thirteen Angels -           

     Atlantean hills = Atlantic mountains -  ,   
   (      ),      -
    ;     -         

     Ariston - ,    -    ,  
  .     -  .
     Bostons Angel -     -  ,
  
     Bernards  house  -      ,      
1760-1769 .;  
     The Bard of Albion -        -    (William
Whitehead, 1715-1785),    
     Allen ... and Lee -    (1738-1789),  ,      
,    (1731-1782),    
     the Pestilence began -              
,     ,        
            
  III
     a wine... the tender grape - .  , 2,13
     twelve years -  1777 .  (      )    1789  .
( )
     the five gates -   


                                   

        1794 .,   12 .   
: "Europe. A Prophecy. Lambeth. Printed by Willm Blake, 1794."
     ""    "".        
  (.  .    "    ")      
          .
    ,     .
      .   .
     Five windows -  
     The nameless Shadowy Female - ,      
  ,     :  ,     
   . .  .  "".
     Los, possessor of the Moon -:            
,  -  
     Urthona - . .  "   "
     Arise,  Ore -      ,  
,    
     That Woman ... may have dominion -       ,
      .         
    .
     Rintrah - . .  "   "
     Palamabron -  ,        ,    ,
 
     Elynittria -    ,   (. )
     Ocalythron -    ,   (. )
     the council-house - 
     his  ancient  temple,  serpent-form'd  ...  Verulam  -        
   
     ...deluge -        ,
      
     God a tyrant crown'd  -      ,  
         ,    
 XVIII .
     Stone of Night ... attractive North -     
,  -   
     Palamabron shot ... / And Rintrah hung -   ,
       (1759-1806)    
 (1729-1797),     
     A mighty Spirit ... / Nam'd Newton - . .     "
 "
     Ethinthus - ,    ,  
     Manatha-Varcyon -  
     Leutha - . .  "  "
     Antamon  -  ,        ,      
 
     Oothoon - . .  "  "
     Theotormon - . .  "  "
     Sotha - ,    ,  ,   -  

     Thiralatha -  
     Then Los arose - .            
   


                               ""

           1809  .  (    1804  .);     4
.    : "Milton. A Poem in two  books.  The
Author and Painter William Blake, 1804. To Justify the Ways of God to Men."
     ""       "  "
. .              ,
  XIX .  ,     , 
     (   ,    
    ).     ""  
                 ,    ""
.       "  "    
.  ,                -
 ,   ,            ,
- .
     Jerusalem - . , . 21
     Og & Anak -   - ,  ,   - 
   

                                                                   . 



     1757, 28  -         .
     1767 -      .
     1771 -     .
     1776-1777 -   " ",
     1779 -             
     .
     1780 -     ,      
 .      .
     1782 -       .    
  ,       .
     1783 -   " ".
     1784 -           
   -.            -  
.  "  ",         .
    .
     1788-1789 -  ,      "
" (  "  ",      
  ).     ("  ").  
   " " "".
     1789 - " ". " ".      .
" ".
     1790 - "   ".
     1791 - "  ".          .
            
. "  ". "".    ,
 ,       
   .
     1794 - " ". "". "  ".
     1795 - " ". " ".
     1796 -   " "  .
     1797-1799 - -          
.
     1800-1803  -        ,       
().
     1803,  -   .
     1805 -    "" . .    .  X.  
     .
     1807-1808 -   " "  .
     1808-1809  -    ""  ("  ",   
  1804 .).
     1809, - -          
 .
     1810 -   " "  .
     1811-1817 -  . "  "    ,  
      .
     1818 -           ,
  .
     1820 -  "" (" ",   
 1804 .).
     1821 -     .          "  "
().
     1822  -              (25   
).
     1825 -    "  "  (    
1826 .).
     1825-1826 -   .     "
" .
     1827, 12  -      .        18
 1831 .


Last-modified: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 16:36:08 GMT
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