THE FIRST BOOK OF URIZEN

William Blake

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  • Preludium to the First Book of Urizen
  • CHAPTER I
  • CHAPTER II
  • CHAPTER III
  • CHAPTER IV
  • CHAPTER IV A
  • CHAPTER V
  • CHAPTER VI
  • CHAPTER VII
  • CHAPTER VIII
  • CHAPTER IX

  • Preludium to the First Book of Urizen

       Of the primeval Priest's assum'd power,
    When Eternals spurn'd back his Religion,
    And gave him a place in the North,
    Obscure, shadowy, void, solitary.

       Eternals! I hear your call gladly.
    Dictate swift wingèd words, and fear not
    To unfold your dark visions of torment.

    CHAPTER I

    1. Lo, a Shadow of horror is risen
    In Eternity! unknown, unprolific,
    Self-clos'd, all-repelling. What Demon
    Hath form'd this abominable Void,
    This soul-shudd'ring Vacuum? Some said
    It is Urizen. But unknown, abstracted,
    Brooding, secret, the dark Power hid.

    2. Times on times he divided, and measur'd
    Space by space in his ninefold darkness,
    Unseen, unknown; changes appear'd
    Like desolate mountains, rifted furious
    By the black winds of perturbation.

    3. For he strove in battles dire,
    In unseen conflictions with Shapes,
    Bred from his forsaken wilderness,
    Of beast, bird, fish, serpent, and element,
    Combustion, blast, vapour, and cloud.

    4. Dark, revolving in silent activity,
    Unseen in tormenting passions,
    An Activity unknown and horrible,
    A self-contemplating Shadow,
    In enormous labours occupièd.

    5. But Eternals beheld his vast forests;
    Ages on ages he lay, clos'd, unknown,
    Brooding, shut in the deep; all avoid
    The petrific, abominable Chaos.

    6. His cold horrors, silent, dark Urizen
    Prepar'd; his ten thousands of thunders,
    Rang'd in gloom'd array, stretch out across
    The dread world; and the rolling of wheels,
    As of swelling seas, sound in his clouds,

    In his hills of stor'd snows, in his mountains
    Of hail and ice; voices of terror
    Are heard, like thunders of autumn,
    When the cloud blazes over the harvests.

    CHAPTER II

    1. Earth was not, nor globes of attraction;
    The will of the Immortal expanded
    Or contracted his all-flexible senses;
    Death was not, but Eternal life sprung.

    2. The sound of a trumpet the heavens
    Awoke, and vast clouds of blood roll'd
    Round the dim rocks of Urizen, so nam'd
    That solitary one in Immensity.

    3. Shrill the trumpet! and myriads of Eternity
    Muster around the bleak deserts,
    Now fill'd with clouds, darkness, and waters,
    That roll'd perplex'd, lab'ring; and utter'd
    Words articulate, bursting in thunders,
    That roll'd on the tops of his mountains:—

    4. `From the depths of dark solitude, from
    The Eternal abode in my Holiness,
    Hidden, set apart, in my stern counsels,
    Reserv'd for the days of futurity,
    I have sought for a joy without pain,
    For a solid without fluctuation.
    Why will you die, O Eternals?
    Why live in unquenchable burnings?

    5. `First I fought with the fire, consum'd
    Inwards into a deep world within,
    A Void immense, wild, dark and deep,
    Where nothing was—Nature's wide womb;
    And self-balanc'd, stretch'd o'er the void,
    I alone, even I! the winds merciless
    Bound; but condensing in torrents
    They fall and fall; strong I repell'd
    The vast waves, and arose on the waters
    A wide World of solid obstruction.

    6. `Here alone I, in books form'd of metals,
    Have written the secrets of Wisdom,
    The secrets of dark Contemplation,
    By fightings and conflicts dire
    With terrible monsters sin-bred,
    Which the bosoms of all inhabit—
    Seven deadly Sins of the Soul.

    7. `Lo! I unfold my darkness, and on
    This rock place, with strong hand, the Book
    Of Eternal brass, written in my solitude:

    8. `Laws of peace, of love, of unity,
    Of pity, compassion, forgiveness;
    Let each choose one habitation,
    His ancient infinite mansion,
    One command, one joy, one desire,
    One curse, one weight, one measure,
    One King, one God, one Law.'

    CHAPTER III

    1. The voice ended: they saw his pale visage
    Emerge from the darkness, his hand
    On the rock of Eternity unclasping
    The Book of brass. Rage seiz'd the strong—

    2. Rage, fury, intense indignation,
    In cataracts of fire, blood, and gall,
    In whirlwinds of sulphurous smoke,
    And enormous forms of energy,
    In living creations appear'd,
    In the flames of eternal fury.

    3. Sund'ring, dark'ning, thund'ring,
    Rent away with a terrible crash,
    Eternity roll'd wide apart,
    Wide asunder rolling;
    Mountainous, all around
    Departing, departing, departing,
    Leaving ruinous fragments of life,
    Hanging, frowning cliffs, and, all between,
    An Ocean of voidness unfathomable.

    4. The roaring fires ran o'er the heav'ns
    In whirlwinds and cataracts of blood,
    And o'er the dark deserts of Urizen
    Fires pour thro' the void, on all sides,
    On Urizen's self-begotten armies.

    5. But no light from the fires! all was darkness
    In the flames of Eternal fury.

    6. In fierce anguish and quenchless flames
    To the deserts and rocks he ran raging,
    To hide; but he could not. Combining,
    He dug mountains and hills in vast strength,
    He pilèd them in incessant labour,
    In howlings and pangs and fierce madness,
    Long periods in burning fires labouring;
    Till hoary, and age-broke, and agèd,
    In despair and the shadows of death

    7. And a roof vast, petrific, around
    On all sides he fram'd, like a womb,
    Where thousands of rivers, in veins
    Of blood, pour down the mountains to cool
    The eternal fires, beating without
    From Eternals; and like a black Globe,
    View'd by sons of Eternity, standing
    On the shore of the infinite ocean,
    Like a human heart, struggling and beating,
    The vast world of Urizen appear'd.

    8. And Los, round the dark globe of Urizen,
    Kept watch for Eternals to confine
    The obscure separation alone;
    For Eternity stood wide apart,
    As the stars are apart from the earth,

    9. Los wept, howling around the dark Demon,
    And cursing his lot; for in anguish
    Urizen was rent from his side,
    And a fathomless Void for his feet,
    And intense fires for his dwelling.

    10. But Urizen, laid in a story sleep,
    Unorganiz'd, rent from Eternity.

    11. The Eternals said: `What is this? Death?
    Urizen is a clod of clay!'

    12. Los howl'd in a dismal stupor,
    Groaning, gnashing, groaning,
    Till the wrenching apart was healèd.

    13. But the wrenching of Urizen heal'd not.
    Cold, featureless, flesh or clay,
    Rifted with direful changes,
    He lay in a dreamless night,

    14. Till Los rous'd his fires, affrighted
    At the formless, unmeasurable Death.

    CHAPTER IV

    1. Los, smitten with astonishment,
    Frighten'd at the hurtling bones

    2. And at the surging, sulphureous,
    Perturbèd, immortal, mad raging

    3. In whirlwinds, and pitch, and nitre
    Round the furious limbs of Los.

    4. And Los formèd nets and gins,
    And threw the nets round about.

    5. He watch'd in shudd'ring fear
    The dark changes, and bound every change
    With rivets of iron and brass.

    6. And these were the changes of Urizen:—

    CHAPTER IV A

    1. Ages on ages roll'd over him;
    In stony sleep ages roll'd over him,
    Like a dark waste stretching, changeable,
    By earthquakes riv'n, belching sullen fires:
    On ages roll'd ages in ghastly
    Sick torment; around him in whirlwinds
    Of darkness the Eternal Prophet howl'd,
    Beating still on his rivets of iron,
    Pouring solder of iron; dividing
    The horrible night into watches.

    2. And Urizen (so his eternal name)
    His prolific delight obscur'd more and more,
    In dark secrecy hiding in surging
    Sulphureous fluid his phantasies.
    The Eternal Prophet heav'd the dark bellows,
    And turn'd restless the tongs, and the hammer
    Incessant beat, forging chains new and new,
    Numb'ring with links hours, days, and years.

    3. The Eternal mind, bounded, began to roll
    Eddies of wrath, ceaseless, round and round,
    And the sulphureous foam, surging thick,
    Settled, a lake, bright and shining clear,
    White as the snow on the mountains cold.

    4. Forgetfulness, dumbness, necessity,
    In chains of the mind lockèd up,
    Like fetters of ice shrinking together,
    Disorganiz'd, rent from Eternity,
    Los beat on his fetters of iron;
    And heated his furnaces, and pour'd
    Iron solder and solder of brass.

    5. Restless turn'd the Immortal, enchain'd,
    Heaving dolorous, anguish'd, unbearable;
    Till a roof, shaggy, wild, enclos'd
    In an orb his fountain of thought.

    6. In a horrible, dreamful slumber,
    Like the linkèd infernal chain,
    A vast Spine writh'd in torment
    Upon the winds, shooting pain'd
    Ribs, like a bending cavern;
    And bones of solidness froze
    Over all his nerves of joy—
    And a first Age passèd over,
    And a state of dismal woe.

    7. From the caverns of his jointed Spine
    Down sunk with fright a red
    Round Globe, hot, burning, deep,
    Deep down into the Abyss;
    Panting, conglobing, trembling,
    Shooting out ten thousand branches
    Around his solid bones—
    And a second Age passèd over,
    And a state of dismal woe.

    8. In harrowing fear rolling round,
    His nervous Brain shot branches
    Round the branches of his Heart,
    On high, into two little orbs,
    And fixèd in two little caves,
    Hiding carefully from the wind,
    His Eyes beheld the deep—
    And a third Age passèd over,
    And a state of dismal woe.

    9. The pangs of hope began.
    In heavy pain, striving, struggling,
    Two Ears, in close volutions,
    From beneath his orbs of vision
    Shot spiring out, and petrified
    As they grew—And a fourth Age passèd,
    And a state of dismal woe.

    10. In ghastly torment sick,
    Hanging upon the wind,
    Two Nostrils bent down to the deep—
    And a fifth Age passèd over,
    And a state of dismal woe.

    11. In ghastly torment sick,
    Within his ribs bloated round
    A craving, hungry Cavern;
    Thence arose his channell'd Throat,
    And, like a red flame, a Tongue
    Of thirst and of hunger appear'd—
    And a sixth Age passèd over,
    And a state of dismal woe.

    12. Enragèd and stifled with torment,
    He threw his right Arm to the North,
    His left Arm to the South,
    Shooting out in anguish deep,
    And his Feet stamp'd the nether Abyss
    In trembling and howling and dismay—
    And a seventh Age passèd over,
    And a state of dismal woe.

    CHAPTER V

    1. In terrors Los shrunk from his task:
    His great hammer fell from his hand;
    His fires beheld, and sickening
    Hid their strong limbs in smoke;
    For with noises, ruinous, loud,
    With hurtlings and clashings and groans,
    The Immortal endur'd his chains,
    Tho' bound in a deadly sleep.

    2. All the myriads of Eternity,
    All the wisdom and joy of life
    Roll like a sea around him;
    Except what his little orbs
    Of sight by degrees unfold.

    3. And now his Eternal life,
    Like a dream, was obliterated.

    4. Shudd'ring, the Eternal Prophet smote
    With a stroke from his North to South region.
    The bellows and hammer are silent now;
    A nerveless silence his prophetic voice
    Seiz'd; a cold Solitude and dark Void
    The Eternal Prophet and Urizen clos'd.

    5. Ages on ages roll'd over them,
    Cut off from life and light, frozen
    Into horrible forms of deformity.
    Los suffer'd his fires to decay;
    Then he look'd back with anxious desire,
    But the Space, undivided by existence,
    Struck horror into his soul.

    6. Los wept, obscur'd with mourning,
    His bosom earthquak'd with sighs;
    He saw Urizen, deadly, black,
    In his chains bound; and Pity began,

    7. In anguish dividing and dividing—
    For Pity divides the soul—
    In pangs, Eternity on Eternity,
    Life in cataracts pour'd down his cliffs.
    The Void shrunk the lymph into Nerves,
    Wand'ring wide on the bosom of night,
    And left a round globe of blood
    Trembling upon the Void.
    Thus the Eternal Prophet was divided
    Before the death image of Urizen;
    For in changeable clouds and darkness,
    In a winterly night beneath,
    The Abyss of Los stretch'd immense;
    And now seen, now obscur'd, to the eyes
    Of Eternals the visions remote
    Of the dark separation appear'd:
    As glasses discover Worlds
    In the endless Abyss of space,
    So the expanding eyes of Immortals
    Beheld the dark visions of Los,
    And the globe of life-blood trembling.

    8. The globe of life-blood trembled,
    Branching out into roots,
    Fibrous, writhing upon the winds,
    Fibres of blood, milk, and tears,
    In pangs, Eternity on Eternity.
    At length in tears and cries embodièd,
    A Female form, trembling and pale,
    Waves before his deathy face.

    9. All Eternity shudder'd at sight
    Of the first Female, now separate,
    Pale as a cloud of snow,
    Waving before the face of Los.

    10. Wonder, awe, fear, astonishment
    Petrify the Eternal myriads
    At the first Female form now separate.
    They call'd her Pity, and fled.

    11. `Spread a Tent with strong curtains around them!
    Let cords and stakes bind in the Void,
    That Eternals may no more behold them.'

    12. They began to weave curtains of darkness,
    They erected large pillars round the Void,
    With golden hooks fasten'd in the pillars;
    With infinite labour the Eternals
    A woof wove, and callèd it Science.

    CHAPTER VI

    1. But Los saw the Female, and pitièd;
    He embrac'd her; she wept, she refus'd;
    In perverse and cruel delight
    She fled from his arms, yet he follow'd.

    2. Eternity shudder'd when they saw
    Man begetting his likeness
    On his own Divided Image!

    3. A time passèd over: the Eternals
    Began to erect the tent,
    When Enitharmon, sick,
    Felt a Worm within her womb.

    4. Yet helpless it lay, like a Worm
    In the trembling womb,
    To be moulded into existence.

    5. All day the Worm lay on her bosom;
    All night within her womb
    The Worm lay till it grew to a Serpent,
    With dolorous hissings and poisons
    Round Enitharmon's loins folding.

    6. Coil'd within Enitharmon's womb
    The Serpent grew, casting its scales;
    With sharp pangs the hissings began

    To change to a grating cry —
    Many sorrows and dismal throes,
    Many forms of fish, bird, and beast
    Brought forth an Infant form
    Where was a Worm before.

    7. The Eternals their tent finishèd,
    Alarm'd with these gloomy visions,
    When Enitharmon, groaning,
    Produc'd a Man-Child to the light.

    8. A shriek ran thro' Eternity,
    And a paralytic stroke,
    At the birth of the Human Shadow.

    9. Delving earth in his resistless way,
    Howling, the Child with fierce flames
    Issu'd from Enitharmon.

    10. The Eternals closèd the tent;
    They beat down the stakes, the cords
    Stretch'd for a work of Eternity —
    No more Los beheld Eternity!

    11. In his hands he seiz'd the Infant,
    He bathèd him in springs of sorrow,
    He gave him to Enitharmon.

    CHAPTER VII

    1. They namèd the child Orc; he grew,
    Fed with milk of Enitharmon.

    2. Los awoke her. O sorrow and pain!
    A tight'ning girdle grew
    Around his bosom. In sobbings
    He burst the girdle in twain;
    But still another girdle
    Oppress'd his bosom. In sobbings

    Again he burst it. Again
    Another girdle succeeds.
    The girdle was form'd by day;
    By night was burst in twain.

    3. These falling down on the Rock
    Into an iron Chain,
    In each other link by link lock'd.

    4. They took Orc to the top of a mountain.
    O how Enitharmon wept!
    They chain'd his young limbs to the Rock
    With the Chain of Jealousy,
    Beneath Urizen's deathful Shadow.

    5. The Dead heard the voice of the Child,
    And began to awake from sleep;
    All things heard the voice of the Child,
    And began to awake to life.

    6. And Urizen, craving with hunger,
    Stung with the odours of Nature,
    Explor'd his dens around.

    7. He form'd a line and a plummet
    To divide the Abyss beneath;
    He form'd a dividing rule;

    8. He formèd scales to weigh,
    He formèd massy weights;
    He formèd a brazen quadrant;
    He formèd golden compasses,
    And began to explore the Abyss;
    And he planted a garden of fruits.

    9. But Los encircled Enitharmon
    With fires of Prophecy
    From the sight of Urizen and Orc.

    10. And she bore an enormous race.

    CHAPTER VIII

    1. Urizen explor'd his dens,
    Mountain, moor, and wilderness,
    With a globe of fire lighting his journey —
    A fearful journey, annoy'd
    By cruel enormities, forms
    Of life on his forsaken mountains.

    2. And his World teem'd vast enormities,
    Fright'ning, faithless, fawning,
    Portions of life, similitudes
    Of a foot, or a hand, or a head,
    Or a heart, or an eye; they swam mischievous,
    Dread terrors, delighting in blood!

    3. Most Urizen sicken'd to see
    His eternal creations appear,
    Sons and daughters of sorrow, on mountains,
    Weeping, wailing. First Thiriel appear'd,
    Astonish'd at his own existence,
    Like a man from a cloud born; and Utha,
    From the waters emerging, laments;
    Grodna rent the deep earth, howling,
    Amaz'd; his heavens immense crack
    Like the ground parch'd with heat; then Fuzon
    Flam'd out, first begotten, last born;
    All his Eternal sons in like manner;
    His daughters, from green herbs and cattle,
    From monsters and worms of the pit.

    4. He in darkness clos'd view'd all his race,
    And his soul sicken'd! He curs'd
    Both sons and daughters; for he saw
    That no flesh nor spirit could keep
    His iron laws one moment.

    5. For he saw that Life liv'd upon Death:
    The Ox in the slaughter-house moans;
    The Dog at the wintry door;
    And he wept, and he callèd it Pity,
    And his tears flowèd down on the winds.

    6. Cold he wander'd on high, over their Cities,
    In weeping and pain and woe;
    And wherever he wander'd, in sorrows
    Upon the agèd Heavens,
    A cold Shadow follow'd behind him
    Like a spider's web, moist, cold, and dim,
    Drawing out from his sorrowing soul,
    The dungeon-like heaven dividing,
    Wherever the footsteps of Urizen
    Walkèd over the cities in sorrow;

    7. Till a Web, dark and cold, throughout all
    The tormented element stretch'd
    From the sorrows of Urizen's soul.
    And the Web is a Female in embryo;
    None could break the Web, no wings of fire,

    8. So twisted the cords, and so knotted
    The meshes, twisted like to the human brain.

    9. And all call'd it the Net of Religion.

    CHAPTER IX

    1. Then the Inhabitants of those Cities
    Felt their Nerves change into Marrow,
    And hardening Bones began
    In swift diseases and torments,
    In throbbings and shootings and grindings,
    Thro' all the coasts; till weaken'd
    The Senses inward rush'd, shrinking
    Beneath the dark Net of infection;

    2. Till the shrunken eyes, clouded over,
    Discern'd not the woven Hypocrisy;
    But the streaky slime in their heavens,
    Brought together by narrowing perceptions,
    Appear'd transparent air; for their eyes
    Grew small like the eyes of a man,
    And, in reptile forms shrinking together,
    Of seven feet stature they remain'd.

    3. Six days they shrunk up from existence,
    And on the seventh day they rested,
    And they bless'd the seventh day, in sick hope,
    And forgot their Eternal life.

    4. And their Thirty Cities divided
    In form of a Human Heart.
    No more could they rise at will
    In the infinite Void, but bound down
    To earth by their narrowing perceptions,
    They livèd a period of years;
    Then left a noisome body
    To the jaws of devouring darkness.

    5. And their children wept, and built
    Tombs in the desolate places,
    And form'd Laws of Prudence, and call'd them
    The Eternal Laws of God.

    6. And the Thirty Cities remain'd,
    Surrounded by salt floods, now call'd
    Africa: its name was then Egypt.

    7. The remaining sons of Urizen
    Beheld their brethren shrink together
    Beneath the Net of Urizen.
    Persuasion was in vain;
    For the ears of the inhabitants
    Were wither'd and deafen'd and cold,
    And their eyes could not discern
    Their brethren of other cities.

    8. So Fuzon call'd all together
    The remaining children of Urizen,
    And they left the pendulous earth.
    They callèd it Egypt, and left it.

    9. And the salt Ocean rollèd englob'd.