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(Engraved 1794) | | Preludium to the First Book of Urizen |
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| Of the primeval Priests assumd power, |
| When Eternals spurnd back his Religion, |
| And gave him a place in the North, |
| Obscure, shadowy, void, solitary. |
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| Eternals! I hear your call gladly. |
| Dictate swift wingèd words, and fear not |
| To unfold your dark visions of torment. |
C HAP. I 1. LO, a Shadow of horror is risen | |
| In Eternity! unknown, unprolific, | |
| Self-closd, all-repelling. What Demon | |
| Hath formd this abominable Void, | |
| This soul-shuddring Vacuum? Some said | 5 |
| It is Urizen. But unknown, abstracted, | |
| Brooding, secret, the dark Power hid. | |
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| 2. Times on times he divided, and measurd | |
| Space by space in his ninefold darkness, | |
| Unseen, unknown; changes appeard | 10 |
| Like desolate mountains, rifted furious | |
| By the black winds of perturbation. | |
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| 3. For he strove in battles dire, | |
| In unseen conflictions with Shapes, | |
| Bred from his forsaken wilderness, | 15 |
| Of beast, bird, fish, serpent, and element, | |
| Combustion, blast, vapour, and cloud. | |
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| 4. Dark, revolving in silent activity, | |
| Unseen in tormenting passions, | |
| An Activity unknown and horrible, | 20 |
| A self-contemplating Shadow, | |
| In enormous labours occupièd. | |
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| 5. But Eternals beheld his vast forests; | |
| Ages on ages he lay, closd, unknown, | |
| Brooding, shut in the deep; all avoid | 25 |
| The petrific, abominable Chaos. | |
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| 6. His cold horrors, silent, dark Urizen | |
| Prepard; his ten thousands of thunders, | |
| Rangd in gloomd array, stretch out across | |
| The dread world; and the rolling of wheels, | 30 |
| As of swelling seas, sound in his clouds, | |
| In his hills of stord snows, in his mountains | |
| Of hail and ice; voices of terror | |
| Are heard, like thunders of autumn, | |
| When the cloud blazes over the harvests. | 35 |
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CHAP. 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. | |
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| 2. The sound of a trumpet the heavens | 40 |
| Awoke, and vast clouds of blood rolld | |
| Round the dim rocks of Urizen, so namd | |
| That solitary one in Immensity. | |
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| 3. Shrill the trumpet! and myriads of Eternity | |
| Muster around the bleak deserts, | 45 |
| Now filld with clouds, darkness, and waters, | |
| That rolld perplexd, labring; and utterd | |
| Words articulate, bursting in thunders, | |
| That rolld on the tops of his mountains: | |
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| 4. From the depths of dark solitude, from | 50 |
| The Eternal abode in my Holiness, | |
| Hidden, set apart, in my stern counsels, | |
| Reservd for the days of futurity, | |
| I have sought for a joy without pain, | |
| For a solid without fluctuation. | 55 |
| Why will you die, O Eternals? | |
| Why live in unquenchable burnings? | |
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| 5. First I fought with the fire, consumd | |
| Inwards into a deep world within, | |
| A Void immense, wild, dark and deep, | 60 |
| Where nothing wasNatures wide womb; | |
| And self-balancd, stretchd oer the void, | |
| I alone, even I! the winds merciless | |
| Bound; but condensing in torrents | |
| They fall and fall; strong I repelld | 65 |
| The vast waves, and arose on the waters | |
| A wide World of solid obstruction. | |
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| 6. Here alone I, in books formd of metals, | |
| Have written the secrets of Wisdom, | |
| The secrets of dark Contemplation, | 70 |
| By fightings and conflicts dire | |
| With terrible monsters sin-bred, | |
| Which the bosoms of all inhabit | |
| Seven deadly Sins of the Soul. | |
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| 7. Lo! I unfold my darkness, and on | 75 |
| This rock place, with strong hand, the Book | |
| Of Eternal brass, written in my solitude: | |
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| 8. Laws of peace, of love, of unity, | |
| Of pity, compassion, forgiveness; | |
| Let each choose one habitation, | 80 |
| His ancient infinite mansion, | |
| One command, one joy, one desire, | |
| One curse, one weight, one measure, | |
| One King, one God, one Law. | |
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CHAP. III 1. The voice ended: they saw his pale visage | 85 |
| Emerge from the darkness, his hand | |
| On the rock of Eternity unclasping | |
| The Book of brass. Rage seizd the strong | |
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| 2. Rage, fury, intense indignation, | |
| In cataracts of fire, blood, and gall, | 90 |
| In whirlwinds of sulphurous smoke, | |
| And enormous forms of energy, | |
| In living creations appeard, | |
| In the flames of eternal fury. | |
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| 3. Sundring, darkning, thundring, | 95 |
| Rent away with a terrible crash, | |
| Eternity rolld wide apart, | |
| Wide asunder rolling; | |
| Mountainous, all around | |
| Departing, departing, departing, | 100 |
| Leaving ruinous fragments of life, | |
| Hanging, frowning cliffs, and, all between, | |
| An Ocean of voidness unfathomable. | |
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| 4. The roaring fires ran oer the heavns | |
| In whirlwinds and cataracts of blood, | 105 |
| And oer the dark deserts of Urizen | |
| Fires pour thro the void, on all sides, | |
| On Urizens self-begotten armies. | |
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| 5. But no light from the fires! all was darkness | |
| In the flames of Eternal fury. | 110 |
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| 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, | 115 |
| In howlings and pangs and fierce madness, | |
| Long periods in burning fires labouring; | |
| Till hoary, and age-broke, and aged, | |
| In despair and the shadows of death. | |
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| 7. And a roof vast, petrific, around | 120 |
| On all sides he framd, 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, | 125 |
| Viewd by sons of Eternity, standing | |
| On the shore of the infinite ocean, | |
| Like a human heart, struggling and beating, | |
| The vast world of Urizen appeard. | |
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| 8. And Los, round the dark globe of Urizen, | 130 |
| Kept watch for Eternals to confine | |
| The obscure separation alone; | |
| For Eternity stood wide apart, | |
| As the stars are apart from the earth. | |
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| 9. Los wept, howling around the dark Demon, | 135 |
| 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. | |
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| 10. But Urizen, laid in a stony sleep, | 140 |
| Unorganizd, rent from Eternity. | |
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| 11. The Eternals said: What is this? Death? | |
| Urizen is a clod of clay! | |
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| 12. Los howld in a dismal stupor, | |
| Groaning, gnashing, groaning, | 145 |
| Till the wrenching apart was hearèd. | |
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| 13. But the wrenching of Urizen heald not. | |
| Cold, featureless, flesh or clay, | |
| Rifted with direful changes, | |
| He lay in a dreamless night, | 150 |
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| 14. Till Los rousd his fires, affrighted | |
| At the formless, unmeasurable Death. | |
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CHAP. IV 1. Los, smitten with astonishment, | |
| Frightend at the hurtling bones | |
| 2. And at the surging, sulphureous, | 155 |
| Perturbèd, immortal, mad raging | |
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| 3. In whirlwinds, and pitch, and nitre | |
| Round the furious limbs of Los. | |
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| 4. And Los formèd nets and gins, | |
| And threw the nets round about. | 160 |
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| 5. He watchd in shuddring fear | |
| The dark changes, and bound every change | |
| With rivets of iron and brass. | |
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| 6. And these were the changes of Urizen: | |
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CHAP. IV[A] 1. Ages on ages rolld over him; | 165 |
| In stony sleep ages rolld over him, | |
| Like a dark waste stretching, changeable, | |
| By earthquakes rivn, belching sullen fires: | |
| On ages rolld ages in ghastly | |
| Sick torment; around him in whirlwinds | 170 |
| Of darkness the Eternal Prophet howld, | |
| Beating still on his rivets of iron, | |
| Pouring solder of iron; dividing | |
| The horrible night into watches. | |
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| 2. And Urizen (so his eternal name) | 175 |
| His prolific delight obscurd more and more, | |
| In dark secrecy hiding in surging | |
| Sulphureous fluid his phantasies. | |
| The Eternal Prophet heavd the dark bellows, | |
| And turnd restless the tongs, and the hammer | 180 |
| Incessant beat, forging chains new and new, | |
| Numbring with links hours, days, and years. | |
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| 3. The Eternal mind, bounded, began to roll | |
| Eddies of wrath, ceaseless, round and round, | |
| And the sulphureous foam, surging thick, | 185 |
| Settled, a lake, bright and shining clear, | |
| White as the snow on the mountains cold. | |
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| 4. Forgetfulness, dumbness, necessity, | |
| In chains of the mind lockèd up, | |
| Like fetters of ice shrinking together, | 190 |
| Disorganizd, rent from Eternity, | |
| Los beat on his fetters of iron; | |
| And heated his furnaces, and pourd | |
| Iron solder and solder of brass. | |
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| 5. Restless turnd the Immortal, enchaind, | 195 |
| Heaving dolorous, anguishd, unbearable; | |
| Till a roof, shaggy, wild, enclosd | |
| In an orb his fountain of thought. | |
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| 6. In a horrible, dreamful slumber, | |
| Like the linkèd infernal chain, | 200 |
| A vast Spine writhd in torment | |
| Upon the winds, shooting paind | |
| Ribs, like a bending cavern; | |
| And bones of solidness froze | |
| Over all his nerves of joy | 205 |
| And a first Age passèd over, | |
| And a state of dismal woe. | |
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| 7. From the caverns of his jointed Spine | |
| Down sunk with fright a red | |
| Round Globe, hot, burning, deep, | 210 |
| Deep down into the Abyss; | |
| Panting, conglobing, trembling, | |
| Shooting out ten thousand branches | |
| Around his solid bones | |
| And a second Age passèd over, | 215 |
| And a state of dismal woe. | |
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| 8. In harrowing fear rolling round, | |
| His nervous Brain shot branches | |
| Round the branches of his Heart, | |
| On high, into two little orbs, | 220 |
| 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. | 225 |
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| 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 | 230 |
| As they grewAnd a fourth Age passèd, | |
| And a state of dismal woe. | |
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| 10. In ghastly torment sick, | |
| Hanging upon the wind, | |
| Two Nostrils bent down to the deep | 235 |
| And a fifth Age passèd over, | |
| And a state of dismal woe. | |
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| 11. In ghastly torment sick, | |
| Within his ribs bloated round | |
| A craving, hungry Cavern; | 240 |
| Thence arose his channelld Throat, | |
| And, like a red flame, a Tongue | |
| Of thirst and of hunger appeard | |
| And a sixth Age passèd over, | |
| And a state of dismal woe. | 245 |
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| 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 stampd the nether Abyss | 250 |
| In trembling and howling and dismay | |
| And a [seventh] 1 Age passèd over, | |
| And a state of dismal woe. | |
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CHAP. V 1. In terrors Los shrunk from his task: | |
| His great hammer fell from his hand; | 255 |
| His fires beheld, and sickening | |
| Hid their strong limbs in smoke; | |
| For with noises, ruinous, loud, | |
| With hurtlings and clashings and groans, | |
| The Immortal endurd his chains, | 260 |
| Tho bound in a deadly sleep. | |
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| 2. All the myriads of Eternity, | |
| All the wisdom and joy of life | |
| Roll like a sea around him; | |
| Except what his little orbs | 265 |
| Of sight by degrees unfold. | |
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| 3. And now his Eternal life, | |
| Like a dream, was obliterated. | |
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| 4. Shuddring, the Eternal Prophet smote | |
| With a stroke from his North to South region. | 270 |
| The bellows and hammer are silent now; | |
| A nerveless silence his prophetic voice | |
| Seizd; a cold Solitude and dark Void | |
| The Eternal Prophet and Urizen closd. | |
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| 5. Ages on ages rolld over them, | 275 |
| Cut off from life and light, frozen | |
| Into horrible forms of deformity. | |
| Los sufferd his fires to decay; | |
| Then he lookd back with anxious desire, | |
| But the Space, undivided by existence, | 280 |
| Struck horror into his soul. | |
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| 6. Los wept, obscurd with mourning, | |
| His bosom earthquakd with sighs; | |
| He saw Urizen, deadly, black, | |
| In his chains bound; and Pity began, | 285 |
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| 7. In anguish dividing and dividing | |
| For Pity divides the soul | |
| In pangs, Eternity on Eternity, | |
| Life in cataracts pourd down his cliffs. | |
| The Void shrunk the lymph into Nerves, | 290 |
| Wandring 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; | 295 |
| For in changeable clouds and darkness, | |
| In a winterly night beneath, | |
| The Abyss of Los stretchd immense; | |
| And now seen, now obscurd, to the eyes | |
| Of Eternals the visions remote | 300 |
| Of the dark separation appeard: | |
| As glasses discover Worlds | |
| In the endless Abyss of space, | |
| So the expanding eyes of Immortals | |
| Beheld the dark visions of Los, | 305 |
| And the globe of life-blood trembling. | |
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| 8. The globe of life-blood trembled, | |
| Branching out into roots, | |
| Fibrous, writhing upon the winds, | |
| Fibres of blood, milk, and tears, | 310 |
| In pangs, Eternity on Eternity. | |
| At length in tears and cries embodièd, | |
| A Female form, trembling and pale, | |
| Waves before his deathy face. | |
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| 9. All Eternity shudderd at sight | 315 |
| Of the first Female, now separate, | |
| Pale as a cloud of snow, | |
| Waving before the face of Los. | |
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| 10. Wonder, awe, fear, astonishment | |
| Petrify the Eternal myriads | 320 |
| At the first Female form now separate. | |
| They calld her Pity, and fled. | |
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| 11. Spread a Tent with strong curtains around them! | |
| Let cords and stakes bind in the Void, | |
| That Eternals may no more behold them. | 325 |
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| 12. They began to weave curtains of darkness, | |
| They erected large pillars round the Void, | |
| With golden hooks fastend in the pillars; | |
| With infinite labour the Eternals | |
| A woof wove, and callèd it Science. | 330 |
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CHAP. VI 1. But Los saw the Female, and pitièd; | |
| He embracd her; she wept, she refusd; | |
| In perverse and cruel delight | |
| She fled from his arms, yet he followd. | |
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| 2. Eternity shudderd when they saw | 335 |
| Man begetting his likeness | |
| On his own Divided Image! | |
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| 3. A time passèd over: the Eternals | |
| Began to erect the tent, | |
| When Enitharmon, sick, | 340 |
| Felt a Worm within her womb. | |
| 4. Yet helpless it lay, like a Worm | |
| In the trembling womb, | |
| To be moulded into existence. | |
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| 5. All day the Worm lay on her bosom; | 345 |
| All night within her womb | |
| The Worm lay till it grew to a Serpent, | |
| With dolorous hissings and poisons | |
| Round Enitharmons loins folding. | |
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| 6. Coild within Enitharmons womb | 350 |
| 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 | 355 |
| Brought forth an Infant form | |
| Where was a Worm before. | |
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| 7. The Eternals their tent finishèd, | |
| Alarmd with these gloomy visions, | |
| When Enitharmon, groaning, | 360 |
| Producd a Man-Child to the light. | |
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| 8. A shriek ran thro Eternity, | |
| And a paralytic stroke, | |
| At the birth of the Human Shadow. | |
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| 9. Delving earth in his resistless way, | 365 |
| Howling, the Child with fierce flames | |
| Issud from Enitharmon. | |
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| 10. The Eternals closèd the tent; | |
| They beat down the stakes, the cords | |
| Stretchd for a work of Eternity | 370 |
| No more Los beheld Eternity! | |
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| 11. In his hands he seizd the Infant, | |
| He bathèd him in springs of sorrow, | |
| He gave him to Enitharmon. | |
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CHAP. VII 1. They namèd the child Orc; he grew, | 375 |
| Fed with milk of Enitharmon. | |
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| 2. Los awoke her. O sorrow and pain! | |
| A tightning girdle grew | |
| Around his bosom. In sobbings | |
| He burst the girdle in twain; | 380 |
| But still another girdle | |
| Oppressd his bosom. In sobbings | |
| Again he burst it. Again | |
| Another girdle succeeds. | |
| The girdle was formd by day; | 385 |
| By night was burst in twain. | |
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| 3. These falling down on the Rock | |
| Into an iron Chain, | |
| In each other link by link lockd. | |
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| 4. They took Orc to the top of a mountain. | 390 |
| O how Enitharmon wept! | |
| They chaind his young limbs to the Rock | |
| With the Chain of Jealousy, | |
| Beneath Urizens deathful Shadow. | |
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| 5. The Dead heard the voice of the Child, | 395 |
| And began to awake from sleep; | |
| All things heard the voice of the Child, | |
| And began to awake to life. | |
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| 6. And Urizen, craving with hunger, | |
| Stung with the odours of Nature, | 400 |
| Explord his dens around. | |
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| 7. He formd a line and a plummet | |
| To divide the Abyss beneath; | |
| He formd a dividing rule; | |
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| 8. He formèd scales to weigh, | 405 |
| 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. | 410 |
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| 9. But Los encircled Enitharmon | |
| With fires of Prophecy | |
| From the sight of Urizen and Orc. | |
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| 10. And she bore an enormous race. | |
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CHAP. VIII 1. Urizen explord his dens, | 415 |
| Mountain, moor, and wilderness, | |
| With a globe of fire lighting his journey | |
| A fearful journey, annoyd | |
| By cruel enormities, forms | |
| Of life on his forsaken mountains. | 420 |
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| 2. And his World teemd vast enormities, | |
| Frightning, faithless, fawning, | |
| Portions of life, similitudes | |
| Of a foot, or a hand, or a head, | |
| Or a heart, or an eye; they swam mischievous, | 425 |
| Dread terrors, delighting in blood! | |
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| 3. Most Urizen sickend to see | |
| His eternal creations appear, | |
| Sons and daughters of sorrow, on mountains, | |
| Weeping, wailing. First Thiriel appeard, | 430 |
| Astonishd at his own existence, | |
| Like a man from a cloud born; and Utha, | |
| From the waters emerging, laments; | |
| Grodna rent the deep earth, howling, | |
| Amazd; his heavens immense crack | 435 |
| Like the ground parchd with heat; then Fuzon | |
| Flamd 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. | 440 |
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| 4. He in darkness closd viewd all his race, | |
| And his soul sickend! He cursd | |
| Both sons and daughters; for he saw | |
| That no flesh nor spirit could keep | |
| His iron laws one moment. | 445 |
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| 5. For he saw that Life livd 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. | 450 |
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| 6. Cold he wanderd on high, over their Cities, | |
| In weeping and pain and woe; | |
| And wherever he wanderd, in sorrows | |
| Upon the agèd Heavens, | |
| A cold Shadow followd behind him | 455 |
| Like a spiders 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; | 460 |
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| 7. Till a Web, dark and cold, throughout all | |
| The tormented element stretchd | |
| From the sorrows of Urizens soul. | |
| And the Web is a Female in embryo; | |
| None could break the Web, no wings of fire, | 465 |
| |
| 8. So twisted the cords, and so knotted | |
| The meshes, twisted like to the human brain. | |
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| 9. And all calld it the Net of Religion. | |
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CHAP. IX 1. Then the Inhabitants of those Cities | |
| Felt their Nerves change into Marrow, | 470 |
| And hardening Bones began | |
| In swift diseases and torments, | |
| In throbbings and shootings and grindings, | |
| Thro all the coasts; till weakend | |
| The Senses inward rushd, shrinking | 475 |
| Beneath the dark Net of infection; | |
| |
| 2. Till the shrunken eyes, clouded over, | |
| Discernd not the woven Hypocrisy; | |
| But the streaky slime in their heavens, | |
| Brought together by narrowing perceptions, | 480 |
| Appeard transparent air; for their eyes | |
| Grew small like the eyes of a man, | |
| And, in reptile forms shrinking together, | |
| Of seven feet stature they remaind. | |
| |
| 3. Six days they shrunk up from existence, | 485 |
| And on the seventh day they rested, | |
| And they blessd the seventh day, in sick hope, | |
| And forgot their Eternal life. | |
| |
| 4. And their Thirty Cities divided | |
| In form of a Human Heart. | 490 |
| 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 | 495 |
| To the jaws of devouring darkness. | |
| |
| 5. And their children wept, and built | |
| Tombs in the desolate places, | |
| And formd Laws of Prudence, and calld them | |
| The Eternal Laws of God. | 500 |
| |
| 6. And the Thirty Cities remaind, | |
| Surrounded by salt floods, now calld | |
| Africa: its name was then Egypt. | |
| |
| 7. The remaining sons of Urizen | |
| Beheld their brethren shrink together | 505 |
| Beneath the Net of Urizen. | |
| Persuasion was in vain; | |
| For the ears of the inhabitants | |
| Were witherd and deafend and cold, | |
| And their eyes could not discern | 510 |
| Their brethren of other cities. | |
| |
| 8. So Fuzon calld all together | |
| The remaining children of Urizen, | |
| And they left the pendulous earth. | |
| They callèd it Egypt, and left it. | 515 |
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9. And the salt Ocean rollèd englobd.
THE END OF THE FIRST BOOK OF URIZEN | |