Blake's Selected Poems

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Blake's Selected Poems Page 9

by William Blake


  That Heaven was Impure in thy Sight

  Tho thy Oath turnd Heaven Pale

  Tho thy Covenant built Hells Jail

  Tho thou didst all to Chaos roll

  With the Serpent for its soul

  Still the breath Divine does move

  And the breath Divine is Love

  Mary Fear Not Let me see

  The Seven Devils that torment thee

  Hide not from my Sight thy Sin

  That forgiveness thou maist win

  Has no Man Condemned thee

  No Man Lord! then what is he

  Who shall Accuse thee. Come Ye forth

  Fallen Fiends of Heavnly birth

  That have forgot your Ancient love

  And driven away my trembling Dove

  You shall bow before her feet

  You shall lick the dust for Meat

  And tho you cannot Love but Hate

  Shall be beggars at Loves Gate

  What was thy love Let me see it

  Was it love or Dark Deceit

  Love too long from Me has fled.

  Twas dark deceit to Earn my bread

  Twas Covet or twas Custom or

  Some trifle not worth caring for

  That they may call a shame & Sin

  Loves Temple that God dwelleth in

  And hide in secret hidden Shrine

  The Naked Human form divine

  And render that a Lawless thing

  On which the Soul Expands its wing

  But this O Lord this was my Sin

  When first I let these Devils in

  In dark pretence to Chastity

  Blaspheming Love blaspheming thee

  Thence Rose Secret Adulteries

  And thence did Covet also rise

  My Sin thou hast forgiven me

  Canst thou forgive my Blasphemy

  Canst thou return to this dark Hell

  And in my burning bosom dwell

  And canst thou Die that I may live

  And canst thou Pity & forgive

  Then Rolld the shadowy Man away

  From the Limbs of Jesus to make them his prey

  An Ever devo[u]ring appetite

  Glittering with festering Venoms bright

  Crying Crucify this cause of distress

  Who dont keep the secrets of Holiness

  All Mental Powers by Diseases we bind

  But he heals the Deaf & the Dumb & the Blind

  Whom God has afflicted for Secret Ends

  He comforts & Heals & calls them Friends

  But when Jesus was Crucified

  Then was perfected his glittring pride

  In three Nights he devourd his prey

  And still he devours the Body of Clay

  For Dust & Clay is the Serpents meat

  Which never was made for Man to Eat

  Was Jesus gentle or did he

  Give any marks of Gentility

  When twelve years old he ran away

  And left his Parents in dismay

  When after three days sorrow found

  Loud as Sinai’s trumpet sound

  No Earthly Parents I confess

  My Heavenly Fathers business

  Ye understand not what I say

  And angry force me to obey

  Obedience is a duty then

  And favour gains with God & Men

  John from the Wilderness loud cried

  Satan gloried in his Pride

  Come said Satan come away

  III soon see if youll obey

  John for disobedience bled

  But you can turn the stones to bread

  Gods high king & Gods high Priest

  Shall Plant their Glories in your breast

  If Caiaphas you will obey

  If Herod you with bloody Prey

  Feed with the Sacrifice & be

  Obedient fall down worship me

  Thunders & lightnings broke around

  And Jesus voice in thunders sound

  Thus I sieze the Spiritual Prey

  Ye smiters with disease make way

  I come Your King & God to sieze

  Is God a Smiter with disease

  The God of this World raged in vain

  He bound Old Satan in his Chain

  And bursting forth his furious ire

  Became a Chariot of fire

  Throughout the land he took his course

  And traced Diseases to their Source

  He cursd the Scribe & Pharisee

  Trampling down Hipocrisy

  Where eer his Chariot took its way

  There Gates of Death let in the Day

  Broke down from every Chain & Bar

  And Satan in his Spiritual War

  Dragd at his Chariot wheels loud howld

  The God of this World louder rolld

  The Chariot Wheels & louder still

  His voice was heard from Zions hill

  And in his hand the Scourge shone bright

  He scourgd the Merchant Canaanite

  From out the Temple of his Mind

  And in his Body tight does bind

  Satan & all his Hellish Crew

  And thus with wrath he did subdue

  The Serpent Bulk of Natures dross

  Till he had naild it to the Cross

  He took on Sin in the Virgins Womb

  And put it off on the Cross & Tomb

  To be Worshipd by the Church of Rome

  The Vision of Christ that thou dost see

  Is my Visions Greatest Enemy

  Thine has a great hook nose like thine

  Mine has a snub nose like to mine

  Thine is the Friend of All Mankind

  Mine speaks in parables to the Blind

  Thine loves the same world that mine hates

  Thy Heaven doors are my Hell Gates

  Socrates taught what Melitus

  Loathd as a Nations bitterest Curse

  And Caiphas was in his own Mind

  A benefactor of Mankind

  Both read the Bible day & night

  But thou readst black where I read white

  Alphabetical List of Titles and First Lines

  (Titles indicated in italics)

  Abstinence sows sand all over

  A fairy skipd upon my knee

  Africa

  A little Flower grew in a lonely Vale

  America a Prophecy (excerpt)

  Ancient Proverb, An

  And did those feet in ancient time

  An old maid early eer I knew

  Answer to the Parson, An

  Argument, The (from The Marriage of Heaven and Hell)

  Asia

  As I wanderd the forest

  Auguries of Innocence

  Awake awake my little Boy

  Birds, The

  Blind-man’s Buff

  Book of Thel, The

  Come hither my boy tell me what thou seest there

  Come hither my sparrows

  Come, Kings, and listen to my song

  Cradle Song, A

  Cruelty has a Human Heart

  Crystal Cabinet, The

  Day

  Divine Image, A

  Does the Eagle know what is in the pit?

  Everlasting Gospel, The (excerpts)

  [Experiment]

  Fair Elenor

  Fairy, The

  Fresh from the dewy hill, the merry year

  Golden Apollo, that thro’ heaven wide

  Golden Net, The

  Great things are done when Men & Mountains meet

  Grey Monk, The

  Gwin, King of Norway

  Hail Matrimony made of Love

  He who binds to himself a joy

  How sweet I roam’d from field to field

  [How to know Love from Deceit]

  I asked a thief to steal me a peach

  I die I die the Mother said

  I feard the fury of my wind

  If I eer Grow to Mans Estate

  If you play a
Game of Chance know before you begin

  If you trap the moment before its ripe

  I heard an Angel singing

  I laid me down upon a bank

  I love the jocund dance

  Imitation of Spenser, An

  In a wife I would desire

  In seed time learn, in harvest teach, in winter enjoy

  I rose up at the dawn of day

  I saw a chapel all of gold

  I saw a Monk of Charlemaine

  I traveld thro’ a Land of Men

  I walked abroad in a snowy day

  I will sing you a song of Los. The Eternal Prophet

  I wonder whether the Girls are mad

  Lacedemonian Instruction

  Land of Dreams, The

  Let the Brothels of Paris be opened

  Love and harmony combine

  Love to faults is always blind

  Mad Song

  Marriage of Heaven and Hell, The, (excerpts)

  Mary

  Memory, hither come

  Mental Traveller, The

  Merlins Prophecy

  Milton (excerpt)

  Mock on Mock on Voltaire Rousseau

  Morning

  Motto to the Songs of Innocence & of Experience

  My silks and fine array

  My Spectre around me night & day

  Never pain to tell thy Love

  O Autumn, laden with fruit, and stained

  Oer my Sins Thou sit & moan

  O father father where are you going

  O holy virgin! clad in purest white

  O I say you Joe

  O lapwing thou fliest around the heath

  O thou who passest thro’ our vallies in

  O thou, with dewy locks, who lookest down

  O Winter! bar thine adamantine doors

  [Postscript]

  Preludium (from America a Prophecy)

  Proverbs of Hell

  Remove away that blackning church

  Riches

  Rintrah roars & shakes his fires in the burdend air

  Several Questions Answerd

  Silent Silent Night

  Sleep Sleep beauty bright

  Smile, The

  Soft deceit & Idleness

  Soft Snow

  Song (“Fresh from the dewy hill, the merry year”)

  Song (“How Sweet I roam’d from field to field”)

  Song (“I love the jocund dance”)

  Song (“Love and harmony combine”)

  Song (“Memory, hither come”)

  Song (“My silks and fine array”)

  Song (“When early morn walks forth in sober grey”)

  Song 1st by a Shepherd

  Song of Liberty, A

  Song of Los, The

  Song 3d by an Old Shepherd

  Sweet Mary the first time she ever was there

  The bell struck one, and shook the silent tower

  The Caverns of the Grave Ive seen

  The countless gold of a merry heart

  The daughters of Mne Seraphim led round their sunny flocks

  The door of Death is made of Gold

  The Eternal Female groand! it was heard over all the Earth

  The fields from Islington to Marybone

  The Good are attracted by Mens perceptions

  The harvest shall flourish in wintry weather

  The Kings of Asia heard

  Thel

  The look of love alarms

  Thel’s Motto

  The Maiden caught me in the Wild

  There is a Smile of Love

  Theres Doctor Clash

  The shadowy daughter of Urthona stood before red Ore

  The Sun arises in the East

  The sword sung on the barren heath

  The wild winds weep

  This city & this country has brought forth many mayors

  Thou fair-hair’d angel of the evening

  Thou hast a lap full of seed

  Three Virgins at the break of day

  To a lovely mirtle bound

  To Autumn

  To be or not to be

  To find the western path

  To Morning

  To Mrs Ann Flaxman

  To My Mirtle

  To Nobodaddy

  To see a World in a Grain of Sand

  To Spring

  To Summer

  To the Evening Star

  To the Muses

  To the Queen

  To Winter

  Upon a holy thursday their innocent faces clean

  Welcome stranger to this place

  What is it men in women do require

  When early morn walks forth in sober grey

  When Klopstock England defied

  When old corruption first begun

  When silver Snow decks Susan’s cloaths

  When silver Snow decks Sylvio’s clothes

  When the tongues of children are heard on the green

  Where thou dwellest in what Grove

  Whether on Ida’s shady brow

  Who will exchange his own fire side

  Why art thou silent & invisible

  Why of the sheep do you not learn peace

  Why should I care for the men of thames

  Why was Cupid a Boy

  Wild Flowers Song, The

  William Bond

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  1 Printed by Blake “Spencer” and left uncorrected.

  2 Title supplied by Professor Erdman.

  3 This title was added by the poet after composition and later deleted.

  4 Title supplied by Professor Erdman.

  5 Following the lead of John Sampson, who printed the text in ms order followed by a “revised version for those who may prefer to read the poem as a whole, instead of as a number of disconnected proverb-couplets,” and assisted by the specific suggestions of John Grant (in correspondence), I have presented a thematically grouped rearrangement. I concede that Blake may have wished each reader to cope with this “Riddle” by himself. The “editorial arrangement” is not presented as in any sense an improvement upon the text but as a thematic analysis of it.

  6 The word “Famine” was deleted but not replaced by Blake.

  7 This poem, out of its context and retitled Jerusalem, is famous as a hymn, the music composed by Charles Hubert Hastings Parry (1848-1918).

 

 

 


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