Library of Congress Marriage of Heaven and Hell Detail from Plate 5 |
Whether on not William Blake had experienced a trauma in his youth which left a residue of unresolved guilt, it does seem clear that he was constantly attempting to understand how his mind worked. Getting a grasp of Albion, the Four Zoas, their Emanations and Spectres was his way of expanding his consciousness.
In Witcutt's chapter 'The Anatomy of Disintegration' he works with some of the breakdowns in the initial interactions of the Zoas before beginning the process of restoring completeness.
Witcutt Page 59
The object of the innumerable hero-questors is to find the castle, to witness the manifestations of its symbols, and to restore the Priest King to life and health.
Larry's comment
Speaking of the Grail legends - in which as in Blake the sick king is the Self. The search is the only worthwhile purpose in life - to awaken - to achieve identity, to find (and enter) the kingdom of heaven, to become conscious, to know what one is doing, thus to have the power to cease from evil and learn to do good. This is the true meaning and purpose of building Golgonooza. Hurrah. Thanks, Lord, for showing me the way.
The Way is the attempt to become conscious and the first step is to realize that you are asleep, confess your sin.
Witcutt Page 60
The Trauma causes the displacement of
the Four Zoas, except Urthona in the north, whose place remains
constant. Blake often depicts the four functions as facing the four
cardinal points of the compass; a very common way of delineating them,
as every psychiatrist knows.
Larry's comment
Urizen in the west means he fell like the setting sun. In fact he is about to die.
Four Zoas, Night VI, Page 74, (E 351)
Thus Urizen in sorrows wanderd many a dreary way
Warring with monsters of the Deeps in his most hideous pilgrimage
Till his bright hair scatterd in snows his skin barkd oer with wrinkles
Four Caverns rooting downwards their foundations thrusting forth
The metal rock & stone in ever painful throes of vegetation
The Cave of Orc stood to the South a furnace of dire flames
Quenchless unceasing. In the west the Cave of Urizen
For Urizen fell as the Midday sun falls down into the West
North stood Urthonas stedfast throne a World of Solid darkness
Shut up in stifling obstruction rooted in dumb despair
The East was Void.
...
But in Eternal times the Seat of Urizen is in the South
Urthona in the North Luvah in East Tharmas in West"
Witcutt Page 66
...Before the Trauma...He was not
troubled by the stern moral law which Urizen afterwards maintained
against the revolt of Luvah, for Luvah had not yet revolted, was still
the sweet prince of love who glided in the sunny beams.
Larry's comment:
The Law of course comes after the Fall; hence it is always associated with Fallenness. The angels only delight in doing God's will. The Law is fallen Urizen's attempt to redeem the mess.
Thus our self righteousness - the foolish delusion is that our
conformity to some ideal has made us right. Carried to the logical
extreme it contains the delusion that we were never wrong.
Thought and feeling had an illegitimate transaction - uglifying, maddening, depraving both.
Four Zoas, Night VI, PAGE 78 (E 353)
"For Urizen fixd in Envy sat brooding & coverd with snow
His book of iron on his knees he tracd the dreadful letters
While his snows fell & his storms beat to cool the flames of Orc
Age after Age till underneath his heel a deadly root
Struck thro the rock the root of Mystery accursed shooting up
Branches into the heaven of Los they pipe formd bending down
Take root again whereever they touch again branching forth
In intricate labyrinths oerspreading many a grizly deep
Amazd started Urizen when he found himself compassd round
And high roofed over with trees. he arose but the stems
Stood so thick he with difficulty & great pain brought
His books out of the dismal shade. all but the book of iron
Again he took his seat & rangd his Books around
On a rock of iron frowning over the foaming fires of Orc
And Urizen hung over Orc & viewd his terrible wrath "
Witcutt Page 68
The Trauma thus causes the
disintegration of the Self, viewed symbolically as the separation of
Albion from his children and possessions.
Larry's comment:
[The teachings of] 'The moral law ... was the reason for the
repression of thought, the Fall of Urizen.' Ah, recall the young
Jung: the law strictly enjoined him from thinking that giant
thought, but the thought broke through. That was certainly a sort
of a Fall also, but he interpreted it as grace - and rightly so.
Four Zoas, Night VII, Page 79, (E 355) "But Urizen remitted not their labours upon his rock Page 80 And Urizen Read in his book of brass in sounding tones Listen O Daughters to my voice Listen to the Words of Wisdom So shall [ye] govern over all let Moral Duty tune your tongue But be your hearts harder than the nether millstone To bring the shadow of Enitharmon beneath our wondrous tree That Los may Evaporate like smoke & be no more Draw down Enitharmon to the Spectre of Urthona And let him have dominion over Los the terrible shade" Book of Los, Plate IV, (E 94) "7: Nine ages completed their circles When Los heated the glowing mass, casting It down into the Deeps: the Deeps fled Away in redounding smoke; the Sun Stood self-balanc'd. And Los smild with joy. He the vast Spine of Urizen siez'd And bound down to the glowing illusion 8: But no light, for the Deep fled away On all sides, and left an unform'd Dark vacuity: here Urizen lay In fierce torments oil his glowing bed 9: Till his Brain in a rock, & his Heart In a fleshy slough formed four rivers Obscuring the immense Orb of fire Flowing down into night: till a Form Was completed, a Human Illusion In darkness and deep clouds involvd. The End of the Book of LOS"
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