First posted April 2010
THE SLEEP OF ALBION is a chapter in Kathleen Raine's book, Golgoonoza: City of Imagination. In it Raine explores the relationship between King Arthur and Albion (the oldest name for Great Britain) in the mind of the British. She shows how Blake's Albion partakes of the legends surrounding King Arthur. As the legends of King Arthur end, he is entombed but not dead, sleeping until he is called to return to 'restore just rule to his kingdom and repel its enemies'. Blake writes:
Descriptive Catalogue, Number V, (E 543)
"The giant Albion, was Patriarch of the Atlantic, he is the Atlas of the Greeks, one of those the Greeks called Titans. The stories of Arthur are the acts of Albion, applied to a Prince of the fifth century, who conquered Europe, and held the Empire of the world in the dark age, which the Romans never again recovered."
Quotes from Golgoonoza: City of Imagination:
In Jerusalem, it is the Giant Albion who is "imagined in the similitude of Arthur". Albion's sleep is the sleep of Arthur. Raine says, "in recounting the 'acts of Albion' [Blake] considered himself to be recounting the sacred history - the inner history of the British nation from ancient times, with prophetic foresight of that future when Albion, like Arthur, is to wake from sleep."
To Raine the 'sleep' of Albion "is conceived by Blake not as the mere passage of time but as a state of apathy, of lowering of consciousness, of forgetfulness of higher things...
"Blake tells the story of how the nation has come to lapse into spiritual ignorance and forgetfulness...
"Blake is quite specific in his diagnosis of England's national disease: it is precisely that secular materialism ... upon which modern Western civilization is founded...
"Our society is forever thinking in terms of changing our circumstances; Blake's revolution will come when we change ourselves. From inner awakenings outer changes will follow...
"When Albion awakens he will find himself in his lost kingdom restored to its former glory; for the kingdom is ourselves...
"Paradise is not a place but a state of being, the lost kingdom to which the sleepers of Albion must someday awake."
Descriptive Catalogue, NUMBER V, (E 542)
The Ancient Britons:
Jerusalem, Plate19, Albion 'in pain & tears'
Yale Center for British Art Jerusalem Plate 19 |
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