- The Book of Ahania
- William Blake
- Exported from Wikisource on 12/19/19
- The Book of Ahania
- * * *
- CHAP: 1ST
- 1. Fuzon, on a chariot iron-wing’d,
- On spiked flames rose; his hot visage
- Flam’d furious; sparkles his hair & beard
- Shot down his wide bosom and shoulders.
- On clouds of smoke rages his chariot,
- And his right hand burns red in its cloud,
- Moulding into a vast globe his wrath
- As the thunder-stone is moulded,
- Son of Urizen’s silent burnings.
- 2. ‘Shall we worship this Demon of smoke,’
- Said Fuzon, ‘this abstract non-entity,
- This cloudy God seated on waters,
- Now seen, now obscur’d, King of Sorrow?’
- 3. So he spoke, in a fiery flame,
- On Urizen frowning indignant,
- The Globe of wrath shaking on high.
- Roaring with fury, he threw
- The howling Globe; burning it flew,
- Length’ning into a hungry beam. Swiftly
- 4. Oppos’d to the exulting flam’d beam
- the broad Disk of Urizen uphav’d
- Across the Void many a mile.
- 5. It was forg’d in mills where the winter
- Beats incessant; ten winters the disk
- Unremitting endur’d the cold hammer.
- 6. But the strong arm that sent it remember’d
- The sounding beam; laughing it tore through
- That beaten mass, keeping its direction,
- The cold loins of Urizen dividing.
- 7. Dire shriek’d his invisible Lust.
- Deep groan’d Urizen! Stretching his awful hand,
- Ahania (so name his parted soul)
- He seiz’d on his mountains of Jealousy.
- He groan’d, anguish’d, & called her Sin,
- Kissing her and weeping over her;
- Then hid her in darkness, in silence,
- Jealous tho’ she was invisible.
- 8. She fell down, a faint shadow wand’ring
- In chaos and circling dark Urizen,
- As the moon, anguish’d, circles the earth:
- Hopeless! Abhorr’d! a death-shadow,
- Unseen, unbodied, unknown,
- The mother of Pestilence.
- 9. But the fiery beam of Fuzon
- Was a pillar of fire to Egypt,
- Five hundred years wand’ring on earth,
- Till Los seiz’d it and beat in a mass
- With the body of the sun.
- CHAP: IID
- 1. But the forehead of Urizen gathering,
- And his eyes pale with anguish, his lips
- Blue & changing, in tears and bitter
- Contrition he prepar’d his Bow,
- 2. Form’d of Ribs, that in his dark solitude
- When obscur’d in his forests fell monsters
- Arose. For his dire Contemplations
- Rush’d down like floods from his mountains,
- In torrents of mud settling thick,
- With Eggs of unnatural production
- Forthwith hatching; some howl’d on his hills,
- Some in vales, some aloft flew in air.
- 3. Of these, an enormous dread Serpent,
- Scaled and poisonous horned,
- Approach’d Urizen even to his knees
- As he sat on his dark rooted Oak.
- 4. With his horns he push’d furious.
- Great the conflict & Great the jealousy
- In cold poisons; but Urizen smote him.
- 5. First he poison’d the rocks with his blood;
- Then polish’d his ribs, and his sinews
- Dried; laid them apart till winter;
- Then a Bow black prepar’d; on this Bow
- A poisoned rock plac’d in silence.
- He utter’d these words to the Bow:
- 6. ‘O Bow of the clouds of secrecy,
- O nerve of that lust form’d monster!
- Send this rock swift, invisible thro’
- The black clouds, on the bosom of Fuzon.’
- 7. So saying, in torment of his wounds,
- He bent the enormous ribs slowly:
- A circle of darkness! Then fixed
- The sinew in its rest; then the Rock,
- Poisonous source, plac’d with art, lifting difficult
- Its weighty bulk; silent the rock lay,
- 8. While Fuzon, his tigers unloosing,
- Thought Urizen slain by his wrath.
- ‘I am God,’ said he, ‘eldest of things!’
- 9. Sudden sings the rock; swift & invisible
- On Fuzon flew; enter’d his bosom.
- His beautiful visage, his tresses
- That gave light to the mornings of heaven
- Were smitten with darkenss, deform’d
- And outstretch’d on the edge of the forest.
- 10. But the rock fell upon the Earth,
- Mount Sinai in Arabia.
- CHAP: III
- 1. The Globe shook; and Urizen, seated
- On black clouds, his sore wound anointed.
- The ointment flow’d down on the void
- Miz’d with blood – here the snake gets her poison.
- 2. With difficulty & great pain Urizen
- Lifted on high the dead corse;
- On his shoulders he bore it to where
- A Tree hung over the Immensity.
- 3. For when Urizen shrunk away
- From Eternals, he sat on a rock
- Barren, a rock which himself
- From redounding fancies had petrified.
- Many tears fell on the rock,
- Many sparks of vegetation.
- Soon shot the pained root
- Of Mystery under his heel.
- It grew a thick tree; he wrote
- In silence his book of iron;
- Till the horrid plant, bending its boughs,
- Grew to roots when it felt the earth
- And again sprung to many a tree.
- 4. Amaz’d started Urizen! When
- He beheld himself compassed round
- And high roofed over with trees.
- He arose, but the stems stood so thick
- He with difficulty and great pain
- Brought his Books, all but the Book
- Of iron, form the dismal shade.
- 5. The Tree still grows over the Void,
- Enrooting itself all around,
- An endless labyrinth of woe!
- 6. The corse of his first begotten
- on the accursed Tree of Mystery
- On the topmost stem of this Tree
- Urizen nail’d Fuzon’s corse.
- CHAP: IV
- 1. Forth flew the arrows of pestilence
- Round the pale living Corse on the tree;
- 2. For in Urizen’s slumbers of abstraction
- In the infinite ages of Eternity,
- When his Nerves of joy melted and flow’d
- A white Lake on the dark blue air,
- In perturb’d pain and dismal torment
- Now stretching out, now swift conglobing,
- 3. Effluvia vapor’d above
- In noxious clouds; these hover’d thick
- Over the disorganiz’d Immortal,
- Till petrific pain scruf’d o’er the Lakes
- As the bones of man, solid & dark.
- 4. The clouds of disease hover’d wide
- Around the Immortal in torment,
- Perching around the hurtling bones,
- Disease on disease, shape on shape,
- Winged, screaming in blood & torment.
- 5. The Eternal Prophet beat on his anvils,
- Enrag’d in the desolate darkness;
- he forg’d nets of iron around
- And Los threw them around the bones.
- 6. The shapes, screaming, flutter’d vain;
- Some combin’d into muscles & glands,
- Some organs for craving and lust;
- Most remain’d on the tormented void,
- Urizen’s army of horrors.
- 7. Round the pale living Corse on the Tree
- Forty years flew the arrows of pestilence.
- 8. Wailing and terror and woe
- Ran thro’ all his dismal world;
- Forty yyears all his sons & daughters
- Felt their skulls harden; then Asia
- Arose in the pendulous deep.
- 9. They reptilize upon the Earth.
- 10. Fuzon groan’d on the Tree.
- CHAP: V
- 1. The lamenting voice of Ahania,
- Weeping upon the void
- And round the Tree of Fuzon:
- Distant in solitary night
- Her voice was heard , but no form
- Had she; but her tears from clouds
- Eternal fell round the Tree;
- 2. And the voice cried: ‘Ah, Urizen! Love!
- Flower of morning! I weep on the verge
- Of Non-entity; how wide the Abyss
- Between Ahania and thee!
- 3. ‘I lie on the verge of the deep,
- I see thy dark clouds ascend,
- I see thy black forests and floods,
- A horrible waste to my eyes!
- 4. ‘Weeping I walk over rocks,
- Over dens & thro’ valleys of death.
- Why didst thou despise Ahania,
- To cast me from thy bright presence
- Into the World of Loneness?
- 5. ‘I cannot touch his hand,
- Nor weep on his knees, nor hear
- his voice & bow, nor see his eyes
- And joy, nor hear his footsteps and
- My heart leap at the lovely sound!
- I cannot kiss the place
- Whereon his bright feet have trod,
- But I wander on the rocks
- With hard necessity.
- 6. ‘Where is my golden palace?
- Where my ivory bed?
- Where the joy of my morning hour?
- Where the sons of eternity singing
- 7. ‘To awake bright Urizen, my king,
- To arise to the mountain sport,
- To the bliss of eternal valleys;
- 8. ‘To awake my king in the morn
- To embrace Ahania’s joy
- On the bredth of his open bosom,
- From my soft cloud of dew to fall
- In showers of life on his harvests?
- 9. ‘When he gave my happy soul
- To the sons of eternal joy;
- When he took the daughters of life
- into my chambers of love;
- 10. When I found babes of bless on my beds,
- And bosoms of mild in my chambers
- Fill’d with eternal seed,
- O! eternal births sung round Ahania
- In interchange sweet of their joys.
- 11. “Swell’d with ripeness & fat with fatness,
- Bursting on winds my odors,
- My ripe figs and rich pomegranates
- In infant joy at thy feet,
- O Urizen, sported and sang.
- 12. ‘Then thou with thy lap full of seed,
- With thy hand full of generous fire,
- Walked forth form the clouds of morning,
- On the virgins of springing joy,
- On the human soul to cast
- The seed of eternal science.
- 13. ‘The sweat poured down thy temples;
- To Ahania return’d in evening
- The moisture awoke to birth
- My mother’s-joys, sleeping in bliss.
- 14. ‘But now, alone, over rocks, mountains,
- Cast out form thy lovely bosom.
- Cruel jealousy, selfish fear,
- self-destroying: how can delight
- Renew in these chains of darkness,
- Where bones of beasts are strown
- On the bleak and snowy mountains,
- Where bones form the birth are buried
- Before they see the light?’
- * * *
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