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  • Europe a Prophecy
  • William Blake
  • Exported from Wikisource on 12/19/19
  • CONTENTS: Inroduction [Plate iii]
  • Preludium
  • A Prophecy
  • EUROPE a PROPHECY
  • [Plate iii][1]
  • ‘Five windows light the cavern’d Man: thro’ one he breathes the air;
  • Thro’ one hears music of the spheres; thro’ on the eternal vine
  • Flourished, that he may receive the grapes; thro’ one can look
  • And see small portions of the eternal world that ever growth;
  • 5 Thro’ one himself pass out what time he please, but he will not;
  • For stolen joys are sweet, & bread eaten in secret pleasant.’
  • So sang a Fairy mocking as he sat on a streak’d Tulip,
  • Thinking none saw him; when he ceas’d I started from the trees,
  • And caught him in my hat as boys knock down a butterfly.
  • 10 ‘How know you this,’ said I, ‘small Sir? where did you learn this song?’
  • seeing himself in my possession, thus he answer’d me:
  • ‘My Master, I am yours; command me, for I must obey.’
  • ‘Then tell me what is the material world, and is it dead?’
  • He laughing answer’d: ‘I will write a book on leaves of flowers,
  • 15 If you will feed me on love-thoughts, & give me now and then
  • A cup of sparkling poetic fancies. So, when I am tipsie,
  • I’ll sing to you to this soft lute, and shew you all alive
  • The world, where every particle of dust breathes forth its joy.’
  • I took him home in my warm bosom. As we went along
  • 20 Wild flowers I gather’d, & he shew’d me each eternal flower.
  • He laugh’d aloud to see them whimper because they were pluck’d.
  • They hover’d round me like a cloud of incense. When I came
  • Into my parlour and sat down, and took my pen to write,
  • My Fairy sat upon the table, and dictated ‘EUROPE.’
  • * * *
  • Notes
  • ↑ This Introduction was included only in two existing copies.
  • PRELUDIUM
  • The nameless shadowy female rose form out the breast of Orc,
  • Her snaky hair brandishing in the winds of Enitharmon;
  • And thus her voice arose:
  • ‘O mother Enitharmon, wilt thou bring forth other sons,
  • To cause my name to vanish, that my place may not be found?
  • For I am faint with travel!
  • Like the dark cloud disburden’d in the day of dismal thunder.
  • ‘My roots are brandish’d in the heavens, my fruits in earth beneath
  • Surge, foam and labour into life, first born & first consum’d!
  • Consumed and consuming!
  • Then why shouldst thou, accused mother, bring me into life?
  • ‘I warp my turban of thick clouds around my lab’ring head,
  • And fold the sheety waters as a mantle round my limbs.
  • Yet the red sun and moon
  • And all the overflowing stars rain down prolific pains.
  • ‘Unwilling I look up to heaven! unwilling count the stars!
  • Sitting in fathomless abyss of my immortal shrine,
  • I seize their burning power
  • And bring forth howling terrors, all devouring fiery kings,
  • ‘Devouring & devoured, roaming in dark and desolate mountains
  • in forests of eternal death, shrieking in hollow trees.
  • Ah mother Enitharmon!
  • Stamp not with solid form the vig’rous progeny of fires.
  • ‘I bring forth form my teeming bosom myriads of flames,
  • And thou dost stamp them with a signet; then they roam abroad
  • And leave me void as death.
  • Ah! I am drown’d in shady woe, and visionary joy.
  • ‘And who shall bind the infinite with an eternal band?
  • To compass it with swaddling bands? And who shall cherish it
  • With milk and honey?
  • I see it smile & I roll inward & my voice is past.’
  • She ceast, & roll’d her shady clouds
  • Into the secret palce.
  • * * *
  • A PROPHECY
  • The deep of winter came,
  • What time the secret child
  • Descended thro’ the orient gates of the eternal day.
  • War ceas’d, & all the troops like shadows fled to their abodes.
  • Then Enitharmon saw her sons & daughters rise around;
  • Like pearly clouds they meet together in the crystal house;
  • And Los, possessor of the moon, joy’d in the peaceful night,
  • Thus speaking, while his num’rous sons shook their bright fiery wings:
  • ‘Again the night is come
  • That strong Urthona takes his rest,
  • And Urizen unloos’d from chains
  • Glows ike a meteor in the distant north.
  • Stretch forth your hands and strike the elemental strings!
  • Awake the thunders of the deep,
  • ‘The shrill winds wake!
  • Till all the sons of Urizen look out and envy Los:
  • Seize all the spirits of life and bind
  • Their warbling joys to our loud strings;
  • Bind all the nourishing sweets of earth
  • To give us bliss, that we may drink the sparkling wine of Los;
  • And let us laugh at war,
  • Despising toil and care,
  • Because the days and nights of joy in lucky hours renew.’
  • ‘Arise, O Orc, from thy deep den,
  • First born of Enitharmon, rise!
  • And we will crown thy head with garlands of the ruddy vine;
  • For now thou art bound,
  • And I may see thee in the hour of bliss, my eldest born.’
  • The horrent Demon rose, surrounded with red stars of fire,
  • Whirling about in furious circles round the immortal fiend.
  • Then Enitharmon down descended into his red light,
  • And thus her voice rose to her children; the distant heavens reply:
  • ‘Now comes the night of Enitharmon’s joy!
  • Who shall I call? Who shall I send?
  • That Woman, lovely Woman! may have dominion?
  • Arise, O Rintrah, thee I call! & Palamabron, thee!
  • Go! tell the human race that Woman’s love is Sin;
  • That an Eternal life awaits the worms of sixty winters
  • In an allegorical abode where existence hath never come.
  • Forbid all Joy, & from her childhood shall the little female
  • Spread nets in every secret path.
  • ‘My weary eyelids draw towards the evening, my bliss is yet but new!
  • ‘Arise, O Rintrah, eldest born, second to none but Orc.
  • O lion Rintrah, raise thy fury form thy forests black;
  • Bring Palamabron, horned priest, skipping upon the mountains,
  • And silent Elynittria, the silver bowed queen.
  • Rintrah, where has thou hid thy bride?
  • Weeps she in desart shades?
  • Alas, my Rintrah! bring all thy brethren, O thou king of fire.
  • Prince of the sun, I see thee with thy innumberable race,
  • Thick as the summer stars;
  • But each ramping his golden mane shakes,
  • And thine eyes rejoice because of strength, O Rintrah, furious king.’
  • Enitharmon slept,
  • Eighteen hundred years. Man was a Dream!
  • The night of Nature and their harps unstrung.
  • She slept in middle of her nightly song,
  • Eighteen hundred years, a female dream.
  • Shadows of men in fleeting bands upon the winds
  • Divide the heavens of Europe,
  • Till Albion’s Angel, smitten with his own plagues, fled with his bands.
  • The cloud bears hard on Albion’s shore,
  • Fill’d with immortal demons of futurity.
  • In council gather the smitten Angels of Albion.
  • The cloud bears hard upon the council house, down rushing
  • On the heads of Albion’s Angels.
  • One hour they lay buried beneath the ruins of that hall;
  • But as the stars rise from the salt lake they arise in pain,
  • In troubled mists o’erclouded by the terrors of struggling times.
  • In thoughts perturb’d they rose from the bright ruins, silent following
  • The fiery King, who sought his ancient temple serpertform’d
  • That stretches out its shady length along the Island white.
  • Round him roll’d his clouds of war; silent the Angel went,
  • Along the infininte shores of Thames to golden Verulam.
  • There stand the venerable porches that high-towering rear
  • Their oak-surrounded pillars, form’d of massy stones, uncut
  • Will tool, stones precious – such eternal in the heavens,
  • Of colours twelve, few known on earth, give light in the opake,
  • Plac’d in the order of the stars. When the five senses whelm’d
  • In deluge o’er the earth-born man, then turn’d the fluxile eyes
  • Into two stationary orbs, concentrating all things;
  • The ever-varying spiral ascents to the heavens of heavens
  • Were bended downward, and the nostrils’ golden gate shut,
  • Turn’d outward, barr’d and petrify’d against the infinite.
  • Thought chang’d the infinite to a serpent, that which pitieth
  • To a devouring flame; and man fled from its face and hid
  • In forests of night. Then all the eternal forests were divided
  • Into earths rolling in circles of space, that like an ocean rush’d
  • And overwhelmed all except this finite wall of flesh.
  • Then was the serpent temple form’d, image of infinite
  • Shut up in finite revolutions, and man became an Angel,
  • Heaven a mighty circle turning, god a tyrant crown’d.
  • Now arriv’d the ancient Guardian at the southern porch
  • That, planted thick with trees of blackest leaf, & in a vale
  • Obscure, inclos’d the stone of Night. Oblique it stood, o’erhung
  • With purple flowers and berries red, image of that sweet south
  • Once open to the heavens and elevated on the human neck,
  • Now overgrown with hair and cover’d with a stony roof.
  • Downward ‘tis sunk beneath th’ attractive north, that round the feet
  • A raging whirlpool draws the dizzy enquirer to his grave.
  • Albion’s Angel rose upon the Stone of Night.
  • He saw Urizen on the Atlantic;
  • And his brazen Book
  • That Kings & Priests had copied on earth
  • Expanded from North to South.
  • And the clouds & fires pale roll’d round in the night of Enitharmon,
  • Round Albion’s cliffs & London’s walls (still Enitharmon slept);
  • Rolling volumes of grey mist involve Churches, Palaces, Towers;
  • For Urizen unclasp’d his Book, feeding his soul with pity.
  • Thy youth of England, hid in gloom, curse the pain’d heavens, compell’d
  • Into the deadly night to see the form of Albion’s Angel.
  • Their parents brought them forth, & aged ignorance preaches, canting,
  • On a vast rock, perceived by those senses that are clos’d from thought –
  • Bleak, dark, abrupt it stands & overshadows London city.
  • They saw his boney feet on the rock, the flesh consum’d in flames;
  • They saw the Serpent temple lifted above, shadowing the Island white;
  • They heard the voice of Albion’s Angel howling in flames of Orc,
  • Seeking the trump of the last doom.
  • Above the rest the howl was heard from Westminster louder and louder.
  • The Guardian of the secret codes forsook his ancient mansion,
  • Driven out by the flames of Orc; his furr’d robes & false locks
  • Adhered and grew one with his flesh, and nerves & veins shot thro’ them.
  • With dismal torment sick, hanging upon the wind, he fled
  • Groveling along Great George Street thro’ the Park gate; all the soldiers
  • Fled from his sight; he drag’d his torments to the wilderness.
  • Thus was the howl thro’ Europe!
  • For Orc rejoic’d to hear the howling shadows;
  • But Palamabron shot his lightnings trenching down his wide back,
  • And Rintrah hung with all his legions in the nether deep.
  • Enitharmon laugh’d in her sleep to see (O woman’s triumph)
  • Every house a den, every man bound; the shadows are fill’d
  • With specters, and the windows wove over with curses of iron;
  • Over the doors ‘Thou shalt not,’ & over the chimneys “Fear’ is written;
  • With bands of iron round their necks fasten’d into the walls
  • The citizens; in leaden gives the inhabitants of suburbs
  • Walk heavy; soft and bent are the bones of villagers.
  • Between the clouds of Urizen the flames of Orc roll heavy
  • Around the limbs of Albion’s Guardian, his flesh consuming.
  • Howlings & hissings, shrieks & groans & voices of despair
  • Arise around him in the cloudy Heavens of Albion. Furious,
  • The red limb’d Angel seiz’d, in horror and torment,
  • The Trump of the last doom; but he could not blow the iron tube!
  • Thrice he assay’d presumptuous to awake the dead to Judgment.
  • A mighty Spirit leap’d from the land of Albion,
  • Nam’d Newton; he seiz’d the Trump & blow’d the enormous blast!
  • Yellow as leaves of Autumn the myriads fo Angelic hosts
  • Fell thro’ the wintry skies seeking their graves,
  • Rattling their hollow bones in howling and lamentation.
  • Then Enitharmon woke, nor knew that she had slept;
  • And eighteen hundred years were fled
  • As if they had not been.
  • She call’d her sons & daughters
  • To the sports of night,
  • Within her crystal house;
  • And thus her song proceeds:
  • ‘Arise, Ethinthus! tho’ the earth-worm call,
  • Let him call in vain;
  • Till the night of holy shadows
  • And human solitude is past!
  • ‘Ethinthus,, queen of waters, how thou shinest in the sky!
  • My daughter, how do I rejoice! for thy children flock around
  • Like the gay fishes on the wave when the cold moon drinks the dew.
  • Ethinthus! thou art sweet as comforts to my fainting soul,
  • For now thy waters warble round the feet of Enitharmon.
  • ‘Manathu-Vorcyon! I behold thee flaming in my halls,
  • light of thy mother’s soul! I see thy lovely eagles round;
  • thy golden wings are my delight, & thy flames of soft delusion.
  • ’where is my lureing bird of Edin? Leutha, silent love!
  • Leutha, the many colur’d bow delights upon thy wings,
  • Soft soul of flowers, Leutha!
  • Sweet smiling pestilence! I see thy blushing light;
  • Thy daughters many changing
  • Revolve like sweet perfumes ascending, O Leutha, silken queen!
  • ‘Where is the youthful Antamon, prince of the pearly dew?
  • O Antamon, why wilt thou leave thy mother enitharmon?
  • Alone I see thee, crystal form,
  • Floating upon the bosom’d air
  • With lineaments of gratified desire.
  • My Antamon, the seven churches of Leutha seek thy love.
  • ‘I hear the soft Oothoon in Enitharmon’s tents.
  • Why wilt thou give up woman’s secrecy, my melancholy child?
  • Between two moments bliss is ripe.
  • O Theotormon robb’d of joy, I see thy salt tears flow
  • Down the steps of my crystal house.
  • ‘Sotha & Thiralatha, secret dwellers of dreamful caves,
  • arise and please the horrent fiend with your melodious songs.
  • Still all your thunders golden hoof’d, & bind your horses black.
  • Orc! smile upon my children!
  • Smile, son of my afflictions.
  • Arise, O Orc, and give our mountains joy of thy red light.’
  • She ceas’d; for All were forth at soport beneath the solemn moon,
  • Waking the stars of Urizen with their immortal songs,
  • That nature felt thro’ all the pores the enormous revelry,
  • Till morning oped the eastern gate.
  • Then every on fled to his station, & Enitharmon wept.
  • But terrible Orc, when he beheld the morning in the east,
  • Shot from the heights of Enitharmon,
  • And in the vineyards of red France appear’d the light of his fury.
  • The sun glow’d fiery red!
  • The furious terrors flew around
  • On golden chariots raging, with red wheels dropping with blood;
  • The Lions lash their wrathful tails;
  • The Tigers couch upon the prey & suck the ruddy tide;
  • And Enitharmon groans & cries in anguish and dismay.
  • Then Los arose; his head he rear’d in snaky thunders clad,
  • And with a cry that shook all nature to the utmost pole
  • Call’d all his sons to the strife of blood.
  • * * *
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