The witches and their prophecies to both Macbeth and Banquo. Thematic patterns: things occur in 3’s; the word “equivocal.” Duncan declares his son Malcolm heir to the throne, and Macbeth decides upon murder.
Macbeth (1606) is a play about real Scottish history, but is also a drama of the mind, clearly written with James I in mind, who was both Scottish and obsessed with witches. The opening scenes alternate between political and military doings and the dark Otherworld of the blasted heath, with the three witches.
Albion redeemed from his fall into illusion and nihilistic despair by the work of Los. The renunciation of the natural self and “natural religion” for the true Christianity of the imagination. Against illusion, the arts and sciences. Against vengeance and love of war, the forgiveness of sins.
Blake’s culminating epic, on the work of Los, the imagination, to redeem the fall of Albion, the universal divine-human figure. Chapter 1 of 4: the great debate of Los with the Spectre of Urthona, the selfish and despairing part of all of us. The struggle of Los to keep faith in a time of despair like our own has great dramatic power, as it is a struggle within every person.
Milton, inspired by the Bard’s Song, returns and enters Blake, who is thereby united to Los, the imagination, resulting in a vision of nature redeemed by imagination. Then Milton confronts his Selfhood and renounces it, reconciling with his Emanation Ololon, a kind of renewed marriage witnessed by the married couple William and Catherine Blake in their garden.
We begin an overview in four podcasts of Blake’s two final and definitive poems, Milton and Jerusalem. Milton is in two books. In the first, Milton returns to the fallen world to achieve the clarified vision that eluded him in Paradise Lost. He wrestles with Urizen, who tries to oppose him, and enters Blake’s left foot to inspire him.
The lowest point: Orc crucified as serpent by Vala, Urizen Wars with Los, the hermaphroditic form of Satan/Rahab is revealed. But Los, the Spectre of Urthona, and Enitharmon unite to create forms for the Spectres. Night the 9th: the apocalypse.
After the Fall, Urizen explores his dens, bringing the fallen world into being. He follows the powerful heartbeat of the bound Orc, and sits confronting him, writing his books of laws. Orc defies him, then metamorphoses downward into a gigantic serpent. But in the beginning of a counter-movement, Los unites with the Spectre of Urthona and Enitharmon to begin the imagination’s work of redemption.
The effort to brake the Fall, although successful, has driven Lost temporarily mad, and he dances on the mountains. Enitharmon gives birth to Orc, who is chained like Prometheus. Urizen explores his dens, which are the fallen world, following the mighty heartbeat of Orc.
“All deities reside in the human breast,” said Blake. The Zoas are aspects of the fallen Albion’s mind, at odds with one another. They are also alienated from their Emanations or female counterparts, who have become split off and “other.” When that happens, the male is diminished into a Spectre, whose attitude towards what he should love and regard as his other self becomes either possessiveness or antagonism.
A quick run-through of the plot elements in the first half of Blake’s The Four Zoas. But then a discussion of why such a synopsis is only a useful fiction or scaffolding. The poem describes a higher order of reality falling into the lower one and becoming it. Things are metamorphosing into their fallen forms, the forms we call ordinary reality. This is a fall from a circumference to an alienated center.
Blake interprets the Fall into our suffering world psychologically and epistemologically rather than morally. The Fall was into the illusion of the subject-object split, or “cloven fiction.” The cosmic being Albion, who united all being and beings, fell, and therefore we are living in an illusion that we take for real. The imagination tries to awaken us, and thereby awaken Albion.
Why bother with the difficulties of this poem? Because Blake is showing us the nightmare we are dreaming right now. The fall of the universal being Albion is into the alienated state of the “cloven fiction,” or subject-object division. But that breeds madness. It breeds delusional “magical thinking,” which breeds strife, violence, terror, despair. We are Albion.
In The Four Zoas, Blake’s vision expands past the fall of Urizen and the conflict with Orc. The original fall was that of Albion, a cosmic being. The four Zoas—Orc/Luvah, Urizen, Los, and Tharmas—are four parts of Albion’s psyche at war. Albion falls by turning from his own emanation, Jerusalem, to Vala, who is other and not part of his own being.
In 1797, in mid-life, Blake attempted an epic The Four Zoas. Remaining in manuscript because he was not satisfied with it, it is indispensable in tracing the development of Blake’s mythology, and also contains some of his greatest poetry.
A female figure of emancipation to complement the male rebels Orc and Fuzon. Oothoon affirms desire and rejects guilt, despite the accusations of the two males in her life. Her speeches praising gratified desire expand into a praise of difference born of individuality. There cannot be “one law” governing all because all beings are different, and one law for the lion and the ox is oppression.
Blake came to see his original figure, Orc, as an ironically cyclical figure, a “dying god” figure, symbolized by Los nailing him to a rock, like Prometheus. Urizen battles and kills his own son, the fire-haired Fuzon, and nails him to the Tree of Mystery. The same image of the ironic cycle.
Blake’s mythology postulates an original unity of the divine, natural, and human that disintegrated into the fallen world as we know it. This began with the contraction of the false god Urizen from Eternity, whose fall parodies the Creation story in seven days. Los, the imagination, feels his female Emanation split from him. Their union results in the birth of Orc.
Urizen is the aspect of the divine nature that fell out of the larger cosmic identity, contracting away. His fall into a void is metaphorically identical with the creation of the fallen world, so it is a Creation-Fall. Los has to create a body for the fallen Urizen or he would plunge into non-being.
To the expanded eyes of the imagination, the American Revolution is more than a political uprising against tyranny. It is also a liberation of human desire on all levels, including sexual and natural. The limits of time and space are on the verge of being shattered, and Atlantis will rise.