Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Book Of Urizen: Chapter IX by William Blake
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The Book Of Urizen: Chapter IX

    By William Blake



1.

    Then the Inhabitants of those Cities:
    Felt their Nerves change into Marrow
    And hardening Bones began
    In swift diseases and torments,
    In throbbings & shootings & grindings
    Thro' all the coasts; till weaken'd
    The Senses inward rush'd shrinking,
    Beneath the dark net of infection.

2.

    Till the shrunken eyes clouded over
    Discernd not the woven hipocrisy
    But the streaky slime in their heavens
    Brought together by narrowing perceptions
    Appeard transparent air; for their eyes
    Grew small like the eyes of a man
    And in reptile forms shrinking together
    Of seven feet stature they remaind

3.

    Six days they shrunk up from existence
    And on the seventh day they rested
    And they bless'd the seventh day, in sick hope:
    And forgot their eternal life

4.

    And their thirty cities divided
    In form of a human heart
    No more could they rise at will
    In the infinite void, but bound down
    To earth by their narrowing perceptions
    They lived a period of years
    Then left a noisom body
    To the jaws of devouring darkness

5.

    And their children wept, & built
    Tombs in the desolate places,
    And form'd laws of prudence, and call'd them
    The eternal laws of God

6.

    And the thirty cities remaind
    Surrounded by salt floods, now call'd
    Africa: its name was then Egypt.

7.

    The remaining sons of Urizen
    Beheld their brethren shrink together
    Beneath the Net of Urizen;
    Perswasion was in vain;
    For the ears of the inhabitants,
    Were wither'd, & deafen'd, & cold:
    And their eyes could not discern,
    Their brethren of other cities.

8.

    So Fuzon call'd all together
    The remaining children of Urizen:
    And they left the pendulous earth:
    They called it Egypt, & left it.

9.

    And the salt ocean rolled englob'd.



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