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The Mental Traveller

The poem by William Blake describes the poet's mental travels, and features prominently another depiction of Blake's "Orc Cycle".
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
182 views2 pages

The Mental Traveller

The poem by William Blake describes the poet's mental travels, and features prominently another depiction of Blake's "Orc Cycle".
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Mental Traveller

William Blake

I travelled through a land of men,


A land of men and women too,
And heard and saw such dreadful things
As cold earth wanderers never knew.

An aged shadow soon he fades,


Wandering round and earthly cot,
Full filled all with gems and gold
Which he by industry had got.

For there the babe is born in joy


That was begotten in dire woe,
Just as we reap in joy the fruit
Which we in bitter tears did sow;

And these are the gems of the human soul:


The rubies and pearls of a lovesick eye,
The countless gold of an aching heart,
The martyrs groan, and the lovers sigh.

And if the babe is born a boy


Hes given to a woman old,
Who nails him down upon a rock,
Catches his shrieks in cups of gold.

They are his meat, they are his drink:


He feeds the beggar and the poor
And the wayfaring traveller;
For ever open is his door.

She binds iron thorns around his head,


And pierces both his hands and feet,
And cuts his heart out of his side
To make it feel both cold & heat.

His grief is their eternal joy,


They make the roofs and walls to ring
Till from the fire on the hearth
Alittle female babe does spring!

Her fingers number every nerve


Just as a miser counts his gold;
She lives upon his shrieks and cries
And she grows young as he grows old,

And she is all of solid fire


And gems and gold, that none his hand
Dares stretch to touch her baby form,
Or wrap her in his swaddling-band.

Till he becomes a bleeding youth


And she becomes a virgin bright;
Then he rends up his manacles
And pins her down for his delight.

But she comes to the man she loves,


If young or old, or rich or poor;
They soon drive out the aged host,
A beggar at anothers door.

He plants himself in all her nerves


Just as a husbandman his mould,
And she bcomes his dwelling-place
And garden, frutiful seventyfold.

He wanders weeping far away


Until some other take him in;
Oft blind and age-bent, sore distressed,
Until he can a maiden win.

And to allay his freezing age


The poor man takes her in his arms:
The cottage fades before his sight,
The garden and its lovely charms;
The guests are scattered through the land
(For the eye altering, alters all);
The senses roll themselves in fear,
And the flat earth becomes a ball,
The stars, sun, moon, all shrink away
A desert vast without a bound,
And nothing left to eat or drink
And a dark desert all around.
The honey of her infant lips,
The bread and wine of her sweet smile,
The wild game of her roving eye
Does him to infancy beguile.
For as he eats and drinks he grows
Younger and younger every day;
And on the desert wild they both
Wander in terror and dismay.
Like the wild stag she flees away;
Her fear plants many a thicket wild,
While he pursues her night and day,
By various arts of love beguiled.
By various arts of love and hate,

Till the wide desert planted oer


With labyrinths of wayward love,
Where roams the lion, wolf and boar,
Till he becomes a wayward babe
And she a weeping woman old.
Then many a lover wanders here,
The sun and stars are nearer rolled,
The trees bring forth sweet ecstasy
To all who in the desert roam,
Till many a city there is built,
And many a pleasant shepherds home.
But when they find the frowning babe
Terror strikes through the region wide;
They cry, The Babe! the Babe is born!
And flee away on every side.
For who dare touch the frowning form
His arm is withered to its root,
Lions, boars, wolves, all howling flee
And every tree does shed its fruit;
And none can touch that frowning form,
Except it be a woman old;
She nails him down upon the rock,
And all is done as I have told.

from the Pickering Manuscript (?1803)

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