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winter poem


chapter 1 through 19of songs of innocence by william blake chapter 1introduction piping down the valleys wild,piping songs of pleasant glee, on a cloud i saw a child,and he laughing said to me: "pipe a song about a lamb!"so i piped with merry cheer. "piper, pipe that song again;"so i piped: he wept to hear.

"drop thy pipe, thy happy pipe;sing thy songs of happy cheer!" so i sang the same again,while he wept with joy to hear. "piper, sit thee down and writein a book, that all may read." so he vanish'd from my sight;and i pluck'd a hollow reed, and i made a rural pen,and i stain'd the water clear, and i wrote my happy songsevery child may joy to hear. the shepherd how sweet is the shepherd's sweet lot!from the morn to the evening he stays; he shall follow his sheep all the day,and his tongue shall be filled with praise.

for he hears the lambs' innocent call,and he hears the ewes' tender reply; he is watching while they are in peace,for they know when their shepherd is nigh. the echoing green the sun does arise,and make happy the skies; the merry bells ringto welcome the spring; the skylark and thrush,the birds of the bush, sing louder aroundto the bells' cheerful sound; while our sports shall be seenon the echoing green. old john, with white hair,does laugh away care,

sitting under the oak,among the old folk. they laugh at our play,and soon they all say, "such, such were the joyswhen we all—girls and boys— in our youth-time were seenon the echoing green." till the little ones, weary,no more can be merry: the sun does descend,and our sports have an end. round the laps of their mothersmany sisters and brothers, like birds in their nest,are ready for rest, and sport no more seenon the darkening green.

the lamb little lamb, who made theedost thou know who made thee, gave thee life, and bid thee feedby the stream and o'er the mead; gave thee clothing of delight,softest clothing, woolly, bright; gave thee such a tender voice,making all the vales rejoice? little lamb, who made thee?dost thou know who made thee? little lamb, i'll tell thee;little lamb, i'll tell thee: he is called by thy name,for he calls himself a lamb he is meek, and he is mild,he became a little child.

i a child, and thou a lamb,we are called by his name. little lamb, god bless thee!little lamb, god bless thee! the little black boy my mother bore me in the southern wild,and i am black, but oh my soul is white! white as an angel is the english child,but i am black, as if bereaved of light. my mother taught me underneath a tree,and, sitting down before the heat of day, she took me on her lap and kissed me,and, pointed to the east, began to say: "look on the rising sun: there god does live,and gives his light, and gives his heat away, and flowers and trees and beasts and men receivecomfort in morning, joy in the noonday.

"and we are put on earth a little space,that we may learn to bear the beams of love and these black bodies and this sunburnt faceis but a cloud, and like a shady grove. "for when our souls have learn'd the heatto bear, the cloud will vanish, we shall hear his voice,saying, 'come out from the grove, my love and careand round my golden tent like lambs rejoice'," thus did my mother say, and kissed me;and thus i say to little english boy. when i from black and he from white cloudfree, and round the tent of god like lambs we joy i'll shade him from the heat till he can bearto lean in joy upon our father's knee;

and then i'll stand and stroke his silverhair, and be like him, and he will then love me. the blossom merry, merry sparrow!under leaves so green a happy blossomsees you, swift as arrow, seek your cradle narrow,near my bosom. pretty, pretty robin!under leaves so green a happy blossomhears you sobbing, sobbing, pretty, pretty robin,near my bosom.

the chimney-sweeper when my mother died i was very young,and my father sold me while yet my tongue could scarcely cry "weep! weep! weep! weep!"so your chimneys i sweep, and in soot i sleep. there's little tom dacre, who cried when hishead, that curled like a lamb's back, was shaved;so i said, "hush, tom! never mind it, for, when yourhead's bare, you know that the soot cannot spoil your whitehair." and so he was quiet, and that very night,as tom was a-sleeping, he had such a sight!— that thousands of sweepers, dick, joe, ned,and jack,

were all of them locked up in coffins of black. and by came an angel, who had a bright key,and he opened the coffins, and let them all free;then down a green plain, leaping, laughing, they run,and wash in a river, and shine in the sun. then naked and white, all their bags leftbehind, they rise upon clouds, and sport in the wind;and the angel told tom, if he'd be a good boy,he'd have god for his father, and never want joy. and so tom awoke, and we rose in the dark,and got with our bags and our brushes to work.

though the morning was cold, tom was happyand warm: so, if all do their duty, they need not fearharm. the little boy lost "father, father, where are you going?oh do not walk so fast! speak, father, speak to your little boy,or else i shall be lost." the night was dark, no father was there,the child was wet with dew; the mire was deep, and the child did weep,and away the vapour flew. the little boy found the little boy lost in the lonely fen,led by the wandering light,

began to cry, but god, ever nigh,appeared like his father, in white. he kissed the child, and by the hand led,and to his mother brought, who in sorrow pale, through the lonely dale,the little boy weeping sought. laughing song when the green woods laugh with the voiceof joy, and the dimpling stream runs laughing by;when the air does laugh with our merry wit, and the green hill laughs with the noise ofit; when the meadows laugh with lively green,and the grasshopper laughs in the merry scene, when mary and susan and emilywith their sweet round mouths sing "ha, ha

he!" when the painted birds laugh in the shade,where our table with cherries and nuts is spread:come live, and be merry, and join with me, to sing the sweet chorus of "ha, ha, he!" a song sweet dreams, form a shadeo'er my lovely infant's head! sweet dreams of pleasant streamsby happy, silent, moony beams! sweet sleep, with soft downweave thy brows an infant crown sweet sleep, angel mild,hover o'er my happy child!

sweet smiles, in the nighthover over my delight! sweet smiles, mother's smile,all the livelong night beguile. sweet moans, dovelike sighs,chase not slumber from thine eyes! sweet moan, sweeter smile,all the dovelike moans beguile. sleep, sleep, happy child!all creation slept and smiled. sleep, sleep, happy sleep,while o'er thee doth mother weep. sweet babe, in thy faceholy image i can trace; sweet babe, once like theethy maker lay, and wept for me: wept for me, for thee, for all,when he was an infant small.

thou his image ever see,heavenly face that smiles on thee! smiles on thee, on me, on all,who became an infant small; infant smiles are his own smiles;heaven and earth to peace beguiles. divine image to mercy, pity, peace, and love,all pray in their distress, and to these virtues of delightreturn their thankfulness. for mercy, pity, peace, and love,is god our father dear; and mercy, pity, peace, and love,is man, his child and care. for mercy has a human heartpity, a human face;

and love, the human form divine;and peace, the human dress. then every man, of every clime,that prays in his distress, prays to the human form divine:love, mercy, pity, peace. and all must love the human form,in heathen, turk, or jew. where mercy, love, and pity dwell,there god is dwelling too. holy thursday 'twas on a holy thursday, their innocent facesclean, came children walking two and two, in read,and blue, and green: grey-headed beadles walked before, with wandsas white as snow,

till into the high dome of paul's they likethames waters flow. oh what a multitude they seemed, these flowersof london town! seated in companies they sit, with radianceall their own. the hum of multitudes was there, but multitudesof lambs, thousands of little boys and girls raisingtheir innocent hands. now like a mighty wild they raise to heaventhe voice of song, or like harmonious thunderings the seats ofheaven among: beneath them sit the aged man, wise guardiansof the poor. then cherish pity, lest you drive an angelfrom your door.

night the sun descending in the west,the evening star does shine; the birds are silent in their nest,and i must seek for mine. the moon, like a flowerin heaven's high bower, with silent delight,sits and smiles on the night. farewell, green fields and happy grove,where flocks have ta'en delight. where lambs have nibbled, silent movethe feet of angels bright; unseen they pour blessing,and joy without ceasing, on each bud and blossom,and each sleeping bosom.

they look in every thoughtless nestwhere birds are covered warm; they visit caves of every beast,to keep them all from harm: if they see any weepingthat should have been sleeping, they pour sleep on their head,and sit down by their bed. when wolves and tigers howl for prey,they pitying stand and weep; seeking to drive their thirst away,and keep them from the sheep. but, if they rush dreadful,the angels, most heedful, receive each mild spirit,new worlds to inherit. and there the lion's ruddy eyesshall flow with tears of gold:

and pitying the tender cries,and walking round the fold: saying: "wrath by his meekness,and, by his health, sickness, are driven awayfrom our immortal day. "and now beside thee, bleating lamb,i can lie down and sleep, or think on him who bore thy name,graze after thee, and weep. for, washed in life's river,my bright mane for ever shall shine like the gold,as i guard o'er the fold." spring sound the flute!now it's mute!

bird's delight,day and night, nightingale,in the dale, lark in sky,—merrily, merrily merrily, to welcome in the year. little boy,full of joy; little girl,sweet and small; cock does crow,so do you; merry voice,infant noise; merrily, merrily, to welcome in the year.

little lamb,here i am; come and lickmy white neck; let me pullyour soft wool; let me kissyour soft face; nurse's song when the voices of children are heard on thegreen, and laughing is heard on the hill,my heart is at rest within my breast, and everything else is still."then come home, my children, the sun is gone down,and the dews of night arise;

come, come, leave off play, and let us away,till the morning appears in the skies." "no, no, let us play, for it is yet day,and we cannot go to sleep; besides, in the sky the little birds fly,and the hills are all covered with sheep." "well, well, go and play till the light fadesaway, and then go home to bed."the little ones leaped, and shouted, and laughed, and all the hills echoed. infant joy "i have no name;i am but two days old." what shall i call thee?"i happy am,

joy is my name."sweet joy befall thee! pretty joy!sweet joy, but two days old. sweet joy i call thee:thou dost smile, i sing the while;sweet joy befall thee! a dream once a dream did weave a shadeo'er my angel-guarded bed, that an emmet lost its waywhere on grass methought i lay. troubled, wildered, and forlorn,dark, benighted, travel-worn, over many a tangle spray,all heart-broke, i heard her say:

"oh my children! do they cry,do they hear their father sigh? now they look abroad to see,now return and weep for me." pitying, i dropped a tear:but i saw a glow-worm near, who replied, "what wailing wightcalls the watchman of the night? "i am set to light the ground,while the beetle goes his round: follow now the beetle's hum;little wanderer, hie thee home!" on another's sorrow can i see another's woe,and not be in sorrow too? can i see another's grief,and not seek for kind relief?

can i see a falling tear,and not feel my sorrow's share? can a father see his childweep, nor be with sorrow filled? can a mother sit and hearan infant groan, an infant fear? no, no! never can it be!never, never can it be! and can he who smiles on allhear the wren with sorrows small, hear the small bird's grief and care,hear the woes that infants bear— and not sit beside the next,pouring pity in their breast, and not sit the cradle near,weeping tear on infant's tear? and not sit both night and day,wiping all our tears away?

oh no! never can it be!never, never can it be! he doth give his joy to all:he becomes an infant small, he becomes a man of woe,he doth feel the sorrow too. think not thou canst sigh a sigh,and thy maker is not by: think not thou canst weep a tear,and thy maker is not near. oh he gives to us his joy,that our grief he may destroy: till our grief is fled an gonehe doth sit by us and moan. songs of experience introduction

hear the voice of the bard,who present, past, and future, sees; whose ears have heardthe holy word that walked among the ancient tree; calling the lapsed soul,and weeping in the evening dew; that might controlthe starry pole, and fallen, fallen light renew! "o earth, o earth, return!arise from out the dewy grass! night is worn,and the morn rises from the slumbrous mass.

"turn away no more;why wilt thou turn away? the starry floor,the watery shore, are given thee till the break of day." earth's answer earth raised up her headfrom the darkness dread and drear, her light fled,stony, dread, and her locks covered with grey despair. "prisoned on watery shore,starry jealousy does keep my den cold and hoar;weeping o'er,

i hear the father of the ancient men. "selfish father of men!cruel, jealous, selfish fear! can delight,chained in night, the virgins of youth and morning bear? "does spring hide its joy,when buds and blossoms grow? does the sowersow by night, or the plowman in darkness plough? "break this heavy chain,that does freeze my bones around! selfish, vain,eternal bane,

that free love with bondage bound." the clod and the pebble "love seeketh not itself to please,nor for itself hath any care, but for another gives it ease,and builds a heaven in hell's despair." so sang a little clod of clay,trodden with the cattle's feet, but a pebble of the brookwarbled out these metres meet: "love seeketh only self to please,to bind another to its delight, joys in another's loss of ease,and builds a hell in heaven's despite." is this a holy thing to seein a rich and fruitful land,—

babes reduced to misery,fed with cold and usurous hand? is that trembling cry a song?can it be a song of joy? and so many children poor?it is a land of poverty! and their son does never shine,and their fields are bleak and bare, and their ways are filled with thorns:it is eternal winter there. for where'er the sun does shine,and where'er the rain does fall, babes should never hunger there,nor poverty the mind appall. the little girl lost in futurityi prophetic see

that the earth from sleep(grave the sentence deep) shall arise, and seekfor her maker meek; and the desert wildbecome a garden mild. in the southern clime,where the summer's prime never fades away,lovely lyca lay. seven summers oldlovely lyca told. she had wandered long,hearing wild birds' song. "sweet sleep, come to meunderneath this tree; do father, mother, weep?where can lyca sleep?

"lost in desert wildis your little child. how can lyca sleepif her mother weep? "if her heart does ache,then let lyca wake; if my mother sleep,lyca shall not weep. "frowning, frowning night,o'er this desert bright let thy moon arise,while i close my eyes." sleeping lyca laywhile the beasts of prey, come from caverns deep,viewed the maid asleep. the kingly lion stood,and the virgin viewed:

then he gambolled roundo'er the hallowed ground. leopards, tigers, playround her as she lay; while the lion oldbowed his mane of gold, and her breast did lickand upon her neck, from his eyes of flame,ruby tears there came; while the lionessloosed her slender dress, and naked they conveyedto caves the sleeping maid. the little girl found all the night in woelyca's parents go

over valleys deep,while the deserts weep. tired and woe-begone,hoarse with making moan, arm in arm, seven daysthey traced the desert ways. seven nights they sleepamong shadows deep, and dream they see their childstarved in desert wild. pale through pathless waysthe fancied image strays, famished, weeping, weak,with hollow piteous shriek. rising from unrest,the trembling woman pressed with feet of weary woe;she could no further go.

in his arms he boreher, armed with sorrow sore; till before their waya couching lion lay. turning back was vain:soon his heavy mane bore them to the ground,then he stalked around, smelling to his prey;but their fears allay when he licks their hands,and silent by them stands. they look upon his eyes,filled with deep surprise; and wondering beholda spirit armed in gold. on his head a crown,on his shoulders down

flowed his golden hair.gone was all their care. "follow me," he said;"weep not for the maid; in my palace deep,lyca lies asleep." then they followedwhere the vision led, and saw their sleeping childamong tigers wild. to this day they dwellin a lonely dell, nor fear the wolvish howlnor the lion's growl. the chimney sweeper a little black thing in the snow,crying "weep! weep!" in notes of woe!

"where are thy father and mother? say!"—"they are both gone up to the church to pray. "because i was happy upon the heath,and smiled among the winter's snow, they clothed me in the clothes of death,and taught me to sing the notes of woe. "and because i am happy and dance and sing,they think they have done me no injury, and are gone to praise god and his priestand king, who make up a heaven of our misery." when voices of children are heard on the green,and whisperings are in the dale, the days of my youth rise fresh in my mind,my face turns green and pale. then come home, my children, the sun is gonedown,

and the dews of night arise;your spring and your day are wasted in play, and your winter and night in disguise. the sick rose o rose, thou art sick!the invisible worm, that flies in the night,in the howling storm, has found out thy bedof crimson joy, and his dark secret lovedoes thy life destroy. the fly little fly,thy summer's play

my thoughtless handhas brushed away. am not ia fly like thee? or art not thoua man like me? for i danceand drink, and sing, till some blind handshall brush my wing. if thought is lifeand strength and breath and the wantof thought is death; then am ia happy fly, if i live,or if i die.

the angel i dreamt a dream! what can it mean?and that i was a maiden queen guarded by an angel mild:witless woe was ne'er beguiled! and i wept both night and day,and he wiped my tears away; and i wept both day and night,and hid from him my heart's delight. so he took his wings, and fled;then the morn blushed rosy red. i dried my tears, and armed my fearswith ten-thousand shields and spears. soon my angel came again;i was armed, he came in vain; for the time of youth was fled,and grey hairs were on my head.

the tyger tyger, tyger, burning brightin the forests of the night, what immortal hand or eyecould frame thy fearful symmetry? in what distant deeps or skiesburnt the fire of thine eyes? on what wings dare he aspire?what the hand dare seize the fire? and what shoulder and what artcould twist the sinews of thy heart? and, when thy heart began to beat,what dread hand and what dread feet? what the hammer? what the chain?in what furnace was thy brain? what the anvil? what dread graspdare its deadly terrors clasp?

when the stars threw down their spears,and watered heaven with their tears, did he smile his work to see?did he who made the lamb make thee? what immortal hand or eyedare frame thy fearful symmetry? my pretty rose tree a flower was offered to me,such a flower as may never bore; but i said "i've a pretty rose tree,"and i passed the sweet flower o'er. then i went to my pretty rose tree,to tend her by day and by night; but my rose turned away with jealousy,and her thorns were my only delight. ah sunflower

ah sunflower, weary of time,who countest the steps of the sun; seeking after that sweet golden climewhere the traveller's journey is done; where the youth pined away with desire,and the pale virgin shrouded in snow, arise from their graves, and aspirewhere my sunflower wishes to go! the lily the modest rose puts forth a thorn,the humble sheep a threat'ning horn: while the lily white shall in love delight,nor a thorn nor a threat stain her beauty bright. the garden of love

i laid me down upon a bank,where love lay sleeping; i heard among the rushes dankweeping, weeping. then i went to the heath and the wild,to the thistles and thorns of the waste; and they told me how they were beguiled,driven out, and compelled to the chaste. i went to the garden of love,and saw what i never had seen; a chapel was built in the midst,where i used to play on the green. and the gates of this chapel were shutand "thou shalt not," writ over the door; so i turned to the garden of lovethat so many sweet flowers bore. and i saw it was filled with graves,and tombstones where flowers should be;

and priests in black gowns were walking theirrounds, and binding with briars my joys and desires. the little vagabond dear mother, dear mother, the church is cold;but the alehouse is healthy, and pleasant, and warm.besides, i can tell where i am used well; the poor parsons with wind like a blown bladderswell. but, if at the church they would give us someale, and a pleasant fire our souls to regale,we'd sing and we'd pray all the livelong day, nor ever once wish from the church to stray.

then the parson might preach, and drink, andsing, and we'd be as happy as birds in the spring;and modest dame lurch, who is always at church, would not have bandy children, nor fasting,nor birch. and god, like a father, rejoicing to seehis children as pleasant and happy as he, would have no more quarrel with the devilor the barrel, but kiss him, and give him both drink andapparel. london i wandered through each chartered street,near where the chartered thames does flow, a mark in every face i meet,marks of weakness, marks of woe.

in every cry of every man,in every infant's cry of fear, in every voice, in every ban,the mind-forged manacles i hear: how the chimney-sweeper's cryevery blackening church appalls, and the hapless soldier's sighruns in blood down palace-walls. but most, through midnight streets i hearhow the youthful harlot's curse blasts the new-born infant's tear,and blights with plagues the marriage-hearse. the human abstract pity would be no moreif we did not make somebody poor, and mercy no more could beif all were as happy as we.

and mutual fear brings peace,till the selfish loves increase; then cruelty knits a snare,and spreads his baits with care. he sits down with his holy fears,and waters the ground with tears; then humility takes its rootunderneath his foot. soon spreads the dismal shadeof mystery over his head, and the caterpillar and flyfeed on the mystery. and it bears the fruit of deceit,ruddy and sweet to eat, and the raven his nest has madein its thickest shade. the gods of the earth and seasought through nature to find this tree,

but their search was all in vain:there grows one in the human brain. infant sorrow my mother groaned, my father wept:into the dangerous world i leapt, helpless, naked, piping loud,like a fiend hid in a cloud. struggling in my father's hands,striving against my swaddling-bands, bound and weary, i thought bestto sulk upon my mother's breast. a poison tree i was angry with my friend:i told my wrath, my wrath did end. i was angry with my foe:i told it not, my wrath did grow.

and i watered it in fearsnight and morning with my tears, and i sunned it with smilesand with soft deceitful wiles. and it grew both day and night,till it bore an apple bright, and my foe beheld it shine,and he knew that it was mine,— and into my garden stolewhen the night had veiled the pole; in the morning, glad, i seemy foe outstretched beneath the tree. a little boy lost "nought loves another as itself,nor venerates another so, nor is it possible to thoughta greater than itself to know.

"and, father, how can i love youor any of my brothers more? i love you like the little birdthat picks up crumbs around the door." the priest sat by and heard the child;in trembling zeal he seized his hair, he led him by his little coat,and all admired the priestly care. and standing on the altar high,"lo, what a fiend is here!" said he: "one who sets reason up for judgeof our most holy mystery." the weeping child could not be heard,the weeping parents wept in vain: they stripped him to his little shirt,and bound him in an iron chain, and burned him in a holy placewhere many had been burned before;

the weeping parents wept in vain.are such thing done on albion's shore? a little girl lost children of the future age,reading this indignant page, know that in a former timelove, sweet love, was thought a crime. in the age of gold,free from winter's cold, youth and maiden bright,to the holy light, naked in the sunny beams delight. once a youthful pair,filled with softest care, met in garden brightwhere the holy light

had just removed the curtains of the night. then, in rising day,on the grass they play; parents were afar,strangers came not near, and the maiden soon forgot her fear. tired with kisses sweet,they agree to meet when the silent sleepwaves o'er heaven's deep, and the weary tired wanderers weep. to her father whitecame the maiden bright; but his loving look,like the holy book

all her tender limbs with terror shook. "ona, pale and weak,to thy father speak! oh the trembling fear!oh the dismal care that shakes the blossoms of my hoary hair!" the schoolboy i love to rise on a summer morn,when birds are singing on every tree; the distant huntsman winds his horn,and the skylark sings with me: oh what sweet company! but to go to school in a summer morn,—oh it drives all joy away!

under a cruel eye outworn,the little ones spend the day in sighing and dismay. ah then at times i drooping sit,and spend many an anxious hour; nor in my book can i take delight,nor sit in learning's bower, worn through with the dreary shower. how can the bird that is born for joysit in a cage and sing? how can a child, when fears annoy,but droop his tender wing, and forget his youthful spring? oh father and mother, if buds are nipped,and blossoms blown away;

and if the tender plants are strippedof their joy in the springing day, by sorrow and care's dismay,— how shall the summer arise in joy,or the summer fruits appear? or how shall we gather what griefs destroy,or bless the mellowing year, when the blasts of winter appear? to tirzah whate'er is born of mortal birthmust be consumed with the earth, to rise from generation free:then what have i to do with thee? the sexes sprang from shame and pride,blown in the morn, in evening died;

but mercy changed death into sleep;the sexes rose to work and weep. thou, mother of my mortal part,with cruelty didst mould my heart, and with false self-deceiving tearsdidst bind my nostrils, eyes, and ears, didst close my tongue in senseless clay,and me to mortal life betray. the death of jesus set me free:then what have i to do with thee? the voice of the ancient bard youth of delight! come hitherand see the opening morn, image of truth new-born.doubt is fled, and clouds of reason, dark disputes and artful teazing.folly is an endless maze;

tangled roots perplex her ways;how many have fallen there! they stumble all night over bones of the dead;and feel—they know not what but care; and wish to lead others, when they shouldbe led. appendix a divine image cruelty has a human heart,and jealousy a human face; terror the human form divine,and secresy the human dress. the human dress is forged iron,the human form a fiery forge, the human face a furnace sealed,the human heart its hungry gorge.

note: though written and engraved by blake,"a divine image" was never included in the songs of innocence andof experience. william blake's the book of thel thel's motto does the eagle know what is in the pit?or wilt thou go ask the mole: can wisdom be put in a silver rod?or love in a golden bowl? the author & printer willm. blake. 1780 thel

i the daughters of mne seraphim led round theirsunny flocks, all but the youngest: she in paleness soughtthe secret air. to fade away like morning beauty from hermortal day: down by the river of adona her soft voiceis heard; and thus her gentle lamentation falls likemorning dew. o life of this our spring! why fades the lotusof the water? why fade these children of the spring? bornbut to smile & fall. ah! thel is like a watry bow, and like a partingcloud,

like a reflection in a glass: like shadowsin the water like dreams of infants, like a smile uponan infants face. like the doves voice, like transient day,like music in the air: ah! gentle may i lay me down and gentle restmy head. and gentle sleep the sleep of death, and gentlyhear the voice of him that walketh in the garden in the eveningtime. the lilly of the valley breathing in the humblegrass answerd the lovely maid and said: i am a watryweed, and i am very small and love to dwell in lowlyvales:

so weak the gilded butterfly scarce percheson my head yet i am visited from heaven and he that smileson all walks in the valley, and each morn over mespreads his hand saying, rejoice thou humble grass, thou new-bornlily flower. thou gentle maid of silent valleys and ofmodest brooks: for thou shall be clothed in light, and fedwith morning manna: till summers heat melts thee beside the fountainsand the springs to flourish in eternal vales: they why shouldthel complain. why should the mistress of the vales of har,utter a sigh.

she ceasd & smild in tears, then sat downin her silver shrine. thel answerd, o thou little virgin of thepeaceful valley. giving to those that cannot crave, the voiceless,the o'er tired the breath doth nourish the innocent lamb,he smells the milky garments he crops thy flowers while thou sittest smilingin his face, wiping his mild and meekin mouth from allcontagious taints. thy wine doth purify the golden honey; thyperfume. which thou dost scatter on every little bladeof grass that springs revives the milked cow, & tames the fire-breathingsteed.

but thel is like a faint cloud kindled atthe rising sun: i vanish from my pearly throne, and who shallfind my place. queen of the vales the lily answered, askthe tender cloud, and it shall tell thee why it glitters inthe morning sky. and why it scatters its bright beauty throthe humid air. descend o little cloud & hover before theeyes of thel. the cloud descended and the lily bowd hermodest head: and went to mind her numerous charge amongthe verdant grass. ii.

o little cloud the virgin said, i charge theeto tell me why thou complainest now when in one hourthou fade away: then we shall seek thee but not find: ah thelis like to thee. i pass away, yet i complain, and no one hearsmy voice. the cloud then shewd his golden head & hisbright form emerg'd. hovering and glittering on the air beforethe face of thel. o virgin know'st thou not our steeds drinkof the golden springs where luvah doth renew his horses: lookstthou on my youth. and fearest thou because i vanish and am seenno more.

nothing remains; o maid i tell thee, wheni pass away. it is to tenfold life, to love, to peace,and raptures holy: unseen descending, weigh my light wings uponbalmy flowers: and court the fair eyed dew, to take me toher shining tent the weeping virgin, trembling kneels beforethe risen sun. till we arise link'd in a golden band andnever part: but walk united bearing food to all our tenderflowers. dost thou o little cloud? i fear that i amnot like thee: for i walk through the vales of har, and smellthe sweetest flowers:

but i feed not the little flowers: i hearthe warbling birds, but i feed not the warbling birds, they flyand seek their food: but thel delights in these no more becausei fade away and all shall say, without a use this shiningwomen liv'd, or did she only live to be at death the foodof worms. the cloud reclind upon his airy throne andanswerd thus. then if thou art the food of worms, o virginof the skies, how great thy use, how great thy blessing,every thing that lives. lives not alone nor or itself: fear not andi will call,

the weak worm from its lowly bed, and thoushalt hear its voice. come forth worm and the silent valley, tothy pensive queen. the helpless worm arose and sat upon the lillysleaf, and the bright cloud saild on, to find hispartner in the vale. iii. then thel astonish'd view'd the worm uponits dewy bed. art thou a worm? image of weakness, art thoubut a worm? i see thee like an infant wrapped in the lillysleaf; ah weep not little voice, thou can'st notspeak, but thou can'st weep:

is this a worm? i see they lay helpless & naked:weeping and none to answer, none to cherish thee withmothers smiles. the clod of clay heard the worms voice & rais'dher pitying head: she bowd over the weeping infant, and herlife exhald in milky fondness, then on thel she fix'dher humble eyes; o beauty of the vales of har, we live notfor ourselves, thou seest me the meanest thing, and so iam indeed: my bosom of itself is cold, and of itselfis dark, but he that loves the lowly, pours his oilupon my head

and kisses me, and binds his nuptial bandsaround my breast. and says; thou mother of my children, i haveloved thee and i have given thee a crown that none cantake away. but how this is sweet maid, i know not, andi cannot know i ponder, and i cannot ponder; yet i liveand love. the daughter of beauty wip'd her pitying tearswith her white veil, and said, alas! i knew not this, and thereforedid i weep: that god would love a worm i knew, and punishthe evil foot that wilful bruis'd its helpless form: butthat he cherish'd it

with milk and oil i never knew, and thereforedid i weep, and i complaind in the mild air, because ifade away. and lay me down in thy cold bed, and leavemy shining lot. queen of the vales, the matron clay answered:i heard thy sighs. and all thy moans flew o'er my roof, but ihave call'd them down: wilt thou o queen enter my house, tis giventhee to enter, and to return: fear nothing, enter with thyvirgin feet. iv. the eternal gates terrific porter lifted the northernbar:

thel enter'd in & saw the secrets of the landunknown; she saw the couches of the dead, & where thefibrous roots of every heart on earth infixes deep its restlesstwists: a land of sorrows & of tears where never smilewas seen. she wandered in the land of clouds thro' valleysdark, listning dolors & lamentations: waiting oft besidethe dewy grave she stood in silence, listning to the voicesof the ground, till to her own grave plot she came, & thereshe sat down. and heard this voice of sorrow breathed fromthe hollow pit.

why cannot the ear be closed to its own destruction?or the glistening eye to the poison of a smile! why are eyelids stord with arrows ready drawn,where a thousand fighting men in ambush lie! or an eye of gifts & graces showring fruits& coined gold! why a tongue impress'd with honey from everywind? why an ear, a whirlpool fierce to draw creationsin? why a nostril wide inhaling terror trembling& affright why a tender curb upon the youthful burningboy? why a little curtain of flesh on the bed ofour desire? the virgin started from her seat, & with ashriek,

fled back unhinderd till she came into thevales of har. end of chapter 4and also the end of the book of thel by william blake�

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