This article is about the being from William Blake's mythology. For the character from the Spawn comics, see Urizen (comics).
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Urizen is depicted in Blake's watercoloured etching The Ancient of Days.
Character[edit]
In Blake's original myth, Urizen, the representation of abstractions and an abstraction of the human self, is the first entity. He believes himself holy and he sets about establishing various sins in a book of brass that serves as a combination of various laws as discovered by Newton, given to Moses, and the general concept of deism, which force uniformity upon mankind. The rest of the Eternals in turn become indignant at Urizen turning against eternity, and they instill these essences of sin within Urizen's creation. This torments Urizen, and Los soon after appears. Los' duty within the work is to watch over Urizen and serve as his opposition.[1]In terms of Blake's Orc cycle, Urizen serves as a Satanic force similar to Milton's Satan. After Urizen defeats the serpent/Orc figure in the Garden of Eden story, the Orc figure, in the form of Urizen's son Fuzon, battles against him in a story based on Exodus. Urizen, as a pillar of cloud that hinders the Israelites in their journey home, battles against Fuzon, as a pillar of fire that guides them by night. Eventually, Urizen is able to destroy his rebellious son and impose laws upon the Israelites in the form of the Ten Commandments. This also leads to a death of the Israeli society, and the Israelites under Urizen are imprisoned in a similar manner to how they were under the Egyptians. Symbolically, the Orc cycle describes how Urizen and Orc are part of one unified whole with Urizen representing the destructive and older essence while Orc is the young and creative essence.[2]
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Urizen from the front page of Copy G (c. 1818) of the The Book of Urizen currently held by the Library of Congress [3] (detail)
In the material world, he had Steeds and a Chariot of Day that were stolen from him by Luvah. This occurred because he, reason, sought to take over the Northern lands of Luvah, Imagination. After setting to take over Imagination, Luvah's stealing of the horses, which represented instruction, showed how emotion could dominate over reason. After Luvah falls and becomes Orc, Urizen tries to regain his horses but can only witness them bound. Eventually, the horses are returned to him after the Final Judgment.[5]
Within the early works, Urizen represents the chains of reason that are imposed on the mind. Urizen, like mankind, is bound by these chains.[6] Additionally, these works describe how Newtonian reason and the enlightenment view of the universe traps the imagination. The poems emphasis an evolutionary development within the universe, and this early version of a "survival of the fittest" universe is connected to a fallen world of tyranny and murder.[7]
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Urizen with his net – The Book of Urizen, copy G, object 27 c.1818 (detail)
Urizen is described as having multiple books: Gold, Silver, Iron, and Brass. They represent science, love, war, and sociology, which are four aspects of life. The books are filled with laws that seek to overcome the seven deadly sins. He constantly adds to the works, even when he faces his opposition in Orc, but the books are destroyed in the Last Judgment. The Book of Brass sets forth Urizen's social beliefs that seek to remove all pain and instill peace under one rule. The attempt to force love through law encouraged the Eternals to put forth the Seven Deadly Sins that Urizen hoped to prevent. The Book of Iron was lost in the Tree of Mystery, and represents how Urizen can create wars but cannot control them.[9]
Appearances[edit]
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Urizen striding through a darkened space. The William Blake Archive identifies the image as describing "the episode in which "Urizen explor'd his dens / Mountain, moor, & wilderness, / With a globe of fire lighting his / journey" (The First Book of Urizen plate 22, Erdman page 81)." [10] This illustration comes from Blake's "Small Book of Designs", one of his illuminated art books, that wasn't printed in mass (though some images are comparable to those in other works). This illustration is object 7 and plate 23 of "Small Book of Designs", which is currently held by the British Museum.[11]
In the Book of Urizen, Urizen is an eternal self focused being that creates itself out of eternity, and, it is only Urizen, the representation of abstractions and is an abstraction of the human self that exists in the beginning. Eventually, he creates the rest of creation but is tormented from the rest of the Eternal essence. Urizen is seen as the essence of the eternal priest and is opposed by Los, the eternal prophet.[13] Parts of the story were later revised in The Book of Los and The Book of Ahania:[14] The Book of Ahania describes Urizen's relationship with his son Fuzon, and the Book of Los (1795) describes Urizen's creations from Los's viewpoint. The Song of Los (1795) describes how Urizen's laws are given to humanity and their destructive effects. The work ends with Orc's appearance and Urizen weeping.[15]
Urizen appears within Blake's illustrations of Job as an image of Apollo. He and his realm are described in Blake's Milton a Poem, and he is said to have a throne of silver/love. His realm included his children and was surrounded by justice and eternal science. The work also describes Urizen's Satanic fall. The Urizen of Milton is in the form of reason, and it is he that Milton follows. He appears again in the image "Milton's Dream" as illustrated for Il Penseroso. In the image, Urizen is with images of despair and is interfering with the image of the true God.[16]
In Vala, or The Four Zoas, Urizen was said to have been born as the son of Albion and Vala, and is the fourth son. He was made the leader of Heaven's host and commanded the material sun. The work also describes his fall. Urizen appears in Jerusalem The Emanation of the Giant Albion in a form similar to the previous works. Urizen is the organiser of the universe while Los is the forger. He creates Natural Religion, and, in his returned form after Albion awakes, he is a farmer.[17]
Derivation[edit]
Urizen has clear similarities with the creature called the Demiurge by Gnostic sects, who is likewise largely derived of the Old Testament god (more specifically, like Blake's Urizen, the demiurge is a radical remodelling of that figure achieved by expanding that figure's original contextual setting, or by removing him to one that is almost completely new). Speculative Freemasonry is another possible source of Blake's imagery for Urizen; Blake was attracted to the Masonic and Druidic speculations of William Stukeley. The compass and other drafting symbols that Blake associates with Urizen borrow from Masonic symbolism for God as the "Great Architect of the Universe".[18]In other literature[edit]
- Urizen is the main antagonist throughout much of Philip Jose Farmer's World of Tiers series.
- Urizen is mentioned as a god-like figure in Alex Comfort's Tetrarch novel.
- Urizen is one of the names by which the Primarch Lorgar is known in Warhammer 40,000.
- Urizen is the name of an ancient and powerful demon in the Spawn series of comics by Todd McFarlane.
Notes[edit]
- Jump up ^ Bloom 1993 pp. 71–74
- Jump up ^ Frye 1990 pp. 213–215
- Jump up ^ Morris Eaves, Robert N. Essick, and Joseph Viscomi (ed.). "The Book of Urizen, copy G, object 1 (Bentley 1, Erdman 1, Keynes 1) "The Book of Urizen"". William Blake Archive. Retrieved October 7, 2013.
- Jump up ^ Damon 1988 p. 419
- Jump up ^ Damon 1988 p. 420
- Jump up ^ Bentley 2003 p. 153
- Jump up ^ Frye 1990 pp. 254–255
- Jump up ^ Damon 1988 pp. 424–426
- Jump up ^ Damon 1988 p. 424
- Jump up ^ Morris Eaves, Robert N. Essick, and Joseph Viscomi (ed.). "Description of "A Small Book of Designs, object 7 (Bentley 136.7, Butlin 260.7)"". William Blake Archive. Retrieved February 7, 2014.
- Jump up ^ Morris Eaves, Robert N. Essick, and Joseph Viscomi (ed.). "A Small Book of Designs, object 7 (Bentley 136.7, Butlin 260.7) "The First Book of Urizen, plate 23"". William Blake Archive. Retrieved February 7, 2014.
- Jump up ^ Damon 1988 pp. 422, 419
- Jump up ^ Bloom 1993 pp. 71–75
- Jump up ^ Bentley 2003 p. 156
- Jump up ^ Damon 1988 p. 423
- Jump up ^ Damon 1988 pp. 419, 423
- Jump up ^ Damon 1988 pp. 419, 423–424
- Jump up ^ Peterfreund 1998
References[edit]
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- Bentley, G. E. (Jr). The Stranger From Paradise. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003.
- Bloom, Harold. The Visionary Company. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1993.
- Damon, S. Foster. A Blake Dictionary. Hanover: University Press of New England, 1988.
- Frye, Northrop. Fearful Symmetry. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1990.
- Stuart Peterfreund, William Blake in a Newtonian World: Essays on Literature as Art and Science (Univ. Oklahoma Press, 1998). ISBN 0-8061-3042-3
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