Tiriel (Blake)

Tiriel (Blake)

*"For the Blake character, see Tiriel"
*"For the opera with the same name, see Tiriel (opera)"

Tiriel is a symbolic poem, the first of so called "prophetic books" by William Blake (1757-1827). It was written around 1789, shortly before "The Book of Thel". It was the first of his poems written in free septenaries. He did not engrave it, and the poem was first time published only in 1874 by William Michael Rossetti. There were twelve sepia drawings accompanied the rough and unfinished manuscript, however the three of them are considered lost (they have not been traced since 1863).

First lines

"And agèd Tiriel stood before the gates of his beautiful palace"
"With Myratana, once the Queen of all the western plains;"
"But now his eyes were darkenèd, and his wife fading in death."
"They stood before their once delightful palace; and thus the voice"
"Of agèd Tiriel arose, that his sons might hear in their gates:"

Characters

Tiriel, as an eponymous hero of the poem, was a former king of the West, son of Har and Heva, brother of wild Ijim and enslaved Zazel, husband of dying Myratana, and father of 130 sons with the oldest Heuxos, then Yuva, Lotho, Clithyma and Makuth who usurped their father’s throne, and five daughters, the youngest of whom was Hela. Mnetha (an anagram of Athena) was a guardian of old and senile Har and Heva.

Only Har, Heva and Ijim were mentioned in Blake’s later books. Tiriel is foreshadowing of Urizen that appeared in many of Blake’s poems (including "Europe, The Book of Urizen, The Book of Ahania, The Book of Los, The Four Zoas, Milton", and "Jerusalem".

tory

The blind and aged king, Tiriel, calls down curses on his sons whom he has summoned to observe their mother’s death. The sons bury their mother, but declare that they have tired of their father’s tyranny and now will rebel against it. So Tiriel sets off wandering into the mountains.

Eventually he comes to the ‘pleasant gardens’ in the Vales of Har, where he finds his own parents, Har and Heva, who are both quite senile and have become like children again. They invite Tiriel to help them catch birds and listen to Har’s singing in the ‘great cage’. In madness and dismay, Tiriel abandons them and sets out further on his wanderings.

Tiriel’s wild brother Ijim finds him, captures him and takes him back to his children who are living in what once was his own palace. Tiriel, ever madder and more enraged, curses his children yet more passionately, calling down thunder and pestilence and destroying them. Doing so, he sends his favourite daughter Hela mad. Nonetheless it is Hela who must guide Tiriel back to his parents in the Vales of Har.

On the way through the mountains they pass caves which are the home of another of Tiriel’s brothers, Zazel. Zazel, together with his sons, hurls dirt and stones at Tiriel and his daughter. Eventually Tiriel and Hela arrive once more at the tent in the Vales of Har, where Har and Heva live. In a final speech, Tiriel explains how his father’s laws and his own wisdom now ‘end together in a curse’. And he dies at his parents’ feet.

Quotations

*"Tiriel" has always proved a puzzle to commentators on Blake." (Bentley, G. E.: "William Blake: Tiriel")
*"The poem is an analysis of the decay and failure of Materialism at the end of the age of Reason." (Foster Damon S. "A Blake Dictionary")
*"This phantasmagoria on the theme of the death of an aged king and tyrant-father may be - indeed, must be - read at several levels." (Kathleen Raine "Blake and Tradition")

Adaptations

"Tiriel" ( _ru. Тириэль) an opera with libretto and music by a Russian/British composer Dmitri Smirnov based on Blake's text.

Bibliography

*Butler, William: "Introduction to The Poems of William Blake", George Routledge & Sons Ltd, London, 1905)
*Frye, Northrop: "Fearful Symmetry", Princeton, New Jersey & London, 1947
*Raine, Kathleen: "Blake and Tradition", 2 vols, New York, 1968, London, 1969)
*Bentley, G. E.: "William Blake: Tiriel", Oxford at the Clarendon Press, 1967
*Foster Damon, S. "William Blake: His Philosophy and Symbols", Boston and London, 1924
*Foster Damon, S. "Blake Dictionary: The Ideas and Symbols of William Blake", Brown University Press, Providence, Rhode Island, 1965
*Erdman, David V.: "Blake: Prophet against Empire", Princeton, New Jersey & London, 1954)
*Ostriker, Alicia: Notes to "The Complete Poems by William Blake", Penguin Books, England, USA, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, 1977
*Hans Ostrom Ostrom, Hans. “Blake’s "Tiriel" and the Dramatization of Collapsed Language.” "Papers On Language and Literature" Vol. 19, no. 2 (Spring 1983), 167-182.

ee also


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Tiriel — * For the poem of William Blake with the same name, see Tiriel (Blake) * For the opera with the same name, see Tiriel (opera) Tiriel is the eponymous hero of a poem by William Blake, the first in a series of his so called prophetic books . Tiriel …   Wikipedia

  • Tiriel (opera) — Tiriel (Russian: Тириэль, 1985) is an opera by a Russian composer Dmitri N. Smirnov in three acts (9 scenes) with a Symphonic Prologue to his own libretto after a poem of the same title by William Blake. Language: English (also translated to… …   Wikipedia

  • Albion (Blake) — Blake s image of Albion, accompanying the words, Albion rose from where he labourd at the Mill with Slaves / Giving himself for the Nations he danc d the dance of Eternal Death In the complex mythology of William Blake, Albion is the primeval man …   Wikipedia

  • William Blake — W …   Wikipedia Español

  • Nebuchadnezzar (Blake) — Nebuchadnezzar , Tate impression The M …   Wikipedia

  • William blake — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Blake. William Blake par Thomas Phillips. William Blake …   Wikipédia en Français

  • William Blake's mythology — The prophetic books of the English poet and artist William Blake contain a rich invented mythology (mythopoeia), in which Blake worked to encode his revolutionary spiritual and political ideas into a prophecy for a new age. This desire to… …   Wikipedia

  • Orc (Blake) — Orc emerges from creative fires to challenge the forces of imperialism in plate 12 of America a Prophecy Orc is a proper name for one of the characters in the complex mythology of William Blake. Unlike the medieval sea beast, or Tolkien s… …   Wikipedia

  • Newton (Blake) — Newton (1795 1805) 460 x 600 mm. Collection Tate Britain Newton is a monotype by the English poet, painter and printmaker William Blake first completed in 1795,[1] but reworked and reprinted in 1805 …   Wikipedia

  • William Blake — Infobox Writer name = William Blake caption = William Blake in an 1807 portrait by Thomas Phillips. birthdate = birth date|df=yes|1757|11|28 birthplace = London, England deathdate = death date and age|df=yes|1827|08|12|1757|11|28 deathplace =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”