Friday, March 04, 2016

BLAKE'S DEATH

First posted by Larry on February 16, 2010.
Wikimedia Commons   Jerusalem
Frontispiece, Copy b

Entering the Door of Death (Frontispiece of Jerusalem)
The word die is carefully avoided by most of us; when a loved one dies, we say he/she passed away.

The question is - what dies? The Roman Empire died; the British Empire died? But those were not people per se; they were states, conglomerates of materiality.

So death is relative - from what to what? Ellie asked a workmate if he considered himself a body or a spirit; "a body", he said; "a spirit", she said.

So what dies? A body or a spirit or both? (In mortal life our bodies are said to actually die (cell by cell) and be renewed every 7 years.)

So at the end of mortal life what dies? the body of course, the garment that we acquired when we descended into the Sea of Time and Space and the 'daughters of Enitharmon' began to cut and splice it.

When Odysseus (or Luvah) threw the garment back to the sea goddess, he was on his way back to Eternity, where we all go sooner or later.

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In the French Quarter in N.O. a black friend told me about her dead son; he had had an incurable and painful disease; he came to her and asked her permission to die, which she of course granted.

In one of Charles Williams' delightful metaphysical thrillers two characters are especially memorable: a saintly lady fully in tune with the life of the Spirit, and a man who generations before had been hanged; his spirit still hung around that locale, which happened to be outside her window. She met him there and gave him permission to depart in peace.

In the series called William Blake Meets Thomas Paine we witness a conversation that Will Blake had with his brother, Robert (long deceased), and we're led to believe that this was commonplace in Blake's life.

"But when once I did descry

The Immortal Man that cannot die,
Thro' evening shades I haste away
To close the labours of my day."
(From Gates of Paradise)

 
"Every Death is an improvement in the State of the Departed." (Letter 74 - to Linnell; Erdman 774)
 
By Death Eternal Blake implied descent into mortal life.
By Life Eternal he meant return to our Eternal Origin.


But what have you and I learned here in our mortal life?
(One Post can do no more than introduce this subject; it has other major ramifications.)

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