Buzzer
Languidly Clinical
- Oct 1, 2006
- 26,121
However the actual lyrics to Jerusalem have little to do with the middle east.
He's right you know. Written by William Blake, painter poet, genius, madman it symbolised his non-conformist belief that England was the new Jerusalem where God and the Devil really did battle for the souls of man. A follower of the mystic and philosopher and freemason, William Swedenborg he also believed that the Holy Grail was brought to England by Joseph of Arimathea. Incidentally, there is a Sussex connection. The poem was written whilst he was on holiday near Bognor (the tune added later). A place where he was arrested for chucking a drunk soldier out of his garden for singing jingoistic songs. Blake hated the blind patriotism of the English at the time. Oh, the irony.
He once fled his house after seeing the Devil at the tops of his stairs. The man was the perfect embodiment of creative genius/madness. The nearest living equivalent, in my opinion, is Daniel Johnson.
edit - yes, I really ought to get out more. (I'm quite good at pub quizzes you know?)