JBI, I'm not quite clear as to what point you think we're disagreeing on, since I agree with your above post. I wasn't really trying to give an in-depth reading of Experience, but merely frame it in a brief outline of Blake's overarching mythology. I did forget to mention that Blake's Orc was associated with Satan, the emotional/revolutionary force chained underground and oppressed by Urizen. However, Orc as a force of revolution in the early works did give way to Los in the later works, and while Blake may have hated the OT God, he was very sympathetic to Jesus as being a representative of the creative spirit (contrasted with Satan as the emotional/revolutionary spirit). I think his Milton was, in a way, the transitional point between these two characters, as the creative power of Milton/Los has to descend to craft Satan/Orc out of clay, ie, the creative spirit has to sculpt revolution and frame (not tame) emotion. I agree that Tyger, like most all of Blake's work, is not theological but philosophical. In fact, I did claim in a later post that Blake subsumed religion within his philosophy and mythology.


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