sexuality (symbolized by her plucking a marigold and placing it between her breasts) and sets out joyously to join her lover Theotormon, whose realm is the Atlantic Ocean. She is stopped and raped by Bromion, who appears as a thunderstorm (1.16?17). The jealous Theotormon, condemning the victim as well as the rapist, binds the two 'back to back' in a cave and sits weeping on the threshold. The rest of the work consists of monologues by the three characters, who remain fixed in these postures. Throughout this stage tableau the Daughters of Albion serve as the chorus who, in a recurrent refrain, echo the 'woes' and 'sighs' of Oothoon, but not
her call to rebellion.
This simple drama is densely significant, for as Blake's compressed allusions indicate, the characters, events, and monologues have diverse areas of application. Blake's abrupt opening word, which he etched in very large letters, is Enslav'd, and the work as a whole embodies his view that contemporary men, and even more women, in a spiritual parallel to shackled black slaves, are in bondage to oppressive concepts and codes in all aspects of perception, thought, social institutions, and actions. As indicated by the refrain of the Daughters of Albion (that is, contemporary Englishwomen), Oothoon in one aspect represents the sexual disabilities and slavelike status of all women in a male-dominated society. But as 'the soft soul of America' (1.3) she is also the revolutionary nation that had recently won political emancipation, yet continued to tolerate an agricultural system that involved black slavery and to acquiesce in the crass economic exploitation of her 'soft American plains.' At the same time Oothoon is represented in the situation of a black female slave who has been branded, whipped, raped, and impregnated by her master.
Correlatively, the speeches of the boastful Bromion show him to be not only a sexual exploiter of women and a cruel and acquisitive slave owner but also a general proponent of the use of force to achieve mastery in wars, in an oppressive legal system, and in a religious morality based on the fear of hell (4.19?24). Theotormon is represented as even more contemptible. Broken and paralyzed by the prohibitions of a puritanical religion, he denies any possibility of achieving 'joys' in this life, despairs of the power of intellect and imagination to improve the human condition and, rationalizing his own incapacity, bewails Oothoon's daring to think and act other than he does.
Oothoon's long and passionate oration that concludes the poem (plates 5?8) celebrates a free sexual life for both women and men. Blake, however, uses' this open
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VISIONS OF THE DAUGHTERS OF ALBION / 103
and unpossessive sexuality to typify the realization of all human potentialities and to represent an outgoing altruism, as opposed to an enclosed self-centeredness, 'the self-love that envies all.' To such a suspicious egotism, as her allusions indicate, Oothoon attributes the tyranny of uniform moral laws imposed on variable individuals, a rigidly institutional religion, the acquisitiveness that drives the system of commerce, and the property rights in another person that are established by the marriage contract.
Blake's poem reflects some prominent happenings of the years of its composition, 1791-93. This was not only the time when the revolutionary spirit had moved from America to France and effected reverberations in England, but also the time of rebellions by black slaves in the Western Hemisphere and of widespread debate in England about the abolition of the slave trade. Blake, while composing the Visions, had illustrated the sadistic punishments inflicted on rebellious slaves in his engravings for
J. G. Stedman's A Narrative, of a Five Years' Expedition, against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam (see David Erdman, Blake: Prophet against Empire, chap. 10). Blake's championing of women's liberation parallels some of the views expressed in the Vindication of the Rights of Woman published in 1792 by Mary Wollstonecraft, whom Blake knew and admired, and for whom he had illustrated a book the year before. Visions of the Daughters of Albion
The Eye sees more than the Heart knows.
PLATE iii
The Argument
I loved Theotormon And I was not ashamed I trembled in my virgin fears And I hid in Leutha's1 vale!
5 I plucked Leutha's flower, And I rose up from the vale; But the terrible thunders tore My virgin mantle in twain.
PLATE 1
Visions
ENSLAVED, the Daughters of Albion weep: a trembling lamentation Upon their mountains; in their valleys, sighs toward America.
For the soft soul of America, Oothoon2 wandered in woe,
Along the vales of Leutha seeking flowers to comfort her; And thus she spoke to the bright Marygold of Leutha's vale:
1. In some poems by Blake, Leutha is represented the 1760s, from the ancient British bard Ossian. as a female figure who is beautiful and seductive After her husband goes off to war, Macpherson's but treacherous. Oithona is abducted, raped, and imprisoned by a 2. The name is adapted by Blake from a character rejected suitor. in James Macpherson's pretended translations, in
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104 / WILLIAM BLAKE
Frontispiece, Visions of the Daughters of Alhion (1793), plate i. Copy P, ca. 1815
'Art thou a flower! art thou a nymph! I see thee now a flower, Now a nymph! I dare not pluck thee from thy dewy bed!'
The Golden nymph replied: 'Pluck thou my flower Oothoon the mild. Another flower shall spring, because the soul of sweet delight Can never pass away.' She ceas'd & closd her golden shrine.
Then Oothoon pluck'd the flower saying, 'I pluck thee from thy bed, Sweet flower, and put thee here to glow between my breasts, And thus I turn my face to where my whole soul seeks.'
Over the waves she went in wing'd exulting swift delight; And over Theotormon's reign took her impetuous course.
Bromion rent her with his thunders. On his stormy bed Lay the faint maid, and soon her woes appalld his
