And Did Whose Feet? William Blake's Jerusalem.

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  • Опубликовано: 29 май 2023
  • In 1804, William Blake composed the opening stanzas to his prophetic epic, Milton a Poem. Those lines which begin "And did those feet" have become more famously known as the hymn Jerusalem. While the hymn, however, is often sung as a tribute to traditional patriotism, Blake's own opinions of Great Britain - then at war with France - were very different. This podcast explores the circumstances in which he wrote his stanzas, as well as answering questions as to the poem's meaning.
    Narrated by Professor Jason Whittaker at the University of Lincoln, additional music is provided by the Heinz Chapel Choir from the University of Pittsburgh, and the script is adapted from the book Jerusalem: Blake, Parry and the Fight for Englishness (Oxford University Press, 2022).

Комментарии • 9

  • @djschu8012
    @djschu8012 День назад

    My favourite hymn and a beautiful original Blake poem 10/10 (.... and I am a Kiwi saying this!)

  • @theomnisthour6400
    @theomnisthour6400 День назад

    When you understand that God's plan has had many chosen species and chosen peoples in the 4.5 billion years we have been playing the messiah shell game, and understand that the final chosen people are those faithful to the final chosen language, the real Speare Shaker's English, and the chosen culture, Western Classicism, the song will make much more sense

  • @kekoa555
    @kekoa555 18 дней назад +2

    Please STOP the voice dynamic flashing lines, it is TOTALLY obtrusive to the otherwise wonderful spoken text.

    • @ZoavisionMedia
      @ZoavisionMedia  17 дней назад +2

      Ah! Okay - I shall remove from future ones. Thank you for feeding back on that.

  • @reamick
    @reamick 14 дней назад

    It’s “and did *those* feet” for the title

    • @ZoavisionMedia
      @ZoavisionMedia  12 дней назад +2

      My podcast is asking who Blake is referring to: when researching for a book on Jerusalem, I came very strongly against the opinion that it was a reference to Jesus (which only emerged as an idea some 60 years after Blake’s death), in favour of Joseph of Arimathea, who Blake illustrated from Milton’s History of Britain twice during his career. As such, the title of the podcast is intended as a play on the stanzas from the Preface to Milton a Poem.

  • @rhemaflying
    @rhemaflying 7 дней назад

    The lyrics are actually prophetic. In Enland Ireland and France the church has been free since 1215 Magna Carta. The absorbing of the church under the Monarch and Parliament in 1559 was unconstitutional as it had already been given back to God. That is why we are witnessing the death of the Church of England today. The next version known as New Jerusalem also Zion will return under Mosaic law but without the oppression of a Bishopric. Perfect people do not need controlling by thousands of regulations. Just watch!
    David

    • @djschu8012
      @djschu8012 День назад

      Oh please, what nonsense you wrote here. Just ENJOY it for the beautiful poem and hymn it is ! 😅

  • @VVVBenjaminC
    @VVVBenjaminC День назад

    Edinburgh is built on the site of the historical Jerusalem.
    Jesus was British