Trusted
49,755
edits
m (Bot: Cosmetic changes) |
(→Legacy) Tag: 2017 source edit |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
=== Legacy === | === Legacy === | ||
In Eremite art, Urizen was caricatured as a [[blindness|blind]] old man using a set of [[dividers]] to measure his own [[dung]] as spittle hung from his lips. Despite their vows of silence, the Eremites celebrated the "rites of Urizen" by laughing freely. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Book of the War (novel)|The Book of the War]]'') | In Eremite art, Urizen was caricatured as a [[blindness|blind]] old man using a set of [[dividers]] to measure his own [[dung]] as spittle hung from his lips. Despite their vows of silence, the Eremites celebrated the "rites of Urizen" by laughing freely. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Book of the War (novel)|The Book of the War]]'') | ||
One member of the [[Retconning Crocodile]]s once told [[Auteur]] that he thought the [[Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids]] were "inconsequential [[fool]]s", however that [[The Creator (Resurrection of the Author)|their Creator]] was a [[genius]], and when he put it into terms for Auteur, he said that the Creator was the equivalent of "a lovechild of [[Urizen]] and [[Nikola Tesla]]" if that child had then "pursued a double career in [[robotics]] and [[Biodata|biodata-manipulation]]". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Resurrection of the Author (short story)|Resurrection of the Author]]'') | |||
== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
{{w|Urizen}} is the embodiment of reason and law in {{w|William Blake's mythology}}. In Blake's designs, {{w|Urizen}} is usually portrayed as a bearded old man carrying either architects' tools to [[anchoring of the thread|constrain the universe]] or nets to ensnare people in [[Web of Time|webs of law]]. His opponent is the embodiment of imagination, {{w|Los}}. The description of the Eremites' caricatures of Urizen is an apparent parody of Blake's {{wi|The Ancient of Days}}. | {{w|Urizen}} is the embodiment of reason and law in {{w|William Blake's mythology}}. In Blake's designs, {{w|Urizen}} is usually portrayed as a bearded old man carrying either architects' tools to [[anchoring of the thread|constrain the universe]] or nets to ensnare people in [[Web of Time|webs of law]]. His opponent is the embodiment of imagination, {{w|Los}}. The description of the Eremites' caricatures of Urizen is an apparent parody of Blake's {{wi|The Ancient of Days}}. |