Allen Ginsberg

Psalm Iv

Psalm Iv - meaning Summary

Vision Through Blake and Harlem

The speaker describes a waking mystical vision of God while lying in Harlem, after masturbating and reading Blake. A Blakean voice rises from the page, transforming urban details—sunlight, bricks, apartments—into a cosmic living intelligence. The revelation uses intimate, filial language: the divine speaks as father and son, mixing tenderness and anguish. The poem collapses private erotic, poetic, and religious experience into a single ecstatic encounter.

Read Complete Analyses

Now I'll record my secret vision, impossible sight of the face of God: It was no dream, I lay broad waking on a fabulous couch in Harlem having masturbated for no love, and read half naked an open book of Blake on my lap Lo & behold! I was thoughtless and turned a page and gazed on the living Sun-flower and heard a voice, it was Blake's, reciting in earthen measure: the voice rose out of the page to my secret ear never heard before- I lifted my eyes to the window, red walls of buildings flashed outside, endless sky sad Eternity sunlight gazing on the world, apartments of Harlem standing in the universe-- each brick and cornice stained with intelligence like a vast living face-- the great brain unfolding and brooding in wilderness!--Now speaking aloud with Blake's voice-- Love! thou patient presence & bone of the body! Father! thy careful watching and waiting over my soul! My son! My son! the endless ages have remembered me! My son! My son! Time howled in anguish in my ear! My son! My son! my father wept and held me in his dead arms.

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