EPISODE · Jun 22, 2026 · 6 MIN
And was Jerusalem builded here, Among these dark Satanic Mills?—"Jerusalem" by William Blake
from Reversing Climate Change · host Carbon Removal Strategies LLC
In the last Reversing Climate Change podcast episode, Tom Mills and I started talking about "Jerusalem ["And did those feet in ancient time"]" by William Blake (1810), and the 1916 hymn by Sir Hubert Parry that seemingly all Brits know in their souls.I only knew about it due to a childhood obsession with the dvd boxset of Monty Python's Flying Circus, where in the S1E4 episode, "Owl-Stretching Time", Eric Idle sings this song while being seduced. Unfortunately, I cannot find a good link to this sketch... I can't say I ever fully understood what was happening beyond just the earnestness and absurdity of the situation, but somehow Tom helped me unlock it.In any case, this is a very very quick dip into Romantic poetry (industrialism bad, nature good; analysis bad, intuition good; simple good, complex bad), William Blake's prominence in films like Jim Jarmusch's Dead Man and HBO's tv series Westworld by way of his poem, "Auguries of Innocence", and how sometimes a work can actually be this simple and stand the test of time.ResourcesCheck out my new show, Climate Workers AnonymousBecome a paid subscriber of Reversing Climate ChangeSubscribe to the Reversing Climate Change SubstackSubscribe to the Climate Workers Anonymous SubstackSubscribe to the Reversing Climate Change Substack"And did those feet in ancient time" on Wikipedia
What this episode covers
In the last Reversing Climate Change podcast episode, Tom Mills and I started talking about "Jerusalem ["And did those feet in ancient time"]" by William Blake (1810), and the 1916 hymn by Sir Hubert Parry that seemingly all Brits know in their souls.I only knew about it due to a childhood obsession with the dvd boxset of Monty Python's Flying Circus, where in the S1E4 episode, "Owl-Stretching Time", Eric Idle sings this song while being seduced. Unfortunately, I cannot find a good link to this sketch... I can't say I ever fully understood what was happening beyond just the earnestness and absurdity of the situation, but somehow Tom helped me unlock it.In any case, this is a very very quick dip into Romantic poetry (industrialism bad, nature good; analysis bad, intuition good; simple good, complex bad), William Blake's prominence in films like Jim Jarmusch's Dead Man and HBO's tv series Westworld by way of his poem, "Auguries of Innocence", and how sometimes a work can actually be this simple and stand the test of time.ResourcesCheck out my new show, Climate Workers AnonymousBecome a paid subscriber of Reversing Climate ChangeSubscribe to the Reversing Climate Change SubstackSubscribe to the Climate Workers Anonymous SubstackSubscribe to the Reversing Climate Change Substack"And did those feet in ancient time" on Wikipedia
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And was Jerusalem builded here, Among these dark Satanic Mills?—"Jerusalem" by William Blake
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