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In the Wake of PoseidonI have always had an intense sub-conscious connection with Sinfield's lyrics and knew somehow they were based on more than "stream of consciousness" random "cool sounding" word play. Frustratingly, not being a "student" of Jung or the Tarot, I couldn't connect the dots... But one day I stumbled upon Peter Sinfield's chaotic website and found it fascinating ... I have lifted just a small sliver of the site and redesigned the content a bit to improve the flow of reading and understanding it. Take some time (when you are in the mood) to read this. It's a mythological / psychological masterpiece... When you are ready to take the plunge, jump to Peter Sinfield's site and dig in -- it's heavy stuff but well worth it... Why Poseidon?In keeping with the Temperance theme of the album, Poseidon inhabits the "middle ground" between the sky/heaven (Zeus) and the underworld (Pluto). "Neptune (Poseidon) is between Zeus and Pluto, a middle and not an extreme."
12 Archetypes - What the Cover Illustrates...
On the album cover, the twelve archetypes represent multiplicity. The pairs of archetypes on the front cover (i.e. Kore, the virgin, and Persephone [top,] Dionysus and Demeter [center], Hades and Hermes, the Yellow Jester [bottom]) represent the Dyad, duality. The cover painting also follows directly from the end of the previous album. (In The Court of The Crimson King) Or put another way, the last thing revealed in the previous album is the first thing we see about the second album. As the Crimson King learned in The Dance of the Puppets ...
The archetypes of the collective unconscious are these "giant figures". Thinking vs. FeelingThe anthem and namesake of the album, In the Wake of Poseidon is equivalent to the song In the Court of the Crimson King and might well be sub-titled "The Continued Observations of the Crimson King". However, instead of taking place in a "court", In the Wake of Poseidon chronicles what occurs "in the wake of", or as a consequence of, Poseidon (Poseidon, in this case, representing primordial urge, fallen Eros). In the Court of the Crimson King chronicles some of the ways in which the king's feelings were subordinate to thinking while In the Wake of Poseidon explores the consequences of "thinking governed by feeling". Put another way, album one is concerned with the dark side of the Thinking function and album two is concerned with the dark side of the Feeling function. The song, In the Wake of Poseidon , moreover, is concerned with the imbalance between the two psychological functions.
Therefore, the lyrics of In the Wake of Poseidon refer to each of the archetypes on the cover painting and the song follows very much from the end of the first album, The Dance of the Puppets . In view of this, the title song, In the Wake of Poseidon can be seen as the immediate sequel to the song In the Court of the Crimson King. It was at the end of that song when our protagonist realized that...
The archetypes are these "giant figures" and, just as Pictures of a City develops out of the final verse of 21st Century Schizoid Man , In the Wake of Poseidon is an extended meditation into how it is these archetypes manipulate our lives.
Lyric References to Characters (in the painting)On the title song of the first album, we caught a glimpse of an archetype as a negative force... "The keeper of the city keys "Plato's spawn cold ivyed eyes
As mentioned in chapter four, "bone and globe" (throwing bones and the crystal ball) refers to fortune-telling - which is associated with Neo-Platonic mysticism. Neo-Platonism, as the name implies, grew out of Platonic thought and so could be said to be "Plato's spawn". Additionally, mysticism, when it presents itself as science (pseudo-science, actually), can be quite cold and dogmatic. What we do not see is the fundamental conflict between thinking and feeling and how poorly developed and inferior feeling is in Western society. Feeling is a different and equally valid way of approaching and organizing experience. Jung defined wisdom as the union of thinking and feeling. They are complementary to each other and each is essential. The arguments the militia make against the government are what Jung described as thinking governed by feeling:
All the characters in the painting are referenced throughout the entire album.
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