This is the combination of two texts performed with over 200 slides,
one read at Penny Lane December 19th, and one at Naropa University on
January 19th. It also includes material that will be used in a possible
future performance at the Bug Theater in Denver.
John Thomas Smith published a profile of William Blake in 1829, two
years after Blake's death, beginning with the words "I believe it has
been invariably the custom of every age, whenever a man has been found
to depart from the usual mode of thinking, to consider him of deranged
intellect, and not infrequently stark staring mad…. Bearing this stigma
of eccentricity, William Blake, with most extraordinary zeal, commenced
his efforts in art under the roof of no. 28 Broad St., in which house
he was born," and where his father ran a prosperous hosiery business.
The date was November 28th, 1758, and the house on Broad Street was
in London, but it was a London that didn't look much like what we'd
call a city today. Even the center of London in Blake's time included
hayfields, cattle pastures, and large forests.
Blake was raised as a Protestant in a religiously non-conformist household
back in the days when the word "protest" in it really meant something,
although Blake reportedly never entered a church in his life. The Blakes
were also early supporters of both the American and French revolutions,
and opponents of the slave trade, something some Americans would still
be fighting to prolong a century later. His father was decidedly anti-royal,
although solidly middle-class. In fact, Blake's support of the poor
and downtrodden became a source of tension between the two as the elder
Blake became richer and his son identified more and more with society's
outcasts and the poor.
By all accounts Blake was an argumentative and irritable child. His
visions began shortly after an older brother died in infancy-for instance,
when he was four years old he woke the household with his screaming,
which he told them was provoked when God poked his head into his nursery
window to say hello. Blake also told his father that he saw angelic
beings flying over the hayfields and perched in the trees like stars.
Shortly thereafter, his father decided that it would be best if he kept
Blake home from school, and he was taught to read and write by his mother.
It was customary for the eldest male-in this case his older brother,
James-to inherit the family business, which he eventually did.
When he was ten, Blake's father sent him to drawing school, where he
studied for the next five years. At the same time his father began giving
him money to collect prints, and Blake was drawn to those by Raphael,
Michelangelo, and Durer. Until the end of his life, Blake was known
for his extraordinary print collection.
In August, 1772, at the completion of his schooling, at the age of
fifteen, it was time to arrange for his apprenticeship. At the time,
being an engraver was thought to be a more commercial career than to
be a painter. Illustrated books were something of a fad and painting
was something reserved for the very rich.
His first appointment was with William Ryland, the official engraver
to King George, the most famous, and modern, engraver of the time. But
upon first meeting him, Blake had a vision of Ryland's body hanging
from a scaffold, which gave the official engraver to the king quite
a laugh. But within ten years Ryland would be hanged at the city gates
when it was discovered that he had been counterfeiting official bank
notes.
And so Blake began his apprenticeship instead with the engraver James
Basire. An apprenticeship with Basire was cheaper than most because
he had not kept up with the modern style of engraving, and was considered
an "old-time" engraver. New techniques-such as mezzotint and aquatint-had
created a desire for subtle shading in book illustrations, and the bold,
strongly lined designs of Basire, inspired by Durer, were considered
out of date.
Blake, who did not get along well with his fellow apprentices, was
soon sent off to Westminster Abbey to practice his drawing alone. Here
he also discovered medieval illuminated manuscripts in its library.
He spent entire nights in the gloomy catacombs, sketching the faces
of heroes and gargoyles, including his first engraving in 1773 at the
age of 15, featuring Joseph of Arimathea. When he emerged into the daylight
after a night in the tombs, he often felt himself to be a man out-of-time
with his contemporaries and much preferred the drama of the Gothic to
the "modern style."
While still a student, he illustrated a book called "A New System of
Mythology," where he learned of the common elements in much of the world's
religions, from ancient Egypt to modern Christianity. He also began
to see everything as essentially sacred and believed that the inability
to see the sacredness of the world and all living things-especially
by kings and priests and teachers and lawyers-was responsible for most
of the suffering in the world. Blake began to believe that there must
be one true, all-encompassing, everlasting religion that time and mistranslation
and our blindness had splintered in warring factions. He also believed
that it was possible to reclaim our holiness, but only after we had
overthrown everything that oppressed us. And so upon graduating from
his apprenticeship at the age of 21, you could say that Blake was nearly
fully formed.
At this point he became a professional engraver, but had difficulty
adjusting the style he'd learned from his study of antiquities to the
current images considered fashionable in cosmopolitan London. He also
entered the Royal Academy of Art, where he studied with the most famous
portrait painter of his age-Sir Joshua Reynolds. But after some moderate,
but ill-taken criticism from Reynolds that Blake should simplify his
extravagance and correct his drawing, Blake left the Academy. He wrote
that Reynold's insistence on "copying nature" was to become a slave
to memory, whereas he preferred the vigor of his own Divine Imagination.
Rather than gazing at an object and then painting "backward" from memory,
Blake's active sense of imagination relied upon intense seeing. He believed
that by staring at an object he could actually enter it and that it
would then begin to converse with him.
At this time Blake also joined a group of the most radical political
thinkers of his day, including William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft,
whose salon would later host such Romantics and political revolutionaries
as Shelley, Keats, and Lord Byron. He also joined the mob that burned
Newgate Prison, an act inspired by the storming of the Bastille, and
it was Blake who, by some accounts, was the one who alerted his friend
Thomas Paine to flee England when soldiers were en route to arrest him.
In the latter days of King George's rule, the word "sedition" was taken
very seriously by the king and the courts and one of Blake's early publishers
had gone to prison for it. The French Revolution was killing people,
for instance, and at this point it was still only kings, queens, and
noblemen who were losing their heads. Even though it was considered
politically dangerous, Blake went so far as to wear an emblematic red
bonnet in sympathy for the French Revolution on the streets of London.
At about this time, Blake befriended the publisher Joseph Johnson,
and one of Blake's first professional jobs was to illustrate a novel
by Mary Wollstonecraft. Johnson was primarily a political publisher-he
was ready to print Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man," for instance, but
cancelled its publication when he was warned he would be charged with
sedition if he did. The threat was real, and the pamphlet's second publisher
was arrested and jailed for publishing it. At that time, Johnson was
also advertising the imminent publication of Blake's "French Revolution,"
a book of 7 parts, but Johnson and Blake thought better of it and cancelled
publication after Part I was set into type, for fear that if it were
published they would both end up in jail.
At the time, Blake believed he was living in the end days, and that
the American and French Revolutions were the purifying violence that
was prophesied in the Bible as a prelude to a new heaven on earth. He
saw his prophetical works such as "America" and "Europe" as being in
line with the Hebrew prophets. In fact, Blake made much of the fact
the he was born in 1757, the year that the Christian mystic Swedenborg
had predicted would be the time of the Last Judgment and the coming
of the kingdom of heaven. Like most people, he reconsidered his position
vis a vis the French Revolution after Reign of Terror began, and for
the next 13 years he would write no more prophetical books. But late
in life Blake would tell friends that although he wrote almost exclusively
in religious terms, he meant for his writings to be read as political
tracts, and it was only his obscurity that saved him from prison.
By the late 1790s, France had embraced the despot Napoleon and England
had become even more repressively grim-the poor could no longer afford
bread, for instance, and many Londoners spent their waking lives in
factories in order to make their owners rich, while the factories themselves
worked night and day manufacturing tools for the wars that were orchestrated
by commercial interests, and in which mostly the poor fought and died.
England's war with France, for example, was blatantly an economic war,
fought to secure overseas colonies. And it was at this point that Blake's
earliest hero-fiery Orc, the spirit of revolution-was transformed into
the more human, Los, emblem of the imagination. In Blake's later work
he wrote that the revolution that was necessary was a revolution in
consciousness, via the imagination, not a violent political revolution.
Among his friends at this time was A.S. Matthew and his wife, who raised
funds to publish Blake's first volume of poetry, Poetical Sketches,
in an edition of 50 copies. It contained poems written between the ages
of 12 and 20 in Shakespearean blank verse, and also included his first
songs. It was at this time that Blake's curious history of bad reviews
from unlikely sources began, in this case within the preface of his
own book, written by Mr. Mathews: "The following sketches were the production
of untutored youth-he has been deprived of the leisure requisite to
such a revisal of these sheets, as might have rendered them less unfit
to meet the public eye."
It is also at this time that Blake is described by guests of the Mathews
as singing his poems at parties: "There I have often heard him read
and sing several of his poems. He was listened to by the company with
profound silence, and allowed by most of the visitors to possess original
and extraordinary merit." Even so, and despite that fact that Blake
was a friend and collaborator with publishers all his life and certainly
showed his work to them, Poetical Sketches remained the only commercial
publication of Blake's writing in his lifetime.
Blake was 5 foot, 5 inches tall, had yellow-brown hair which tended
to radiate around his head, and was usually described as having an unkempt
appearance. At the age of 23, recuperating from a broken heart, he left
London to stay near his father's relatives in Battersea, where he met
Catherine Boucher, the illiterate daughter of a farmer, and married
her one year later, when she signed the marriage certificate with an
X. His marriage displeased his father, who thought William was marrying
beneath him. But they were lifetime companions, and Blake taught his
wife not only to read and write but how to paint as well. Twenty years
later their friend William Hayley wrote that Catherine helped to print
and color his works, and that "she draws, she engraves, and sings delightfully
& is so truly the Half of her good Man, that they seem animated by One
Soul."
Two years after his marriage, his father died and Blake started a print
shop with another engraver, investing the little money he'd inherited
from his father's estate. But he quickly quarreled with his partner,
and made only two original etchings in the two years he worked there.
At the same time one of the first high-profile commissioned works he'd
illustrated, Young's Night Thoughts, was a disastrous failure, abandoned
after the first volume, and many blamed Blake's idiosyncratic and archaic
etching style. One review wrote of Blake's illustrations: "Nothing would
be more easy than to produce such. They were like the conceits of drunken
fellow or a madman." Blake was labeled "non-commercial" and what little
work he'd had dried up. When the business went under, he was considered
a failure by his family, and his eldest brother refused to have any
contact with him for the remainder of their lives.
At this time, his younger brother, Robert, also an artist, came to
live with the young childless couple. Whereas Blake was difficult and
singular, Robert was outgoing and loving, and whereas Blake attempted
to make a living out of his art, Robert remained true to his own personal
dreams and visions. At the same time that Blake's print shop was going
out of business, Robert, then 19 years old, was dying in Blake's arms
of tuberculosis. Blake spent the last two weeks of Robert's life at
his bedside, refusing to leave even to eat or sleep. At the moment of
his brother's death, Blake saw his "released spirit ascend heavenward,
clapping its hands for joy." After Robert died, Blake slept for 3 days
and 3 nights and woke with great sadness that he had slept through his
brother's funeral and internment. Upon Robert's death, Blake inherited
Robert's notebook which was filled with his fantastic and spirited drawings,
and suddenly Robert's visionary nature began to become more prominent
in Blake's own work.
At this time Blake joined a Swedenborg cult, at least partially in
hopes that he might contact his dead brother's spirit. Followers of
Swedenborg claimed that they could raise the dead, that the Virgin Mary
came to sit with them, and that they could converse with Jesus and God.
Later, when he became disenchanted with the Swedenborgians, he joined
an underground heretical Christian sect that believed that the words
of the Sermon on the Mount should be taken literally. Their Jerusalem
would have no king but Jesus Christ, but this was a Christ who was,
as the Gnostics had taught as well, a new God, and one who had come
to earth to free us from the Old Testament Jehovah. They believed in
the imminence of a heaven on earth, and opposed private property, war,
any established church, formal government, and laws. They also believed
that the industrial revolution had turned men and women (and more horrifically
children) into slaves, who worked to feed the machinery on the machinery's
schedule. In this Blake predated Romantics such as Coleridge and Wordsworth,
who were still considered revolutionaries for similar ideas a century
later.
Following Robert's death, Blake commonly talked to his brother and
other angels and Biblical figures. He was, he said at the time, "under
the direction of Messengers from Heaven Daily and Nightly." Blake's
first biographer, Alexander Gilchrist, collected first-hand reports
of how Blake would often stare off into space, his eyes moving quickly
back and forth, describing, in elaborate detail, the apparitions who
came to visit him. In current psychiatric parlance, Blake was in this
sense an "eidetic" thinker, someone whose mental images are seen in
great detail as if suspended outside their heads. In his later years,
he even set visiting hours between 9 p.m. and 5 a.m. daily for any spirit
who wanted to drop by for a portrait or a chat. He believed that "Spirits
are not as modern philosophy supposes, a cloudy vapor or a nothing.
They are organized and minutely articulated beyond all that the mortal
and perishing nature can produce." These were observed not with the
material eye but within the imagination heightened to a vision. In his
career he would often paint his visions-including the Ancient of Days,
which he claimed appeared to him and hovered over his head at the top
of the stairs-and a series of Visionary Heads, including Canute, who
came to instruct him in art and philosophy. He was also twice visited
by the spirit of a Flea. These spirits also included personages from
the past, such as the poet John Milton. In fact Blake claimed his long
poem "Milton" was dictated to him by angels with occasional assistance
from Milton himself with the intent to correct an error Milton had made.
"I saw Milton in imagination, and he told me to beware of being misled
by his "Paradise Lost." In particular he wished me to shew the falsehood
of his doctrine that the pleasure of sex arose from the Fall. The Fall
could not produce any pleasure."
In addition, the list of people Blake dined with on "the bread of sweet
thought and the wine of delight"-included Michelangelo, Paracelsus,
Socrates, and the Hebrew prophets. When he also claimed to have had
many conversations with Voltaire, his friend Crabb Robinson asked him
how he could have communicated with Voltaire, who spoke only French,
and Blake said "To my sensations it was English. It was like the touch
of a musical key-he touched it probably in French, but to my ear it
became English."
In a letter to Thomas Butts, he explained the compositional process
of one of these long, dictated poems: "I have written this Poem from
immediate dictation, twelve or sometimes twenty or thirty lines at a
time, without Premeditation & even against my Will; the Time it has
taken in writing was thus render'd non Existent, & an immense Poem Exists
which seems to be the Labour of a long Life, all produc'd without Labour
or Study." But, interestingly enough, Blake's manuscripts-including
such dictated works such as "Vala" and "Milton"-show a considerable
amount of deletions and revisions, proving that the dictation of these
spirit guides was not apparently foolproof.
Blake's habit of invoking the members of the Holy Family whenever it
suited his purpose was not without humor to his friends. Once his painter
friend Henry Fuseli was looking at a new painting that Blake had assured
him had been described as one of his best ever. Fuseli, unconvinced,
enquired of Blake "Now someone has told you this is very fine?" "Yes,"
Blake answered, "the Virgin Mary appeared to me and told me it was very
fine. Now what can you say to that?" "Well," Fuseli replied, "I can
say nothing, other than that her Ladyship has not an immaculate taste."
Blake's visual art was also subject to the dictations from other worlds-he
didn't paint landscapes or seascapes or conventional portraits as they
would be seen through our senses and were defined and determined by
them, but rather he painted a spiritual world, somewhat symbolic, that
he saw in his Divine Imagination. He painted only what was eternal,
and what was eternal did not reside in the features of a face or in
the details of the moment or in any particular vista before the eyes.
In fact, he felt that to paint the world visible to the senses would
only encourage us to continue to freeze our experience on the lower
level perceptible to our senses. But he also believed that it was only
through this world-through the sunflower or the grain of sand or whatever-that
we could see this informing world, this active world, beyond the world
of our senses once, as he put it, the doors of perception were cleansed
and we could see the things of our senses as they were in essence-that
is, infinite and eternal.
Blake described this visionary process as follows: "I assert for My
Self that I do not behold the outward Creation & that to me it is a
hindrance & not Action; it is as the dirt upon my feet, No part of Me.
"What," it will be Questioned, "When the Sun rises, do you not see a
round disk of fire somewhat like a [coin]?" O no, no, I see an Innumerable
company of the Heavenly host crying, "Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God
Almighty." I question not my Corporeal or Vegetative Eye any more than
I would Question a Window concerning a Sight. I look thro' it & not
with it."
In a letter he describes this visionary process as being able to see
four different levels of reality simultaneously. For instance, his first
level of vision might see a thistle. This single vision he refers to
as "Newton's sleep." But Blake's second level of vision would see as
well an old man, perhaps, somewhat inside of it; and his third level
of vision would see the essence of the thistle. This he described as
a passion in a constant state of erotic excitement. And finally his
fourth level of vision would see as well a flame of Divine Imagination
pouring through the thistle from above and beyond.
Blake's visions also occurred to him in dreams, and were often of a
practical nature. For instance, after Robert died, Blake had a dream
about how to print books combining text and illustrations without using
set type (although it has been pointed out that a description of a very
similar process can be found in a letter to Blake from one of his artist
friends years before). Drawing backwards on a copper plate with an acid-resistant
medium, he would then use acid to etch the uncovered areas around the
words and illustrations. The resultant words and illustrations were
raised and Blake would paint them individually in watercolors before
printing. Blake named this process "illuminated printing" and used it
for the rest of his career. Since he handpainted several versions of
his texts at very different times in his career (there are dozens of
versions of his Songs of Innocence, for example), each of them shows
remarkable variations in color and tone. In addition, his earliest printings
in this manner are translucent, but later he often jeweled them with
gold paint, imitating the illuminated manuscripts he'd loved as a child.
Beginning with his first work printed in this manner, all of his written
work is designed as part of a visual design. To read his work as set
type, such as in literary anthologies, is to miss the point entirely.
In addition, his songs are meant to be sung to arrangements common to
any hymnal, especially those by Isaac Watts. It is also interesting
to me how much of his visual art prefigures such future art movements
as surrealism, expressionism, and dadaist collage.
After his mother died, Blake moved to Lambeth, something of a suburb
of London, for the next 7 years. It was cheaper there and the Blakes
could even afford a housekeeper. His publisher friend Joseph Johnson
was able to get Blake lots of work, to the point that Blake actually
began to worry that his affluence would remove him from the cares of
the poor.
This concern with London's poor was already evident in many of Blake's
earliest songs in Songs of Innocence and of Experience, including his
two songs about chimney sweeps, a daily sight on the streets of London.
In Blake's day, children, often orphans, were sold into service as chimney
sweeps, because their size made it possible for them to actually enter
the chimneys and clean them from the inside. Most of these chimney sweeps
died while still children until finally, in 1788, the English Parliament
passed legislation that prevented chimney sweeps from being apprenticed
until the age of eight, that they were to be allowed to wash once a
week, and that they could not be forced to be sent up an ignited chimney.
Similarly, another book of Blake's, Visions of the Daughters of Albion,
was written as a protest to slavery, the buying of children for employment,
the creation of prostitution by wealthy hypocritical males, and England's
oppressive marriage laws, which prevented women from owning their own
property. Some believe that his sensitivity to women's rights was fostered
by an affair with Mary Wollstonecraft (hinted at by Alexander Gilchrist,
Blake's first biographer), author of the first political pamphlet on
"The Rights of Women."
But the days in Lambeth were mostly happy days for the Blakes. One
of my favorite Blake stories comes from when his painter friend Thomas
Butts dropped by and found Mr. and Mrs. Blake naked in their country
garden wearing helmets and reciting Milton's "Paradise Lost." The Blakes
were not the least embarrassed and asked their friend to pull up a chair
and join them.
For these 7 years, beginning in 1793, Blake maintained an almost unbelievable
level of inspiration and creation. He wrote and illuminated the texts
of many of his best-known works, including "The Book of Los," "The Marriage
of Heaven and Hell," "America, a Prophecy," "Visions of the Daughters
of Albion," "The Songs of Experience," "The Book of Ahania," and "The
Song of Los." His engravings from this time include "God Judging Adam"
and his illustrations to "Europe, a Prophecy" and "The Book of Urizen,"
as well as many paintings such as his most famous, "Glad Day." Most
of the works he wrote at this time were written in his long prophetic
line and cadence, which he himself described as "The march of long resounding
strong heroic verse."
But in 1793 Blake lost his friendship with the publisher Johnson, most
probably due to an argument, and with it most of his engraving work.
At this point he begins his long practice of self-publishing, and announced
his latest venture with the following broadside, addressed "To the Public,"
in October: "The Labours of the Artist, the Poet, the Musician, have
been proverbially attended by poverty and obscurity; this was never
the fault of the Public, but was owing to a neglect of means to propagate
such works as have wholly absorbed the Man of Genius…. No Subscriptions
for the numerous great works now in hand are asked, for none are wanted;
but the Author will produce his works, and offer them for sale at a
fair price."
During this period Blake also invented a new method of affixing his
tempera colors. Usually these were bound with gum, but Blake began using
carpenter's glue instead, calling the process "fresco painting." He
claimed this process was revealed to him by the subject of his first
etching-Joseph of Arimathea, Jesus' carpenter dad. Unfortunately, Saint
Joseph did not give Blake an infallible technique, and many of these
paintings have now cracked and darkened, some of them beyond the powers
of restoration. In fact, after realizing that the process was a failure,
he changed his adhesive from carpenter's glue to scraps of parchment.
At this time Blake also began his most dramatic watercolors, painting,
for instance, Newton undersea, as someone so focused on the point of
his compass that he is ignorant of everything else; a dark, underground,
three-headed Hecate, conjuring from an ancient text and surrounded by
her mythic animal guides; and Nebuchanezzer as much a slave to his senses
and passions as any bear in a cave. Then there was the painting of pity
inspired by a line in Macbeth where it was described as a naked newborn
babe.
At the end of this amazing 7-year period, the lack of interest in his
art and literature led Blake to a profound depression. The year 1800
was also a plague year in London-there was no bread for the poor and
new laws designed to control discontent led to renewed and worsening
political repression and the loss of most of England's civil rights.
So, for the first time, Blake left life in the capital for the rural
town of Felpham on the Sussex Coast, to live near the uninspired and
demanding artist, poet, and biographer William Hayley, who would be
his patron for the next three years. At the time Blake had become unemployable
in London due to savage reviews, such as this one, which appeared in
the local papers following the publication of his illustrated version
of "Leonora": "This edition is embellished with a frontispiece, in which
the painter has endeavoured to exhibit to the eye the wild conceptions
of the poet, but with so little success, as to produce an effect perfectly
ludicrous, instead of terrific." Another review ended: "Nor can we pass
by this opportunity of execrating that detestable taste, founded on
the depraved fancy of one man of genius, which substitutes deformity
and extravagance for force and expression, and draws men and women without
skins, with their joints all dislocated; or imaginary beings, which
neither can nor ought to exist."
Blake's response to such criticism was to make grander and grander
statements defending himself, such as the following: "I am more famed
in Heaven for my works than I could well conceive. In my Brain are studies
& Chambers filld with books & pictures of old, which I wrote & painted
in ages of Eternity before my mortal life; & whose works are the delight
& Study of Archangels. Why, then, should I be anxious about the riches
or fame of mortality? The Lord our Father will do for us & with us according
to his Divine will for our Good." Blake's friend John Flaxman, concerned
for Blake's grandiosity, wrote to Hayley that he should keep Blake occupied
with small projects such as illustrating Hayley's broadside ballads
like "The Horse," rather than grand works which Flaxman thought Blake
was "not qualified [for] either by habit or study."
Blake was relatively happy in the rural seacoast town, at least at
first, and often saw the daughters of inspiration descending from the
tops of trees and discovered fairies living amongst his vegetables.
At a party he once asked a woman seated next to him, "Have you ever
seen a fairy's funeral?" and, when she admitted that she hadn't, he
went on to describe in graphic detail the one he'd witnessed just that
afternoon in his garden.
But one day Blake came upon a soldier who had been sent to weed Blake's
somewhat untidy yard. Chasing him off his property, Blake was heard
to remark, "Damn the King, and damn all his soldiers, they are all slaves."
This was enough to get Blake arrested and charged with sedition. Although
he was later found innocent, he was forced to leave Phelpam forever.
In 1803, Blake returned to London and rented rooms on the first floor
of a boarding house at 17 Molton Street, south of the Thames in the
worst part of the city. He was 45 years old and nearly destitute with
very little hope that things would change for the better. For one thing,
Blake's difficult and unprofessional reputation was well deserved. For
instance, before he left Phelpam in 1803, Blake was commissioned by
Hayley to produce an engraved portrait of the artist Romney, and Blake
wrote to Hayley in January of 1804 that he was working briskly on it.
Five months later he wrote to Hayley again, this time asking for 30
pounds-double the amount originally agreed upon-in order to finish the
engraving, which he claimed was almost finished. Three months later
Blake wrote again to ask for another 10 pounds. Then, at the close of
the year, he requested another 10 pounds, telling Hayley he was very
far from completing it. He actually never did finish the portrait, and
the task was eventually assigned to another artist.
Despite his extreme poverty, Blake was relieved to be back in London
after his "3 years slumber on the banks of the Ocean." "Now I may say
to you, what perhaps I should not dare to say to anyone else: That I
can alone carry on my visionary studies in London unannoy'd, & that
I may converse with my friends in Eternity, See Visions, Dream Dreams
& prophecy & speak Parables unobserv'd & at liberty from the Doubts
of other Mortals; perhaps Doubts proceeding from Kindness, but Doubts
are always pernicious, Especially when we Doubt our Friends. Christ
is very decided on this Point; 'He who is Not With Me is Against Me.'
There is no Medium or Middle state; & if a Man is the Enemy of my Spiritual
Life while he pretends to be the Friend of my Corporeal, he is a Real
Enemy…."
Blake's two major written works after his return to London are "Vala"
and "Jerusalem." He had begun "Jerusalem" while still in Felpham, and
it is something of an epic sacred history, although by then Blake had
abandoned allegory for a vision where present-day Oxford Street co-exists
with a heavenly Jerusalem. In it the mercenary world where a poet and
painter such as Blake can not make a living is transformed into a heaven
on earth, filled with Divine Love. Ironically, when Blake showed the
poem to Robert Southey in 1811, the poet, who would later become Britain's
poet laureate, told Blake that he had written "a perfectly mad poem."
Also at this time Blake saw an immense exhibition of paintings in London
arranged by Joseph, Count of Truchsess, that included over 900 canvasses
by mostly European artists, including works by Michelangelo, Raphael,
and Durer. These were the artists who first inspired Blake when he began
collecting prints as a child. He wrote in a letter to Butts that he
experienced an altered state of consciousness while at the exhibition
and became drunk with intellectual vision. "I thank God," he wrote,
"that I have courageously pursued my course through darkness." "I was
again enlightened with the light I enjoyed in my youth, & which has
for exactly 20 years been closed from me as by a door…. [Seeing these
images again has been] my restoration to the light of Art."
But returning to his earliest etching style had its costs. Originally
commissioned by his friend Robert Cromek to illustrate "The Grave,"
the advertisements for the book first announced 20 new etchings by Blake,
which was later reduced to 15, and finally to 12, before Cromek hired
another artist to illustrate the text in a brighter, more modern manner,
and wrote to a friend that Blake would be successful as an artist if
he would "condescend to give … attention to his worldly concerns which
everyone does that prefers living to starving."
Blake answered Cromek's complaints in a letter: "The value of genius
is considerably enhanced by its rarity-it is by no means a common thing….
As there can be but few Men of Genius so, I grant, to be one of them,
is to be, as far as relates to this World, unhappy, unfortunate: the
Mock & scorn of Men; always in strife & contention against the World
& the World against him; but, as far as relates to another World, to
be one of these is to be Blessed! He is a Pilgrim & stranger upon Earth,
traveling into a far distant Land, led by Hope & sometimes by Despair
but-surrounded by Angels & protected by the immediate Divine presence.
He is the light of the World. Therefore Reverence thyself, O Man of
Genius!"
In 1809, he mounted what would be his final attempt to make a name
for himself as a serious artist. He arranged for an exhibit in London
of his watercolors, featuring his most recent and to his mind the best
of all, and certainly his largest-"Chaucer's Pilgrims." He also published
"A Descriptive Catalogue" in which he wrote such counter-contemporary
ideas as "The great and golden rule of art, as well as of life, is this:
That the more distinct, sharp, and wirey the bounding line, the more
perfect the art."
Not one painting sold in the two years the paintings hung, and the
reviews were scathing. One described Blake as "an unfortunate lunatic,
whose personal inoffensiveness secures him from confinement. The poor
man fancies himself a great master, and has painted a few wretched pictures,
some of which are unintelligible allegory, others an attempt at sober
characters by caricature representation, and the whole blotted and blurred
and very badly drawn. These he calls an Exhibition, of which he has
published a Catalogue, or rather a farrago of nonsense, unintelligibleness,
and egregious vanity, the wild effusions of a distempered brain."
During the following eight years, from 1810-1817, even his friends
considered him insane. Catherine told visitors that she had "very little
of Mr. Blake's company; he is always in Paradise." Visitors often describe
him as dirty and poor, and his wife's dresses as filthy. One day he
showed a visitor a painting he claimed was his version of the last judgment
on a sheet of paper that had been so over-painted that it appeared completely
black. In 1815 he told friends that he had had a violent dispute with
his angels and had driven them away. By 1816, Blake's entry in the "Biographical
Dictionary of the Living Artists of Great Britain and Ireland" described
him as an eccentric and a legendary shadow.
Blake's own doubts at this time are evident in his paintings. In his
early paintings Blake sees life as a battle of wills, where in order
for good to conquer, evil must be beaten and controlled. But now, during
his deepest depressions-when he believed that he had betrayed himself
by working for Hayley and forsaking his visionary, prophetic work-he
painted the monster as triumphant, forcing what is good and natural
to submit to his temporal power. It would only be at the conclusion
of his last great illustrated poem "Jerusalem" that Blake would come
to the realization that we can never reattain our state of innocence,
but that we also do not have to succumb to the disappointments of experience.
He would paint as the end of "Jerusalem" his image of the crown of age-that
at the end of our journey we will come to realize that our days here
have been to learn how to embody the divine on earth, if only via our
imagination.
Shortly afterwards, in 1818, Blake commenced the happiest period of
his life. He became a mentor to a group of young artists who called
themselves the Ancients. These painters, fifty years his junior, found
inspiration in his visual art but told Blake his poetry was indecipherable.
Perhaps not coincidentally it was also at this point that Blake abandoned
poetry, claiming that his ideas were better expressed visually.
One of these Ancients, the painter John Linnell, commissioned Blake's
last two major works: a series of illustrations to the Book of Job,
and an illustrated edition of Dante's "Divine Comedy." At the time he
met Linnell, Blake was earning on average 50 pounds a year, while Linnell,
a hack portrait artist of dukes and duchesses, was earning the equivalent
of Blake's yearly income every 10 days. In 1826, Linnell had Blake's
edition of "Job" printed and, once again, the book's illustrations were
considered the reason for its failure. Blake had been painting scenes
from the story of Job throughout his career, but in his last completed
work he used Job's story to tell perhaps the greatest, and certainly
his clearest, version of the story of his spiritual transformation.
When the story begins, Blake paints himself as Job surrounded by the
children of his spiritual crisis-painting, poetry, and music. Their
musical instruments are hung on the tree behind them, and they are gathered
together to pray to God for material comfort. But instead, Job suddenly
suffers a series of horrifying and overwhelming catastrophes-he loses
his family, all of his possessions, and even his health and sanity.
This continues until Job has a vision where he sees that the one who
is causing these torments is Jehovah, the same God he prayed to when
his suffering began. But he sees that this God has the cloven hoof of
the devil, and that it his "mind-forg'd" enslavement to this false God
that has led him down into the material world and its suffering. In
his suffering he sees through the world's falsity and gives birth to
a new god-a personal God, a living Christ-inside of him, from whom he
can never be separated. And thus at the end of this journey-that has
taken place within his Divine Imagination-Blake and his children are
reunited. And they take down their instruments to sing of real truths
with real joy and thanksgiving, having paid the price for their heavenly
wisdom.
Blake's last great work, his illustrations to Dante's "Divine Comedy"
were left incomplete at the time of his death, but included over 100
paintings and 7 etchings, an amazing amount of work for a man to commence
when he's nearly 70 years old, which Linnell reported at the time were
designed "during a fortnight's illness in bed."
But, as with "Paradise Lost" and the Bible, Blake believed that the
"Divine Comedy" had come into his hands in order for him to correct
Dante's mistakes. While working on the illustrations, he wrote on the
back of one of his watercolors: "Dante saw devils where I see none-I
see only good."
His argument with the "Divine Comedy" was that Dante was cruel, and
took obvious pleasure in casting his enemies into hell and torment.
Blake did not believe in an eternal hell-he believed that heaven and
hell were mental states that were experienced subjectively and thus
they existed eternally as possibilities, but that we passed through
them and would leave them behind. Blake's version of the "Divine Comedy"
is more like the story of his poem "The Mental Traveller," where the
spiritual journey begins in our tomb or grave in this world, and then
it begins an ascent through a series of experiences straight out of
the "Pugatario." It is by suffering and eventually experiencing the
false nature of all of the temptations of this world that we purify
ourselves until we are born as new spiritual beings who can withstand,
and contain, spiritual light. As he wrote in a letter to Butts, "I do
not consider either the Just or the Wicked to be in a Supreme State,
but to be every one of them States of Sleep which the soul may fall
into in its deadly dreams of Good & Evil when it leaves Paradise following
the Serpent."
In 1821, Blake moved again to 3 Fountain Court, an even less expensive
apartment, where he lived in two rooms in a house with his sister-in-law.
His friend Crabb Robinson visited him at this time and wrote in his
journal that "nothing could exceed the squalid air both of the apartment
and his dress." "He was at work, engraving, in the small bedroom's light,
looking out on a mean yard. Everything in the room [was] squalid, indicating
poverty, except himself…. There was but one chair in the room, besides
that on which he sat. On my putting my hand to it, I found that it would
have fallen to pieces if I had lifted it." One evening when they sat
down to dinner Catherine brought an empty platter to their table.
At this time Blake's vision was also beginning to fail, but he continued
to etch and paint. The sole print he'd retained through all of his years
of poverty had been the one he still worked beneath at his etching table
ever since the days of his apprenticeship-namely, Durer's "Melancholia."
It's also at this time that his plaster lifemask was cast, when Blake
was 66 years old. Although he is frowning, several people have reported
it is because he found the process disagreeable and that in his last
years Blake constantly possessed a gentle sweetness. Also at this time
there begin to be new reports of Blake singing his poems to his own
melodies, although now his voice is described as being tremulous with
age.
There is an interesting story told of this time, verified by several
people present. One day Blake was entertaining several of the Ancients
when Samuel Palmer, one of the them, left in a coach to return home.
About an hour later Blake put his hand to his head and said "Palmer
is coming. He is walking up the road." Everyone present considered this
an example of Blake's confusion or madness, and explained a bit condescendingly
that, no, Samuel had left and was well on his way home by now. A while
later Blake pointed to the closed door-"He is coming through the wicket."
Once again his guests explained the Samuel had left and would not be
returning tonight. But a moment later the door opened and Palmer walked
into the room. His coach had broken down on its way home and Palmer
had returned to Blake's apartment to arrange another ride home.
In 1826, the year before he died, Blake wrote of death: "I cannot consider
death as any thing but removing from one room to another." And later,
even closer to death, he wrote "That in my imagination I am stronger
& stronger as this Foolish body decays." He'd suffered from gallstones
since 1824, and they would eventually kill him on August 12th, 1827.
His last day was recorded by his friend Frederick Tatham. Blake began
the day in bed, working on a new painting based on "The Ancient of Days."
Then "He made a drawing [of Catherine], which though not a likeness
is finely touched and expressed. He then threw that down, after having
drawn for an hour and began to sing Hallelujahs and songs of joy and
triumph which Mrs. Blake described as being truly sublime in music and
in verse…. The walls rang and resounded with the beatific vision. It
was an overture to the choir of heaven. It was a chant for the response
of angels."
Blake died a pauper and was buried in an unmarked grave. Catherine
inherited only his artworks, which she sold as well as she could, until
her death four years later. She was taken in as a housekeeper-first
by Linnell and then by another friend of her husband's, Frederick Tatham-until
her death four years later. Many of his works were destroyed by friends
who found his writings and drawings sacrilegious or politically dangerous.
Other works were simply lost-his long poem 'Vala, or the Four Zoas,"
for instance, was only rediscovered in manuscript form by the poet William
Butler Yeats in 1889, 62 years after the poet's death. And it wasn't
until 100 years after his death that a simple gravestone was erected
for him in a London chuchyard.
A reappraisal of Blake began in 1861, with Alexander Gilchrist's biography.
Shortly afterwards Swinburne, the most popular poet of his time, wrote
an essay praising Blake, and Yeats edited the first major edition of
his poetry in 1893. But the road was not without resistance. In the
1920s, for example, the most popular poet of his time, T.S. Eliot, dismissed
Blake in a major essay as a crank, an eccentric, and a failure, and,
following Eliot's lead, Roger Fry, the modern art apostle, described
the work as having "the wavy unresistance of seaweed," and that the
poet and painter were both deranged.
But by the centenary of Blake's death in 1927, the re-evaluation of
Blake was complete, although even after World War II the esteemed art
critic Milton Klonsky could write that "Entering his mythic world is
like being immersed in an oceanic soup or stew of the imagination swarming
with the minute particulars of someone else's nightmare." Yet his poem
"Jerusalem" remains one of the most popular British hymns to this day
and a book published in the 1990s claimed that Blake's "Tyger" is the
most published English poem in history.
Two hundred and fifty years after Blake's death, Allen Ginsberg, a
young poet from Paterson, New Jersey, heard the voice of the bard reciting
Blake's "Ah Sunflower, weary of time," and simultaneously had a vision
of eternity in the skyline of New York City that stayed with him, and
informed all that he did, for the rest of his life. Years later, on
a bus ride through California after holding Neal Cassady's ashes in
his hand, he heard a choir of angels singing lines from Blake in his
head, and realized that Blake's Songs of Innocence and of Experience
were songs, and meant to be sung. He then taught himself music in order
to sing Blake's songs wherever and whenever he could, and he'd often
end the evening by singing Blake's "Nurse's Song" from "Experience,"
along with the audience-and for a moment we'd stop thinking whatever
we were thinking, and the distinction between active performer and passive
listener would disappear, and we would hear ourselves and everyone around
us singing the song's final line-"and all the hill echoed." And as we
sang Allen would get more and more animated and he would wiggle and
write in his chair trying to hit higher and higher notes, and he would
sing louder and louder and more and more animated and then, when he
sensed it was just the right moment, he would begin to sing a little
quieter and bring the song down until we were just whispering. And then
he would stop singing and prolong the last note on his harmonium until
it ran out of air and disappeared, and we would just sit there for a
moment in the silence, slightly vibrating, out head humming, having
gone somewhere but not sure of exactly where.
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