Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Final Lesson

If you have become sufficiently interested in Blake after this lesson, I expect to continue these lessons in this blog. http://lessons-blake.blogspot.com/

"I give you the end of a golden string,
Only wind it into a ball:
It will lead you in at Heavens gate
Built in Jerusalem's wall."

Very famous of course; you may find books entitled 'The Golden String.' Does it remind you of anything? Greek?
the Minotaur.

What is the golden string? Read my post, or just read on.

Last week's biography ended in 1804 with "After three years Blake had had enough. He and Catherine returned to London and to abject poverty, glorified by the tremendous production of his last decade.

Output during that time:

Jerusalem, from Biography





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Today's Biography is confined to the 19th Century, Blake's last 28 years. Marriage had brought young Blake responsibilities; he was an artist; it meant producing stuff for sale. (The poet is out of it entirely; he had best never marry unless he knows a rich heiress.)

Blake married an illiterate farm girl; she was more than that when he died; she had been pretty well educated by her husband.

Blake wrote (and inscribed) a lot of things:
Thel
Link
Songs of Innocence and Experience (they became classics, but seen by very few in his day.)
Everybody knows or at least has heard of The Tyger.

As a married man
Blake produced pictures and other objects of art; but the sale was dismal. They struggled along with contributions of a few friends. William Hayley, a successful although mediocre poet, took Blake under his wing.

Hayley insisted on Blake painting miniatures, all day.
Blake had no time for the poetry or the Visions that meant so much to him.

He and Catherine left their cottage on the sea and Hayley's support; they returned to poverty-- and sweet joy.

In the second half of his career Blake had largely dropped his preoccupation with the Old Testament God and in favor of the New Testament God. His first large prophetic poem, Milton begins with a famous poem called Jerusalem that later became the theme song of the British Labor party; they used to sing it as a hymn.

(Blake was not the first person to see the presence of
Jesus in ancient England. Tradition tells us that he was
there in the first century.)

For twenty years Blake had suffered from a failure of his Visions from Heaven. But in 1800, at the age of 43 they returned. 'Purity of Heart is to will one thing', but under the influence of the Main Chance (the need to find a respectable place in the world, to better himself financially, to eat meat instead of beans) he had become double-minded. Divided from his true calling, he had failed financially as well as spiritually.

Then he was "Surprised by Joy" and rescued from the Main Chance (a story that has been amply if not exhaustively treated in this blog). The Visions returned and he happily 'lived in Heaven', to use his wife's plaintive term for it.

Then, with increasing age and deteriorating health, he was 'surprised by joy' again; he found everything that he had lost in the past: friends, and an income that allowed him to 'put bread on the table'.

Perhaps every person with some age has glowing memories of some event in their past: perhaps just a day, perhaps a month or a year. That's what Shoreham meant to Samuel Palmer and the other Ancients, and to Blake at the end of his life.

London was a vast polluted mire of men: the miry clay indeed (Psalm 42), of which the country side was a refuge. All Londoners were aware of this, particularly the young men who made up the Ancients. Thomas Palmer's father was a conforming Christian, a Baptist. Perhaps about 1820 he was called as a lay preacher to a chapel in the environs of the village of Shoreham. The upshot was that he moved his family there.

Meanwhile George Cumberland, a long time friend of Blake brought John Linnell, an affluent painter, to see him. Linnell fell in love with Blake and with what he represented. He supported the old man for the rest of his life. He also brought many of his friends to see Blake and his lovely pictures. They adopted Blake, much like the sixties flower children had adopted him.

For the flower children it may have been mostly about sex, but Linnell's friends liked Blake in more general and thorough ways. Particularly they loved his religion, his spirit, his values. Youthful individualists, they were religious boys, living a life of joy and piety.

These were young man who had become a loose-knit community which they called The Shoreham Ancients. They frequently visited Blake and brought him to Shoreham where he found himself a very honored guest. All this made Blake's last days a fulfillment of extravagant degree. In 1828 he died heartily mourned by his young friends. Everyone knew it was but a temporary separation.


*********************************************

Today let's look especially at the two major prophecies (poems): Milton and Jerusalem.

Milton
Here are the Plates, 1 by 1
go to a terminal
[Do evince
open
~/Downloads/1802rosen1811.pdf
or
~/Documents/1802rosen1811.pdf ]

---------------------------------
There are two discussions of Milton here:
1. The synopsis found in wiki
2.. A section in my Blake Primer

This synopsis of Milton comes from a wiki:

Milton a Poem is an epic poem by William Blake, written and illustrated between 1804 and 1810. Its hero is John Milton, who returns from heaven and unites with Blake to explore the relationship between living writers and their predecessors, and to undergo a mystical journey to correct his own spiritual errors.

The poem is divided into two "books".

Book I opens with an epic invocation to the muses, drawing on the classical models of Homer and Virgil, and also used by John Milton in Paradise Lost. However, Blake describes inspiration in bodily terms, vitalising the nerves of his arm. Blake goes on to describe the activities of Los, one of his mythological characters, who creates a complex universe from within which other Blakean characters debate the actions of Satan.

Referring to the doctrines of Calvinism, Blake asserts that humanity is divided into the "Elect", the "Reprobate" and the "Redeemed". Inverting Calvinist values, Blake insists that the "Reprobate" are the true believers, while the "Elect" are locked in narcissistic moralism. At this point Milton appears and agrees to return to earth to purge the errors of his own Puritanism and go to "Eternal death".

Milton travels to Lambeth, taking in the form of a falling comet, and enters Blake's foot. This allows Blake to treat the ordinary world as perceived by the five senses as a sandal formed of "precious stones and gold" that he can now wear. Blake ties the sandal and, guided by Los, walks with it into the City of Art, inspired by the spirit of poetic creativity.

Book II finds Blake in the garden of his cottage in Felpham. Ololon, a female figure linked to Milton, descends to meet him. Blake sees a skylark, which mutates into a twelve year old girl, who he thinks is one of his own muses. He invites her into his cottage to meet his wife. The girl states that she is actually looking for Milton. Milton then descends to meet with her, and in an apocalyptic scene he is eventually unified with the girl, who is identified as Ololon and becomes his own feminine aspect.

The poem concludes with a vision of a final union of living and dead; internal and external reality; male and female and a transformation of all of human perception.

-------------------------------------------------------------------

2.

The Mature Works


'Milton', Blake's first overtly Christian work, is his testimony of faith. It's also his way of rehabilitating his childhood hero, John Milton. Finally it's a difficult poem; it contains unfathomable depths. This review can do no more than introduce the reader to the poem and call attention to some of the new elements in the mature development of Blake's myth.

'Milton' is a very autobiographical work. Blake used many of the characters that his readers might be familiar with from earlier works, but in this very personal poem they often assume other (although related) identities. Particularly we understand that Blake was Los; Hayley was Satan (he had suborned Blake from his true work to hack work: from Eternity to Ulro.)
John Milton, the author of 'Paradise Lost', had been a major force in Blake's life; he had been many things to Blake through the years. In Blake's day Milton enjoyed enormous spiritual stature among the English people. Even today the general understanding of Heaven, Hell, God and Satan (among people interested in those concepts) tends to be more often Miltonic than Biblical. In the first half of his life Blake was very much under the shadow of Milton, the great epic poet of the English people. All subsequent English poets lived and wrote in Milton's shadow, and the greatest ones aspired to achieve an epic comparable to 'Paradise Lost'.
Although Blake had much in common with the puritan poet, he disagreed with Milton about a number of things. For example, as a young man he despised the God of 'Paradise Lost' and admired Milton's Devil. Blake made that clear in 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell' and tried to put Milton in his place by saying that he was of the Devil's party without knowing it. Ten years later the experience of grace empowered Blake to deal with Milton in a better way. He called him back to earth to straighten out his theology, and he identified with him and his spiritual power in a radical way. He recreated Milton as Milton had recreated the Bible.
As Blake's poem begins, Milton has been in Heaven for a hundred years, obedient although not very happy there. The 'Bard's Song' (which takes up the first third of the poem) recreates the war in Heaven of 'Paradise Lost'. The other Eternals find the Bard's song appalling, but Milton embraces the Bard and his song. In a thrilling imaginative triumph he announces his intention of leaving Heaven to complete the work on earth that he had left undone. Although Blake doesn't say this, any Christian should recognize that Milton thus follows in the footsteps of Christ as described in the famous Kenosis passage in Philippians 2:
Anyone familiar with the gospel story will see biblical allusions and references here.

In Blake's cottage he sees Milton's shadow, a horrible vision:
An attempt to translate this visionary poetry into "common sense" might suggest that in Milton's shadow Blake suddenly became immediately aware of all the fallen nature of the world (and his own mind) that had consumed most of his poetry to that point. Now he became aware of all these things, but in the light of a person now full of light.

Back on earth Milton encounters many of the characters whom we met in 'The Four Zoas'. Tirzah and Rahab tempt him; his contest with Urizen has special interest as a record of the resolution of Blake's life long struggle with the things that Urizen represented to him:
A Bible dictionary, or even better, Damon's Blake Dictionary, will help to clarify the associations with biblical locations. Here we see the old Urizen still trying to freeze the poet's brain, but instead he finds himself being humanized by an emissary from Heaven. Blake is vividly depicting the battle between the forces of positivism and spirit.
Milton meets other obstacles and temptations on his journey, a journey that begins to bear increasing resemblance to that of Bunyan's Pilgrim or even of Jesus himself. He unites with Los and with Blake. He finally meets Satan, confronts him and overcomes him as Jesus had done. These dramatic events give Blake ample opportunity to describe in detail the eternal and satanic dimensions of life, the conflict betwen the two and the inevitable victory of the eternal. For the first and perhaps the only time Blake is writing a traditional morality story.
This material is autobiographical and written in the honeymoon phase of his new spiritual life. Blake's full meanings yield only to intensive study, but from the beginning there are thrilling lines to delight and inspire the reader. In his esoteric language Blake describes for us what has happened to him, and nothing could be more engrossing for the reader interested in the life of the spirit and in Blake. The relationship of this story to the myth described above should be obvious. But 'Milton' is more real than the previous material because Blake has lived it and writes (and sketches) with spiritual senses enlarged and tuned by his recent experience of grace.
A digression occurs in the second half of Book One of 'Milton', a detailed description of the "World of Los"; it contains much of Blake's most delightful poetry. The reader will remember that in 4Z Los had passed through several stages of development. Beginning as the primitive prophetic boy, he became first disciple and later adversary of Urizen. He bound Urizen into fallen forms of life, then "became what he beheld". But in Night vii we recall that he embraced his Spectre, actually the Urizen within, and thereupon became the hero of the epic.

*******************************************
Aphorisms
Ellie suggested that I list some favorite aphorisms:
Before 1980 you might expect from me, in response to almost
anything, a verse of scripture. After 1983 it became a verse from Blake.

Some of them are listed here in bold, and the description perhaps seves to explicate what I take to be the meaning (you may very legitimately find other meanings).

Here are some most commonly quoted:
"
I give you the end of a Golden String Only wind it into a ball: It will let you in at Heaven's Gate Built in Jerusalem's wall."

What is the Golden String? how about the Christ
Consciousness? That's something you must work at
assiduously; it involves continuously annihilating your
internal spectre. 'Winding the ball' is a lifelong project,
but the end of it is Heaven's Gate.

"
My Spectre around me night and day Like a wild beast upon my way"
The devil in you never sleeps.
Give him a chance and he will rend your psyche
limb from limb.

But when your 'string' is fully wound you may meet this:

"Then shall we return & see
The worlds of happy Eternity
& Throughout all Eternity
I forgive you you forgive me
As our dear Redeemer said
This the Wine & this the Bread"

That's the shape of the Eternity that Blake
was always talking about. I call it UPSTAIRS.

Jesus was about
Forgiveness of Sin.
He forgives and forgives and forgives.
But to enjoy his benefit we have to forgive
like [Blake] forgave his Spectre in the poem.

"Both read the Bible day & night But thou readst black where I read white"
(The Everlasting Gospel; E517ff)

Way back some centuries ago the concept of 'The
Everlasting Gospel became current, generally
understood in this way:
The Trinity denotes epochs in three stages of
God's Revelation:
The Father is found in the Old Testament.
The Son is found in the New Testament.
The Holy Spirit includes all subsequent revelations,
including my vision and yours.

The poetry of Blake emphatically occurs in the
third period.

In 1810-12 Blake labored with The Everlasting Gospel:
Here are some Extracts:
"The Vision of Christ that thou dost see
Is my Visions Greatest Enemy
Thine has a great hook nose like thine
Mine has a snub nose like to mine
Thine is the Friend of All Mankind
Mine speaks in parables to the Blind
Thine loves the same world that mine hates
Thy Heaven doors are my Hell Gates
.........
Both read the Bible day & night
But thou readst black where I read white"
(Erdman 517ff)

In Plate 98 of Jerusalem Blake wrote:
"The Druid Spectre was Annihilate loud thundring
rejoicing
Fourfold Annihilation & at the clangor of the Arrows of
Intellect
The innumerable Chariots of the Almighty appeard in
Heaven
And Bacon & Newton & Locke, & Milton & Shakspear &
Chaucer
A Sun of blood red wrath surrounding heaven on all sides
around
Glorious incompreh[en]sible by Mortal Man"

So at the end Blake forgave his mortal enemies; here the term
Bacon and Newton and Locke is a metaphor for all Blake's
enemies. He has complied with the commandment:
"Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who
trespass against us."

"
Know that after Christ's death he became Jehovah".
(MHH plate 6 ; E35)

What in the world does that mean?
In his natural life Jesus put forth the Father;
the epitome may well be the story of the Prodigal Son.
But after he died he became Jehovah?
Link
He had told us to look to the Father, but after he died
orthodox Christian's looked to Jesus; he took the place of God.
They pray to him, not to the Father!
That's why Blake said that "
after he died he became Jehovah", speaking with heavy irony.

"
Satan is the State of Death, & not a Human existence:"
(Jerusalem , Plate 49; E 198)
(This one from Ellie)

"
I must create a system or be enslav'd by another Mans"
We must create our own belief structure and values or else
depend upon someone elses.
We will be conventional, dependent people or
Individualists.

"Without contraries is no progression
Attraction and Repulsion, Reason and Energy,
Love and Hate, are necessary to human existence.
From these contraries spring what the religious
call Good and Evil."

*********************************************

There's one additional source I want to tell
you about: the Library of Congress Rosenwald
Collection
. (http://www.loc.gov/rr/rarebook/rosenwald-blake.html)

[Jerusalem
To see all the Plates we may do this:
Invoke evince
ask for ~/Documents/2003rosen1811.pdf]

Here are some very important ones:

This is the full paged picture that introduces Jerusalem.


Plate that introduced Chapter One of
Jerusalem, entitled To the Public. Plate 2, To the Public





















Chapter Two (Plate 26), To the Jews:
The bright figure on the left is Hand, who represents all the Sons of Albion, who opposed Liberty.
To the right is a poor god-forsaken Jerusalem.



Plate 51,(Chapter Three) To the Deists
On the left is Vala,Symbol of Radical Materialism.

The center figure represents Hyle, a symbol of pure rationalism.

To the right is Scofield, the drunk soldier who accused Blake in his own garden of cursing King George.

Plate 76 , To the Christians

This has contrary meanings:
1. Adherence to conventional religion centered on Jesus as God. Someone asked Blake is Jesus was the Son of God. He answered, "yes, he was; and so am I, and so are you."

2. The Jesus who reunites us all in a Community of Love.








Plate 100 is the curtain call of this intense drama. Blake used to visit London theaters with his young friends, the Shoreham Ancients.


That's all folks

Friday, July 15, 2011

Jerusalem Plates


Plate 1






















Plate 6
























Plate 13





















Plate 14





















Plate 28

















Plate 37





















Plate






















Plate 54





















Plate 57





















Plate 59





















Plate 92






















Plate 100 (a Curtain Call)

Monday, July 11, 2011

Week II



Last week someone asked if Blake had drawn himself. This is the only thing I've been able to find. It's in his Notebook, now in the British Library.


Bio:
We have a choice between a simple biography and a more complex one:
Simple
and this one:

"The Immortal Man that cannot did,
Thro' evening shades I haste away
to close the labours of my day."
(Gates of Paradise)

Begin with a childhood innocence recapitulating the dawn of the race, the primeval Garden of Paradise. Every loved child has this experience. In Blake's life it was protracted by a strange set of circumstances pointing to a peculiar, almost unique quality of love. We socialize children through the painful laying down of the law, but Blake's parents seem to have reared him with an absolute minimum of fear, a minimum of law, of prohibitions. The young Blake was considerate, aware of the needs of others, but not coerced. We know little about his childhood, but the shape of his mind points compellingly to these circumstances. Throughout his childhood and adolescence his psyche was largely protected from the destructive influences of the world, although he was very much a part of it.

The inevitable fall, when it did occur, proved all the more traumatic. A youth with his head full of heaven came up against the sudden realization that earthly life is directed, ruled, and regulated by those at the other end of the cosmos. The rulers of this world are by and large the most devoted and loyal servants of the God of this World. The young, idealistic, sensitive poet and artist experienced this sinking realization suddenly and acutely. Thereafter the most gruesome visions of fallenness filled the pages of his creations. (The same could be said of Isaiah or Jeremiah.) Taking their cue from Blake's popular 'Songs' the critics have called this stage 'experience', but a more illuminating and descriptive term is 'fallenness'.

The third stage embodies struggle. He who lives in the fallen world without becoming a worldling learns to fight back in some way. He develops defense mechanisms; he learns to preserve his individuality short of martyrdom. To some extent he defies the God of this World, and he pays a price for that defiance. Then they read The Marriage of Heaven and Hell people called Blake a Satanist, but that evaluation reflects a shallow grasp of his true moral stance. With MHH Blake discovered new powers of expression which he used to fight the true satanic kingdom, the fallen order of society that surrounded him (and us!).

For the fortunate few there comes a moment when grace reaches consciousness and glorifies the struggle. It's the moment when Blake realized that truth is on the side of the angels, and he was one of them. He mets a God to whom he could give his allegiance. Once he was on the losing side with his defense mechanisms and his defiance; suddenly he realized that the universe is basically okay, and he was in tune with it. Happy the person who makes that glad discovery. It came to Blake at 43 with a fundamental alteration of consciousness.

As a new man Blake became a prophet. He had always possessed the most intense faith in his Vision; now he gained the ability to make it Good News, at least to himself and to a few devoted artists, themselves relatively unaffected by the downward drag. They caught the gleam in his eye and the lilt in his voice as he sang his songs. What more could a man hope for than a small group, perhaps twelve or so, tuned and attentive to the truth which he embodies with his life? That was the Saviour's lot, too.

O why was I born with a different face?
(from the poem, Mary, in The Pickering Manuscript] Erdman p. 487)

Blake was different from earliest times, and he knew it well. Partly it was innate: his sheer intellectual quotient had to be awesome. The concept of a spiritual quotient (in a child!) is problematic, but in this case it should be looked at. A unique upbringing removed him further from his contemporaries. And finally he inhabited a social environment very different from anything we know today.

______________________________________________________________

How Did He Get That Way

FIRST of all he came into the world with a tremendous endowment; some people are simply born with unusual gifts.

SECOND: Leaving school on the first day his mind was never subjected to the indoctrination most of us got from our teachers. "The primary object of primary education is to socialize the pupil to the conventions of the culture we belong to." That never happened to Blake.

THIRD read! and read! and read! He read the things that had fallen out of the national consciousness-- dominated by an extremely materialistic culture: the Bible, Behmen (Boehme) and hundreds of others, each in his own way representing the Perennial Philosophy. And he saw the Great Painters, not those favored by the Establishment.

FOURTH The population didn't read anything beyond the fourth grade level. When Tom Paine asked Blake if people read him, he replied, "before the people can read it, they have to be able to read" (very much like today!). So there was a chasm between his mind and theirs (and ours).

The aforementioned video shows Tom Paine represented as the soul of rationality and Bill Blake the feeling, and above all the imagination. So Blake's relationships were with God: Meister Eckhart, Mohammed, Isaiah, Ezekiel, Boehme, Jesus, other men who had had similar visions. He honored God with the "severe contentions of friendship & the burning fire of thought." (Jerusalem 91:17; E251)

As a believer Blake came up the hard way: Molech, Elohim, Nobodaddy, Urizen, and finally the Dear Saviour. How many of us good people can say we came to our faith like that? Thank God we have the benefit of Blake's experience.

______________________________________________________________

Blake and his wife, Catherine, had lived in extreme poverty until 1818. A friend named Thomas Butts had kept them alive with modest sums from 1800-20). Then John Linnell, an affluent painter, came to see Blake and was delighted with him. Over the next decade he commissioned Blake to produce works; he gave him 200 lbs or so to make copies of Illustrations to the Book of Job, and for Illustrations To Dante's Inferno. This emphatically alleviated the poverty of the Blake family. "beginning in August 1818 [Linnell] began to pay [Blake] regular sums of money--it was an arrangement that with a few gaps, was to last for the rest of Blake's life (Peter Ackroyd, page 328).

But more important than the money, at least to Blake were the numbers of young painters he brought to Blake's home. They made up the Shoreham Ancients, and they treated Blake like an equal (although he was 35 years older than Linnell). They adopted him into their family. Why? because the values he beclaimed were also theirs.

______________________________________________________________

The ones who love Blake are those of us who share his values. Here's a hurried description of his values:

Blake's Values:
Although Blake's poetry is most often opaque and mystifying, to share the following values gives one a leg up on understanding.

Non material: no, anti materialistic: 'when you die, you die.' Blake would have laughed at that materialistic viewpoint: there are several kinds of death, and life, we die to live ((except a gain of seed fall into the ground (and die as a seed) it yields nothing.))

Anti-clerical: The Established Church in Blake's day was shot through with corruption. To go to the Established Church was to stamp your approval on social preference.
But Blake saw much to disapprove in the Dissenters churches as well. He saw that any church is an institution, with all the flaws of any institution: favoritism, privilege, 'politics', everything but brotherhood.

Anti-war: No peacenik of our generation has anything over Blake. He associated war with the State, the ultimate constriction of human freedom.

Political: a rabid democrat. He gloried in the American Revolution and felt the same toward the French Revolution until the guillotine came to the fore.

The bounding line:
"The great and golden rule of art, as well as of life, is this: That the more distinct, sharp, [P 64] and wirey the bounding line, the more perfect the work of art; and the less keen and sharp, the greater is the evidence of weak imitation, plagiarism, and bungling. Great inventors, in all ages, knew this: Protogenes and Apelles, [two ancient Greek painters] knew each other by this line. Rafael and Michael Angelo, and Albert Durer, are known by this and this alone. The want of this determinate and bounding form evidences the want of idea in the artist's mind, and the pretence of the plagiary in all its branches." (Descriptive Catalogue, E 550)"

Sources: Blake was an omnivores
reader: the Bible was his primary source, but he read everything, a great many things that ordinary people were (and are) completely ignorant of. In his day Middle Ages literature was not worth their time (equally true today). In a letter to his friend Flaxman he wrote:

"
Now my lot in the Heavens is this; Milton lovd me in childhood and shewd me his face
Ezra came with Isaiah the Prophet, but Shakespeare in riper years gave me his hand
Paracelsus & Behmen appeard to me."

To really understand Blake we need to learn his symbols and metaphors: one by one; what he called the minute particulars. He wrote a longuage that few of us have much understanding of, but the challenge and the beauty is to find someone whose values I so much admire.

July 12

Has anybody used the resources you got last week?
There was a request for interpretation last week, but
I need a specific one. Send email
(lclay34@gmail.com ) or slo mail (1906 SE 8th St.) or
phone (369-6032)

I was hoping to get email-- with a question or a
comment or request.

I have plenty of time, nothing better to do than talk
with you about Blake.

If you have the net, you may read all this stuff at your
leisure by directing your browser to
http://lessons-blake.blogspot.com/2011/07/july-12.html or maybe
http://studyblake.blogspot.com/2011/07/lesson-b2.html

Words:
Many people have the naive idea that a word has one
and only one meaning. True in Science, but not in
poetry. Words are metaphors or symbols that mean
different things according to the context.

For Blake everything had its contrary:

"Without Contraries is no progression, Attraction and Repulsion
Reason and Energy, Love and Hate are necessary to Human existence
From these contraries spring what the religious call Good and Evil.
Good is the passive that obeys Reason.
Evil is the active springing from Energy.
Good is Heaven. Evil is Hell."
(From Marriage of Heaven and Hell; plate 3; E34)

The picture is Plate 4.)



Bear in mind that this is ironic, a parody,
not Blake's considered adult opinion, but the posturing of the 'angry young man'.

If you really want to understand Blake, you have to learn his language. That involves learning his metaphors and
symbols, one by one, or as he put it, dealing with the mnute particulars.

Take the word love for example:

1. It may mean sex

2. it may mean godly love.

Blake used the word love in a very special sense
This poem at Erdman 475-6 (one of my very favorites)
illustrates Blake's strange use of love, as well as
several other words that need Blakean definition;
The Spectre we've already talked about, identified
with the Selfhood and Satan. Blake talks with it in
this conversation; (we may talk at some other time about
the emanation (far within).

Blake's 'sweet loves' here are the Visions that meant so
much to him. But under the influence of the Selfhood he
lost the faculty of Vision.

("Suddenly, on the day after visiting the Truchsessian Gallery
of
pictures, I was again enlightened with the light I enjoyed in
my
youth, and which has for exactly twenty years been closed
from
me as by a door and by window-shutters."
(Letter to William Hayley, 23 October 1804)

"My Spectre around me night & day
Like a Wild beast guards my way
My Emanation far within
Weeps incessantly for my Sin

.............
Seven of my sweet loves thy knife
Has bereaved of their life
Their marble tombs I built with tears
And with cold & shuddering fears

Seven more loves weep night & day
Round the tombs where my loves lay
And seven more loves attend each night
Around my couch with torches bright

And seven more Loves in my bed
Crown with wine my mournful head
Pitying & forgiving all
Thy transgressions great & small

(Look at Daniel 4:33 "That very hour was fulfilled concerning Nebuchadnezzar; he was driven from men and ate grass like oxen; his body was wet with the dew of heaven till his hair had grown like eagles’ feathers and his nails like birds’ claws.")

This is what happened to Blake when he fell under the
influence of his Spectre, and what happens to me, and
to you?)

"When wilt thou return & view
My loves & them to life renew
When wilt thou return & live
When wilt thou pity as I forgive"

[Now he talks about Female Love; (in a word female love was
self-love) it would

take an hour to explain what he meant by
that; he's telling the spectre that until they
give it up, his Visions will never return.)]

".........
Till I turn from Female Love
And root up the Infernal Grove
I shall never worthy be
To Step into Eternity"

(The Infernal Grove is something that
books have been written about. This vale of tears?)

..............
Let us agree to give up Love
And root up the infernal grove
Then shall we return & see
The worlds of happy Eternity

& Throughout all Eternity
I forgive you you forgive me
As our dear Redeemer said
This the Wine & this the Bread"



The last two verses have turned to the
happier mode. He equated Eternity with
forgiving.

Blake's image of Milton and Urizen from Plate 45 of Milton is a powerful statement of forgiveness: between a man and his own spectre.






In the picture above we have an inner God; here we have forgiveness of the 'God Without'. Once again:

"Then shall we return & see

The worlds of happy Eternity

& Throughout all Eternity
I forgive you you forgive me
As our dear Redeemer said
This the Wine & this the Bread"

There are three kinds of forgiveness:
of yourself,
of another,
of God.

Erich Fromm: The Art of Loving:
you cannot love any one of those three
without loving all of them

Love is about forgiveness; Blake repeated that often.
-----------------------------------------------------------

To go back to love Blake wrote many
beautiful poems on the subject:

The Clod and the Pebble
"Love seeketh not itself to please,
Nor for itself hath any care,
But for another gives its ease,
And builds a heaven in hell's despair.
So sung a little Clod of Clay,
Trodden with the cattle's feet,
But a Pebble of the brook
Warbled out these metres meet:

"Love seeketh only Self to please,
To bind another to its delight,
Joys in another's loss of ease,
And builds a hell in heaven's despite."

Now this one gives the most exalted Vision
of Love:
SONGS 18 (of Songs of Innocence)
The Divine Image.

To Mercy Pity Peace and Love,
all pray in their distress
And to these virtues of delight
Return their thankfulness.

For Mercy Pity Peace and Love
Is God our father dear
And Mercy Pity Peace and Love
Is Man his child and care

For Mercy has a human heart
Pity, a human face
and Love, the human form divine
And Peace, the human dress.

Then every man of every clime,

That prays in his distress,
Prays to the human form divine
Love Mercy Pity Peace.

And all must love the human form,
In heathen, turk or jew.
Where Mercy, Love & Pity dwell,
There God is dwelling too

When you read this poem, you must realize that Blake
was a Universalist; he denied the exclusivity of
Christianity, as what narrow minded religionists refer to
as 'There's only One Way'.

**********************************************************
The one thing that leads people to love or despise Blake is the
values he espoused:


Values determine what we think of Blake,
whether we love him or hate him:

Although Blake's poetry is most often opaque and mystifying, to share the following values gives one a leg up on understanding.

Non material: no! anti materialistic: 'when you die, you die.' Blake would have laughed at that materialistic viewpoint: there are several kinds of death, and life, we die to live ((except a gain of seed fall into the ground (and die as a seed) it yields nothing.))

Anti-clerical: The Established Church in Blake's day was shot through with corruption. To go to the Established Church was to stamp your approval on social preferences.
But Blake saw much to disapprove in the Dissenters churches also. He saw that any church is an institution, with all the flaws of any institution: favoritism, privilege, 'politics', everything but brotherhood.

Anti-war: No peacenik of our generation has anything over Blake. He associated war with the State, the ultimate constriction of human freedom.

Political: a rabid liberal. He gloried in the American Revolution and felt the same toward the French Revolution until the guillotine came to the fore.
He opposed emphatically class economic privilege.

I'd be glad to discuss these four values, or any others you may see in Blake.

********************************************************

Bio, the Early Years
:

London was a rapidly growing metropolis filling with poor
farmers who had been dispossessed of their farms by the
inclosure movement, which encouraged the large land owners
to seize their land. The poor farmers (or tenants) had little left
except large families and hunger.

Blake's family had been in London longer; they were respectable
tradespeople; you might call them lower middle class. Blake's
parents were dissenters; they had left the established church
for one of the many sects that had arisen in the 17th and 18th
Centuries. Blake was a dissenter from birth.

At four the child ran out of his bedroom claiming that an ugly
God had look in his window; he mother consoled him. A few years
later he claimed that he had seen a tree filled with angels.

At six he was placed in school. The first day he saw the
schoolmaster flogging a pupil; young Blake immediately rose and
exited; the was the end of his academic career; thereafter his
education came largely from his own reading. He was called an
autodidact. Unlike most of us Blake was an individualist!

At ten Blake's father put him in a drawing school, during which
he showed a gift for visual arts, and at 14 his father proposed to
apprentice him to an engraver. After meeting the man chosen the
young Blake declined; he told his father that he felt the man would
be hanged. Sure enough he was hanged a few years later for forgery.

All of these events meant that the child had an unusual psyche.
His mother was very dear, and his father dealt with him permissively
and with real intelligence.

The next choice for an apprenticeship was satisfactory; his employer showed an awareness of Blake's gifts, and showed him how to use them. After his apprenticeship he enrolled in the Royal Academy, but he had problems with Sir Joshua Reynolds, the leader of the school.

An early engraving was of Joseph of Arimathea among the Rocks of Albion.

According to British legend this man had lots of tin mines in Cornwall. The legend led Blake to say this in the Preface to Milton (Erdman page 95)

"And did those feet in ancient time,
Walk upon Englands mountains green:
And was the holy Lamb of God,
On Englands pleasant pastures seen!
And did the Countenance Divine,
Shine forth upon our clouded hills?
And was Jerusalem builded here,

Among these dark Satanic Mills?
Bring me my Bow of burning gold:
Bring me my Arrows of desire:
Bring me my Spear: O clouds unfold!
Bring me my Chariot of fire!

I will not cease from Mental Fight,
Nor shall my Sword sleep in my hand:
Till we have built Jerusalem,
In Englands green & pleasant Land."

Would to God that all the Lords people were Prophets." Numbers XI. ch 29 v.

A few years later he was invited to teach the children of the royal family. But that would have been a disaster; he was going through the years of protest (actually the years of protest lasted for his entire life).

At 19 the American Revolution broke out. Like many other Brits he sympathized with the colonies; he wrote a long poem called America justifying Washington and the others.

The French Revolution came along in the 1790s and once again he sympathized with the revolutionists, but when the guillotine became the primary activity in France, he withdrew his sympathy. Blake above all hated violence; he wrote many pages of poetry condemning the empirical wars of his country.

He was an 'angry young man'; that was reflected in his first large poem, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. It is shocking in the extreme, attracts some (especially young) readers and repels older conventional people. MHH will give you a significant introduction of a (relatively) young Blake.

His dissatisfaction with the conventional (Established) Church is expressed in these verses from Plate 11:

"a system was formed, which some took advantage of and enslav'd the vulgar by attempting to realize or abstract the mental deities from their objects; thus began Priesthood.

Choosing forms of worship from poetic tales.
And at length they pronounc'd that the Gods had order'd such things.
Thus men forgot that All deities reside in the human breast."

These verses show the slight regard in which he viewed priests and the doctrines they taught; they also show his emphasis on 'The God Within'.


*******************************'
Blake's Myth


Unable to believe the conventional established theology, Blake felt that he must deal with it:

"I must Create a System, or be enslav'd by another Mans
I will not Reason & Compare: my business is to Create."

He proceeded to create his own System. It was structured in the form of four zoas; each one had a name:

Tharmas: The body, sensation, water

Urizen the reasoning faculty. He fought his own Urizen for years (perhaps because he was so cerebral).

Luvah the feeling function. Blake leaned toward this one, but his identity was more like
Urthona, called Los in the world: call it imagination or intuition.

In Eternity the four zoas were parts of the Eternal Albion. In the world they broke up into warring factions.

The Four Zoas was to be the greatest unfinished poem in the Engliah Language. Actually it was a sort of notebook or maybe a rough draft for the two major works, called Milton and Jerusalem.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Lecture One: MYTH

The Myth
(Erdman 153 Jerusalem)

Look at MHH,: “PLATE 11 The ancient Poets animated all sensible objects with Gods or Geniuses calling them by the names and adorning them with the properties of woods, rivers, mountains, lakes, cities, nations, and whatever their enlarged & numerous senses could percieve. And particularly they studied the genius of each city & country. placing it under its mental deity. Till a system was formed, which some took advantage of & enslav'd the vulgar by attempting to realize or abstract the mental deities from their objects: thus began Priesthood. Choosing forms of worship from poetic tales. And at length they pronounced that the Gods had orderd such things. Thus men forgot that All deities reside in the human breast.”

We could discuss that at length, but look at a later one:
“I must create a system or be enslavd by another Mans I will not reason and compare, my business is to Create”(Jerusalem; E153)

In a manner of speaking Blake's Myth involved a re-creation of the Bible. Both works proceed as follows: A worldly creation, including making of Man A fall leading to expulsion from the Garden. In Blake's Version the dire consequences of eating of the fruit of the Tree of Good and Evil. Blake denied any reality to Good and Evil; instead he used the terms: Truth and Error. Men don't sin, he says. They make errors. Forgiveness, the most powerful word for Blake wipes out the error. In his Reflections of A Vision of the Last Judgment he made this statement:
“ What are all the Gifts of the Spirit but Mental Gifts whenever any Individual Rejects Error & embraces Truth a Last Judgment passes upon that Individual”, which of course in my book amounts to Universalism in the original sense of the word."

“Hell” is presented at great length in The Four Zoas and in Jerusalem. He called it Ulro. Starting with Eternity newborns inhabit Beulah (on dry land). However they more or less always find themselves in the Sea of Land and Sea. (ILLUSTRATE) (Picture is in the back of Blake and Antiquity.)

A better way is to speak of Albion (equivalent to Adam) Beulah is an earthly place where the eternals resort for R&R from the “severe contentions of Friendship, our Sexual cannot: but flies into the Ulro”.
“And War & Hunting: the Two Fountains of the River of Life"
Blake's myth is an alternative version of the Bible myth:

Creation: Albion, the Eternal Man, Adam lived in Eternity, but becoming tired of the fierce contentions of Friendship dropped down to Beulah. Unfortunately he fell asleep, divided into the four zoas:

Tharmas: our basic physicality.
Urizen: our reasoning faculty
Luvah: our feeling function
Urthona/Los: our imagination (intuition)

We all have those Jungian functions. One is called the dominant function; another is our inferior function.

The zoas got into all sorts of conflict with one another and with their Emanations (their female dimension). The emanations are wonderful until they fall into spidery dominating elements.

All of them have descended from Beulah to Ulro (Blake's name for Hell).
Here we languish until love and forgiveness heal us through generation, then regeneration, then redemption, then awaking in Eternity.

That's Blake's myth in a nutshell. We might devote an hour to it some time in the next month.


Saturday, July 2, 2011

Blake's Myth

Blake's Myth

Unable to believe the conventional established theology, Blake felt that he must deal with it this:

"I must Create a System, or be enslav'd by another Mans
I will not Reason & Compare: my business is to Create."
(

He proceeded to create his own System. It was structured in the form of four zoas; each one had a name:

Tharmas: The body, sensation, water

Urizen the reasoning faculty. He fought Urizen for years (perhaps because he was so cerebral).

Luvah the feeling function. Blake leaned toward this one.
was said to be
Urthona: call it imagination or intuition.

The Four Zoas was to be the greatest unfished poem in the Engliah Language. Actually it was a sort of notebook or maybe a rough draft for the two major works, called Milton and Jerusalem.


Friday, July 1, 2011

Bio I

London was a rapidly growing metropolis filling with poor farmers who had been dispossessed of their farms by the inclosure movement, which encouraged the large land owners to seize their land. The poor farmers (or tenants) had little left except large families and hunger.

Blake's family had been there longer; they were respectable tradespeople; you might call them lower middle class. Blake's parents were dissenters; they had left the established church for one of the many sects that had arisen in the 17th and 18th Centuries. Blake was a dissenter from birth.

At four the child ran out of his bedroom claiming that an ugly God had look in his window; he mother consoled him. A few years later he claimed that he had seen a tree filled with angels.

At six he was placed in school. The first day he saw the schoolmaster flogging a pupil; young Blake immediately rose and exited; the was the end of his academic career; thereafter his education came largely from his own reading. He was called an autodidact.

At ten Blake's father put him in a drawing school, during which he showed
a gift for visual arts, and at 14 his father proposed to apprentice him as an engraver. After meeting the man chosen he declined; he told his father that he felt the man would be hanged. Sure enough he was hanged a few years later for forgery.

All of these events that the child had an unusual psyche. His mother was very dear, and his father dealt with him permissively and with real intelligence.

The next choice for an apprenticeship was satisfactory; his employer showed an unwareness of Blake's, and some years later he was invited to teach the children of the royal family. But that would have been a disaster; he was going through the years of protest (actually the years of protest lasted for his entire life).

At 19 the American Revolution broke. Like many other Brits he sympathized with the colonies; he wrote a long poem called America justifying Washington and the others.

The French Revolution came along in the 1790s and once again he sympathized with the revolutionists, but when the guillotine became the primary activity in France, he withdrew his sympathy. Blake above all hated violence and wrote many pages of poetry condemning the empirical wars of his country.

He was an 'angry young man'; that was reflected in his first large poem may have been The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. It is shocking in the extreme, attracts some (especially young) readers and repels older conventional people. MHH will give you a significant introduction of a (relatively) young Blake.

His dissatisfaction with the conventional (Established) Church is expressed in these verses from Plate 11:

"a system was formed, which some took advantage of and enslav'd the vulgar by attempting to realize or abstract the mental deities from their objects; thus began Priesthood.

Choosing forms of worship from poetic tales.
And at length they pronounc'd that the Gods had order'd such things.
Thus men forgot that All deities reside in the human breast."

These verses show the slight regard in which he viewed priests and the doctrines they taught; they also show his emphasis on 'The God Within'.

The one thing that leads people to love or despise Blake is the values he espoused. Among them are

Blake's Values

Although Blake's poetry is most often opaque and mystifying, to share the following values gives one a leg up on understanding.

Non material: no! anti materialistic: 'when you die, you die.' Blake would have laughed at that materialistic viewpoint: there are several kinds of death, and life, we die to live ((except a gain of seed fall into the ground (and die as a seed) it yields nothing.))

Anti-clerical: The Established Church in Blake's day was shot through with corruption. To go to the Established Church was to stamp your approval on social preferences.
But Blake saw much to disapprove in the Dissenters churches also. He saw that any church is an institution, with all the flaws of any institution: favoritism, privilege, 'politics', everything but brotherhood.

Anti-war: No peacenik of our generation has anything over Blake. He associated war with the State, the ultimate constriction of human freedom.

Political: a rabid democrat. He gloried in the American Revolution and felt the same toward the French Revolution until the guillotine came to the fore.
He opposed emphatically class economic preferences.
Look at this poem (The Little Black Boy):
"My mother bore me in the southern wild,
And I am black, but oh! my soul is white.
White as an angel is the English child,
But I am black as if bereaved of light.

My mother taught me underneath a tree,
And, sitting down before the heat of day,
She took me on her lap and kissed me,
And pointing to the east began to say:

"Look on the rising sun, -there God does live
And gives his light, and gives his heat away;
And flowers and trees and beasts and men receive
Comfort in morning, joy in the noonday.

And we are put on earth a little space
That we may learn to bear the beams of love;
And these black bodies and this sunburnt face
Is but a cloud, and like a shady grove.

For when our souls have learned the heat to bear
The cloud will vanish, we shall hear his voice
Saying: `Come out from the grove, my love and care,
And round my golden tent like lambs rejoice!' "

Thus did my mother say, and kissed me;
And thus I say to little English boy:
When I from black and he from white cloud free,
And round the tent of God like lambs we joy,

I'll shade him from the heat till he can bear
To lean in joy upon our father's knee;
And then I'll stand and stroke his silver hair,
And be like him, and he will then love me."


*******************************'
Blake's Myth

Unable to believe the conventional established theology, Blake felt that he must deal with it this statement:

"I must Create a System, or be enslav'd by another Mans
I will not Reason & Compare: my business is to Create."

He proceeded to create his own System. It was structured in the form of four zoas; each one had a name:

Tharmas: The body, sensation, water

Urizen the reasoning faculty. He fought Urizen for years (perhaps because he was so cerebral).

Luvah the feeling function. Blake leaned toward this one.
was said to be
Urthona: call it imagination or intuition.

The Four Zoas was to be the greatest unfished poem in the Engliah Language. Actually it was a sort of notebook or maybe a rough draft for the two major works, called Milton and Jerusalem.