20 July 2012

William Blake: The Modern Mystic


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/00/William_Blake_by_Thomas_Phillips.jpg/220px-William_Blake_by_Thomas_Phillips.jpg
Introduction
I quickly became intrigued by William Blake when reading about his unique religious views.  I was fascinated by his accounts of seeing visions.  As a young boy, he saw a God put his head to the window.  Furthermore, he also saw "a tree filled with angels, bright angelic wings bespangling every bough like stars" (Livergood).  He continued to experience visions throughout his life, which undoubtedly inspired and influenced his writing.
Not only was he a writer, but also an extraordinary artist.  He would illustrate his works with beautiful paintings and relief etchings.  The process of relief etching was a very meticulous one – consisting of time-consuming steps and careful workmanship.  I think this added so much to his work; making it even more a part of him.  His wife would assist him in the procedure of relief etching and painting in the colors.  This personal touch to his work adds a significant dynamic to his poems and writings.
Knowing about the life of William Blake before reading his poems definitely helped set the context for me.  Having some background information helped me to read his poems with an understanding of his spiritual interests.  I found his poems to be very insightful and with spiritual meanings as I read them.  They express his thoughts, beliefs, and hopes in a beautiful, artistic way.  He is able to contrast opposing aspects of life and nature.  He shows how they are connected and make the world what it is.  This is demonstrated by his collection of poems entitled Songs of Innocence and of Experience.  The poems are short and simple, yet packed with deep messages and wisdom.  These poems were often read to children, but the messages are intended for both young and old.  The poems are still enjoyed by people of all ages today.

Chronology
Data collected from BlakeArchive.org Chronology and HumanitiesWeb.org Chronology
1757                      Born in London, 28 November, to James Blake and Catherine Wright Armitage Blake.
1767                      Begins attending Henry Par's drawing school.
1768                      Begins writing Poetical Sketches.
1771                      Becomes an apprentice of James Basire, the engraver to the Society of Antiquaries and the Royal Society.
1779                      Apprenticeship with Basire ends and he enters the Royal Academy of Art's Schools of Design.
                              He becomes a journeyman copy engraver.
1780                      Blake may have participated in the Gordon Riots in London (June).
                              He was arrested on suspicion of spying during his sketching trip on the River Medway.
1782                      50 copies of Poetical Sketches are printed.
                              Blake becomes a freelance engraver.
                              Blake marries Catherine Boucher on 18 August.
1783                      Blake's father dies in July.
1784                      Blake and James Parker open a print shop together at 27 Broad Street.
                              He begins working on An Island in the Moon.
1787                      Blake’s brother, Robert, dies at 19.  Robert shows William a new method of engraving in a vision.  This is how Blake develops relief etching.
1788                      First illuminated works, All Religions Are One, and There Is No Natural Religion, are published.
1789                      Songs of Innocence is published.
                              Begins working on The Book of Thel.
                              Writes Tiriel.
1790                      Marriage of Heaven and Hell is published.
1791                      The French Revolution is published.
                              Blake's mother dies in September.
                              Blake illustrates Original Stories from Real Life by Wollstonecraft.
1793                      America: A Prophecy, Visions of the Daughters of Albion, and For Children: The Gates of Paradise are published.
                              Blake engraves Albion Rose.
1794                      Songs of Experience, The First Book of Urizen, and Europe: A Prophecy are published.
1795                      Book of Ahania, The Book of Los, and The Song of Los are published.
1796                      Begins working on The Four Zoas.
1800                      Moves to Felpham in Sussex to work for William Hayley.
1803                      Blake is charged with treason after a dispute with a soldier.  He is put on trial at Chichester and is acquitted.
1804                      Begins working on Milton: A Poem and Jerusalem.
1809                      His work is exhibited at the Royal Academy.
1810                      He begins to suffer bouts of depression until 1817.
1817                      Hesiod is published.
1820                      First copy of Jerusalem is printed.
                              For the Sexes: The Gates of Paradise is published.
1822                      The Ghost of Abel and On Homer’s Poetry On Virgil are published.
1826                      Job is published.
1827                      Blake dies on 12 August of complications from gallstones.

Biographical Impressions
            The life of William Blake was lived in ordinary circumstances.  He was born in London in 1757 to James and Catherine Blake.  They had seven children, but two of them passed away while infants.  Although he grew up in an ordinary neighborhood and settings, he lived a fascinating life (poets.org).
His spirituality added a unique dynamic to his life.  He was seen as an eccentric by those who knew him.  His spiritual beliefs, ideals, and experiences were radical – causing many people to believe him to be either insane or a genius.  From his early childhood, he saw visions and angels.  He had siblings who passed away as he grew up.  He felt their spirits’ presences throughout his life, especially the spirit of his brother Robert.  He was visited by Robert’s spirit and was shown the illustration technique of “relief etching” that he became known for (poetryfoundation.org).
He was very in tune with his spiritual nature, which I strongly believe influenced his writing and art.  Alexander Gilchrist wrote a biography on William Blake in 1863 and said that he “neither wrote nor drew for the many, hardly for work'y-day men at all, rather for children and angels; himself 'a divine child,' whose playthings were sun, moon, and stars, the heavens and the earth" (poetryfoundation.org). 
His parents recognized that William was a different child.  They educated him at home and he was strongly influenced by the Holy Bible (william-blake.org).  They supported his artistic interests and enrolled him in a drawing school at the age of 10.  He began writing poetry during his time at school.  He became an apprentice to an engraver when he was 14, which provided many inspirational experiences.  Some of these included sketching assignments of Gothic monuments and architecture, including Westminster Abbey.  These experiences would prove to be an inspiration to Blake throughout his life and works (poets.org).
Blake’s contemplative, spiritual nature enabled and inspired his writing and art.  Many of his works reflect his spirituality and beliefs.  His collection of poems called Songs of Innocence and of Experience convey deep meanings about life, nature, and that everything has its opposite.  He subtitled the work with the statement “shewing the two contrary states of the human soul.”  He illustrated the collection as well, adding visual appeal and meaning to his written works.  The Songs of Innocence and the Songs of Experience are to be read together, as they mirror one another.  They contrast each other by their different perspectives – the innocence poems being “happy songs” despite the injustice and suffering of the world.  The experience poems depict the world through veteran eyes, addressing this suffering, injustice, and evil of the world (Greenblatt, 81).  This collection, as well as his other works, are greatly influenced by his study of the Holy Bible along with his spiritual disposition.
“He produced his personal, spiritual work, and it was this part of Blake's work that inspired his development of illuminated printing and prophetic books, written ‘so that the spirits could see them.’ The poems in Blake's Prophetic Books were exciting texts of a mystical nature, and very few people could understand them” (skoletorget.no).  His poems and works communicate his spirituality and “his hope that man can overcome all limitations by means of the spirit within himself” (skoletorget.no).


Critical Interpretations
            Literary critic and poet, Keith Sagar, wrote an essay on Blake’s collection of Songs of Innocence and of Experience.  He begins his essay by bringing up the point of dualism.  He wrote that Blake, like most great poets, was “an enemy to dualism.”  Instead, he focused on the “contrary” and sought to unite them holistically.
“Dualistic thinking is so built into our ordinary language, and the language of philosophy and theology, that the words hardly exist to enable us to think non-dualistically, holistically, that is in terms of systems, patterns, relationships, correspondences. But poetry is such a non-dualistic language, which is why poetry is invariably metaphorical, and the poet is the connection-man and healer. The language and vision not just of Blake but of poetry itself insists that the contraries are equally important and inseparable. ‘Without contraries is no progression’, wrote Blake. He sought to transform the energies generated by conflict into creative energies, moving towards mutual acceptance, reconciliation, harmony, expressed in imagery of music and marriage” (Sagar).
            His essay continues to demonstrate this mutual acceptance or harmony by sharing excerpts from different poems from the collection.  He starts with Songs of Innocence, acknowledging their joyful, childlike feel, yet the shadows of experience still make their presence known.  He explains that Blake’s intention of Songs of Innocence and of Experience is not to invite us “to choose between them, that no such choice is possible or desirable, and that we are not simply going to be offered here the truism that innocent joy is preferable to the sorrows of experience” (Sagar).  Through this collection of poems, we are able to accept both the joys and sorrows in life as they must always coexist.
            In another critical essay called Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience, the author also brings up the dualism, and the message of the poems of finding balance and harmony between the good and bad.  It uses many examples from the poems to show the presence of both good and evil.  The author of the essay also identifies the symbolism that Blake uses in his poems.  He uses symbols of joy and despair in Holy Thursday.  I thought some of the examples were very interesting, such as the symbolism of thorns symbolizing the suffering of Christ.  The author makes a great statement saying, “though his powerful, vivid use of imagery, personal tone, and sense of paradox, William Blake's Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience, are able to work together in order to express a natural sense of balance of the human spirit” (Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience). 
The essay continues to show this balance through the different poems, using “I Saw a Chapel,” “Holy Thursday,” “I Heard an Angel,” and “Earth’s Answer.”  The poems express very different perspectives, yet still convey that both aspects of innocence and experience are necessary.  “Blake seems to be emphasizing in these two poems that although innocence and experience are two very different perspectives, and are often associated with what is good and what is evil, a person cannot grow and develop without both, because both states of innocence and experience contain elements of good and evil. Mankind simply cannot exist without both contrary aspects of the human soul” Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience).  This idea really reminded me of Lehi’s teachings of “opposition in all things” (Book of Mormon, 2 Nephi 2:11).  It is through this balance that we learn, gain experience, and grow.  This is what Blake was teaching through his poems contained in Songs of Innocence and of Experience.  I love the closing statement of the essay, which says:
 “Perhaps Blake is saying that neither innocence, nor experience is better, for both are necessary for the growth of mankind. Maybe the question Blake is asking the reader to think about it not, ‘How can I completely live in the world of experience,’ or ‘How can I completely live in the world of innocence,’ rather, ‘How can I learn from both innocence and experience to grow as a human being?’  Blake seems to emphasize that a person cannot dwell on regrets, or be completely oblivious to change.  Change is inevitable, and regrets are necessary, and in order for a person to learn about the beauty and importance of life, one must be able to appreciate the good, as well as learn from the bad” (Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience).  I feel like that is an excellent summary of Blake’s beliefs and intent of writing the collection.  We are meant to learn to live in harmony with these contradictory presences in our lives.  Life would lose meaning without this opposition, and Blake expresses this very well in his beautiful collection of art and poetry.
Lawrence J. Trudeau wrote an essay on the collection, sharing a textual history of the work, as well as the major themes of it.  I learned that the most common edition of Songs of Innocence and of Experience took about 35 years to produce.  Like the other essays, this one focuses on “the opposition between the innocent, joyous perspective of the child and the more experienced, less spontaneous, perspective of the adult” (Trudeau).  He also mentions the contrasts included in the poems and how they reflect English society of the time they were written.  It was a time when personal, political, and economical freedom was desired, but at the same time, there was also much apprehension concerning such freedom and the possible consequences.  I like how Trudeau brought up this aspect of the poems in relation to English society.  He uses “The Chimney Sweeper,” “Holy Thursday,” and “London” as examples of this social mirror.  These poems depict the unfavorable conditions of children’s work, poverty, and social protest.
Trudeau also includes a “critical reception” section of his essay, sharing the different opinions, meanings, and controversies regarding the collection.  He brings up the controversy that exists about the organization of the collection and the relation of poems with similar titles as well as those that are different.  Trudeau explains this as follows:
 “Many critics have studied the obvious dialectical pairings of individual poems, such as the contrasting versions of ‘Nurse's Song’ or ‘The Chimney-Sweeper’ in each section. Others see affinities between poems that do not have similar titles, such as the cluster ‘Laughing Song,’ ‘The Little Black Boy’ and ‘The Voice of the Ancient Bard.’  Attempts to establish a direct correspondence across the board between the two sections have proven fruitless, however.  Donald A. Dike maintains that ‘Blake was too fine an artist to pair off in detail all the poems in the sequences; to get what he was after, it was enough to do this with a few.’  K. E. Smith suggests that attempts to match up the individual songs are complicated by the fact that Blake himself changed the order of the poems several times, moving some from Innocence to Experience. Smith suggests that Blake was ‘constantly highlighting different paths through the innocent world,’ rather than pointing to one final, ideal arrangement of the poems” (Trudeau).
            I like the different viewpoints that this author shared.  It helped me to see the works in not just a spiritual viewpoint, but in historical context and the meaning of the works in relation to society.
            Lastly, another essay written by Kate, uses very specific examples of poems in relation to the terms “innocence” and “experience.”  She writes “Innocence and Experience are in opposition to each other. Innocence is the child, unspoiled by society. Experience is what becomes of the child when it comes in contact with society” (Kate).  The focus of her essay is the comparison and contrast of the two poems “The Lamb” and “The Tyger.”  She shares her thoughts on these poems and the symbolism used in them.  She relates “The Lamb” to innocence and Christ.  The people and animals in the poem all live harmoniously together without any sorrow, pain, fear, or night.  “They Tyger,” in contrast, has undertones of experience, with fear and nighttime.  The two poems are opposites of each other, yet still tie well together to balance each other out, as what one lacks, the other has.

Principal Critics
            S. Foster Damon was an American critic and poet who specialized in William Blake.  He graduated from Harvard and became an English instructor.  His works include A Blake Dictionary: The Ideas and Symbols of William Blake and William Blake: His Philosophy and Symbols.  Both of these works are invaluable guides on the ideas and symbolism that Blake shares and uses.  He led a successful career at Brown University.  The school’s website has a page about him and states, “with his interest in alchemy and spiritualism, [he] was especially qualified to expound ‘the esoteric side of Blake's genius,’ and placed Blake ‘in his historical earthly setting with true biographical art.’  Damon was to become one of the world's leading authorities on Blake, publishing several influential books during the course of his career” (Mitchell).
Algernon Charles Swinburne, an English critic and writer, wrote William Blake: A Critical Essay in 1868.  It contains a comprehensive criticism of Blake’s poems and prophetic books.  Before writing this book, he assisted Alexander Gilchrist, an author of a biography on William Blake.  “Swinburne helped prepare Gilchrist’s biography of Blake for publication, but he grew to dislike the finished book. His disgust culminated in the publication of his own assessment of Blake’s life and work a few years later. Swinburne’s book is useful for its commentary on Blake’s prophetic poems‚ works largely ignored by Gilchrist‚ as well as for its characterization of Blake as a rebel” (biblioboard.com).  His contribution has remained a valuable recourse for those studying William Blake and his works.
Alexander Gilchrist wrote the classic biography, The Life of William Blake.  His interest in Blake’s life began while he was still relatively young.  As a student, Gilchrist had heard rumours of Blake as the eccentric erstwhile occupant of Fountain Court, which he passed through every day on the way to his legal chambers” (guardian.co.uk).  He later decided to begin his great work of a biography on Blake.  He spent years compiling materials and interviewing Blake’s living friends.  He died before the work was completed, so his wife, Anne Gilchrist, finished it for him.  It was published in 1863 and continues to be “a standard reference work on the poet” (Wikipedia.org).

Creative Response

    
     I created a video of Blake's illustrations for Songs of Innocence and of Experience.




 Websites
The William Blake Archive
This website contains an archive of information regarding William Blake’s life, works, and news.

The Blake Society
This is a blog containing information about William Blake, and different projects and events the society is involved in.

Poetry Foundation
This website has extensive information with a biography, bibliography, analyses on various works, and references about William Blake.  His poems are also available to read or listen to as podcasts.

William-Blake.org
This website has a biography, his complete works, and a beautiful slideshow of Blake’s artwork.  It also shares links for related pages, museums, and exhibitions.

Friends of Blake
This website is for a group that is involved with various issues relating to William Blake.  Their aim is to raise awareness of Blake’s work and the different historical sites associated with him. 


Works Cited
Bibliooard.com. William Blake: A Critical Essay, by Algernon Charles Swinburne.
This website contains information about Algernon Charles Swinburne, biographer, expert and researcher on William Blake.  Also contains the Ancient of Days painting by William Blake that I used.
BlakeArchive.org. Chronology. June 14, 2012.
This website contains a detailed chronology of William Blake’s life and works.
The Book of Mormon. 1987. Print.
            This book contains teachings about opposition I used to compare Blake’s beliefs about opposition in Songs of Innocence and of Experience.
Greenblatt, Stephen, et al. Norton Anthology of English Literature, Eighth Editions, Volume D. W. W. Norton & Company, 2005. Print.
This book contains a brief biography of William Blake.
Guardian.co.uk. Saving Blake. May 28, 2004.
This website contains information about Alexander Gilchrist’s extensive work and research on Blake’s biography.
HumanitiesWeb.org. Chronology. January 13, 2012.
This website contains a detailed chronology of William Blake’s life and works.
Kate. William Blake - Songs Of Innocence And Experience – Essay. April 13, 2010.
This blog contains a student’s essay about Blake’s Songs of Innocence and of Experience.
Mitchell, Martha.  Encyclopedia Brunoniana – S. Foster Damon. 1993.
This website contains information on S. Foster Damon, an expert on William Blake.
Phillips, Thomas. William Blake. 1807.
            This website contains the portrait I used of William Blake.
PoetryFoundation.org. William Blake. 2011.
This website contains a biography of William Blake, a bibliography, samples of his works, and additional resources available about him.
Poets.org. William Blake. 1997-2012.
This website contains a brief biography of William Blake’s life.
Sagar, Keith. Innocence and Experience. 2002.
This website contains an essay that Sagar wrote about Songs of Innocence and of Experience.
Skoletorget.no. The Life and Works of William Blake. February 13, 2004.
This website contains a short biography of William Blake and sections of information about his different poems and artwork.
Trudeau, Lawrence J. Songs of Innocence and of Experience.  2005.
This website contains information about the context, history, and major themes of Songs of Innocence and of Experience.
Wikipedia.org. Alexander Gilchrist. February 24, 2012.
This website contains information about Alexander Gilchrist, a biographer and expert on William Blake.
Wikipedia.org. The Life of William Blake. February 24, 2012.
This website contains information about The Life of William Blake, the biography written by Alexander Gilchrist.
Wikispaces.com. Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience. 2000-2006
This website contains an essay on Blake’s work, Songs of Innocence and of Experience.
William-Blake.org. Biography. 2002-2012.
This website contains a biography of William Blake through different stages of his life.

01 July 2012

Teaching

2 Peter 2:1-19 teaches us to be aware of false teachers and how we can identify them.

Characteristics of False Teachers:
  • Teach Heresies
  • Deny the Lord
  • Speak feigned words
  • Make their teaching a business
  • Walk after the flesh in the lust of uncleanness
  • Despise the government
  • Presumptuous
  • Selfwilled
  • Not afraid to speak evil of dignities
  • Find rioting as a pleasure
  • Adulterous
  • Sinful
  • Unstable
  • Speak alluring words of vanity
  • Promise liberty when bondage results
  • Covetousness

How this list helps me recognize false teachers today:
If I hear people with these characteristics or teaching things with these characteristics, I can know to be weary and that these people are most likely false teachers.  Because the scriptures share this information, I will know what to be aware of and what false teachers are like.

Dangers of returning to the “pollutions of the world:”
2 Peter 2:20-22 teaches us that it’s worse to know righteousness and to turn back to the “pollutions of the world.”  Doctrine & Covenants 82:3 teaches us that “to much is given, much is required.”  When we are given light and truth, we are accountable for the knowledge we have and how we choose to use it.  Verse 7 of the same chapter teaches us that when a person repents, but goes back to their old ways, their old sins will return to them.  If we want to be forgiven of our sins, we must always strive to live the gospel and keep the commandments.