The Project Gutenberg eBook of William Blake, by G. K. Chesterton
www.gutenberg.orgTitle: William Blake
Author: G. K. Chesterton
Release Date: March 16, 2022 [eBook #67639]
Language: English
Produced by: Thomas Frost, Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
ALBRECHT DÜRER (37 Illustrations).
By Lina Eckenstein.
ROSSETTI (53 Illustrations).
By Ford Madox Hueffer.
REMBRANDT (61 Illustrations).
By Auguste Bréal.
FRED. WALKER (32 Illustrations and Photogravure).
By Clementina Black.
MILLET (32 Illustrations).
By Romain Rolland.
LEONARDO DA VINCI (44 Illustrations).
By Dr Georg Gronau.
GAINSBOROUGH (55 Illustrations).
By Arthur B. Chamberlain.
THE FRENCH IMPRESSIONISTS (50 Illustrations).
By Camille Mauclair.
BOTTICELLI (37 Illustrations).
By Julia Cartwright (Mrs Ady).
VELAZQUEZ (51 Illustrations).
By Auguste Bréal.
WATTS (33 Illustrations).
By G. K. Chesterton.
RAPHAEL (50 Illustrations).
By Julia Cartwright (Mrs Ady).
HOLBEIN (50 Illustrations).
By Ford Madox Hueffer.
ENGLISH WATER COLOUR PAINTERS (42 Illustrations).
By A. J. Finberg.
WATTEAU (35 Illustrations).
By Camille Mauclair.
PERUGINO (50 Illustrations).
By Edward Hutton.
THE PRE-RAPHAELITE BROTHERHOOD (38 Illustrations).
By Ford Madox Hueffer.
CRUIKSHANK (55 Illustrations).
By W. H. Chesson.
WHISTLER (26 Illustrations).
By Bernhard Sickert.
HOGARTH (48 Illustrations).
By Edward Garnett.
WILLIAM BLAKE (33 Illustrations).
By G. K. Chesterton.
FROM “SONGS OF INNOCENCE”
1789
WILLIAM BLAKE
BY
AUTHOR OF “ROBERT BROWNING,” ETC.
: DUCKWORTH & CO.
NEW YORK
PRINTED BY
TURNBULL AND SPEARS,
EDINBURGH
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
|
| PAGE | | —- | —- | | The Lamb | | | The Lilly (1789) | 13 | | The Divine Image (1789) | 21 | | The Little Black Boy (1789) | 27 | | The Swan (1789) | 35 | | Space (1793) | 43 | | Oothoon (1793) | 49 | | Spells of Law (1793) | 55 | | Frontispiece to “America” (1793) | 63 | | Preludium (1793) | 69 | | A Prophecy (1793) | 77 | | A Female Dream (1793) | 84 | | The Tyger (1794) | 91 | | Holy Thursday (1794) | 97 | | Ariel | 105 | | Preludium to Urizen (1794) | 112 | | Har and Heva (1795) | 117 | | Philander’s Dust (1796) | 121 | | A Group (1804) | 129 | | The Waters of Life (1804) | 136 | | Ploughing the Earth (1804) | 141 | | The Eagle (1804) | 147 | | “Albion! Arouse Thyself!” (1804) | 153 | | The Crucifixion (1804) | 159 | | The Judgment Day (1806) | 165 | | The Tomb (1806) | 171 | | The Selfhood of Deceit (1807) | 177 | | The Shepherds (1821) | 183 | | The Morning Stars (1821) | 189 | | The Whirlwind (1825) | 195 | | The Just Upright Man (1825) | 202 | | For His Eyes are upon the Ways of Man (1825) | 207 |
[Pg 1]
William Blake would have been the first to
understand that the biography of anybody
ought really to begin with the words, “In the
beginning God created heaven and earth.”
If we were telling the story of Mr Jones of
Kentish Town, we should need all the centuries
to explain it. We cannot comprehend even
the name “Jones,” until we have realised that
its commonness is not the commonness of
vulgar but of divine things; for its very commonness
is an echo of the adoration of St
John the Divine. The adjective “Kentish”
is rather a mystery in that geographical connection;
but the word Kentish is not so mysterious
as the awful and impenetrable word
“town.” We shall have rent up the roots of
prehistoric mankind and seen the last revolutions
of modern society before we really know
the meaning of the word “town.” So every
word we use comes to us coloured from all its
adventures in history, every phase of which
has made at least a faint alteration. The[Pg 2]
only right way of telling a story is to begin
at the beginning—at the beginning of the
world. Therefore all books have to be begun
in the wrong way, for the sake of brevity. If
Blake wrote the life of Blake it would not
begin with any business about his birth or
parentage.
Blake was born in 1757, in Carnaby Market—but
Blake’s life of Blake would not have
begun like that. It would have begun with
a great deal about the giant Albion, about the
many disagreements between the spirit and
the spectre of that gentleman, about the
golden pillars that covered the earth at its
beginning and the lions that walked in their
golden innocence before God. It would have
been full of symbolic wild beasts and naked
women, of monstrous clouds and colossal
temples; and it would all have been highly
incomprehensible, but none of it would have
been irrelevant. All the biggest events of
Blake’s life would have happened before he
was born. But, on consideration, I think it
will be better to tell the tale of Blake’s life
first and go back to his century afterwards.
It is not, indeed, easy to resist temptation[Pg 3]
here, for there was much to be said about
Blake before he existed. But I will resist
the temptation and begin with the facts.
William Blake was born on the 28th of
November 1757 in Broad Street, Carnaby
Market. Like so many other great English
artists and poets, he was born in London.
Like so many other starry philosophers and
flaming mystics, he came out of a shop. His
father was James Blake, a fairly prosperous
hosier; and it is certainly remarkable to note
how many imaginative men in our island have
arisen in such an environment. Napoleon
said that we English were a nation of shopkeepers;
if he had pursued the problem a
little further he might have discovered why
we are a nation of poets. Our recent slackness
in poetry and in everything else is due
to the fact that we are no longer a nation of
shopkeepers, but merely a nation of shop-owners.
In any case there seems to be
no doubt that William Blake was brought
up in the ordinary atmosphere of the smaller
English bourgeoisie. His manners and morals[Pg 4]
were trained in the old obvious way; nobody
ever thought of training his imagination,
which perhaps was all the better for the
neglect. There are few tales of his actual
infancy. Once he lingered too long in the
fields and came back to tell his mother that
he had seen the prophet Ezekiel sitting
under a tree. His mother smacked him.
Thus ended the first adventure of William
Blake in that wonderland of which he was
a citizen.
His father, James Blake, was almost certainly
an Irishman; his mother was probably
English. Some have found in his Irish origin
an explanation of his imaginative energy; the
idea may be admitted, but under strong reservations.
It is probably true that Ireland, if
she were free from oppression, would produce
more pure mystics than England. And for
the same reason she would still produce fewer
poets. A poet may be vague, and a mystic
hates vagueness. A poet is a man who mixes
up heaven and earth unconsciously. A mystic
is a man who separates heaven and earth even
if he enjoys them both. Broadly the English
type is he who sees the elves entangled in the[Pg 5]
forests of Arcady, like Shakespeare and Keats:
the Irish type is he who sees the fairies quite
distinct from the forest, like Blake and Mr
W. B. Yeats. If Blake inherited anything
from his Irish blood it was his strong Irish
logic. The Irish are as logical as the English
are illogical. The Irish excel at the trades
for which mere logic is wanted, such as law
or military strategy. This element of elaborate
and severe reason there certainly was in Blake.
There was nothing in the least formless or
drifting about him. He had a most comprehensive
scheme of the universe, only that no
one could comprehend it.
If Blake, then, inherited anything from
Ireland it was his logic. There was perhaps
in his lucid tracing of a tangled scheme of
mysticism something of that faculty which
enables Mr Tim Healy to understand the rules
of the House of Commons. There was perhaps
in the prompt pugnacity with which he kicked
the impudent dragoon out of his front garden
something of the success of the Irish soldier.
But all such speculations are futile. For we
do not know what James Blake really was,
whether an Irishman by accident or by true[Pg 6]
tradition. We do not know what heredity is;
the most recent investigators incline to the
view that it is nothing at all. And we do
not know what Ireland is; and we shall never
know until Ireland is free, like any other
Christian nation, to create her own institutions.
Let us pass to more positive and certain
things. William Blake grew up slight and
small, but with a big and very broad head, and
with shoulders more broad than were natural
to his stature. There exists a fine portrait of
him which gives the impression of a certain
squareness in the mere plan of his face and
figure. He has something in common, so to
speak, with the typically square men of the
eighteenth century; he seems a little like
Danton, without the height; like Napoleon, without
the mask of Roman beauty; or like Mirabeau,
without the dissipation and the disease. He
had abnormally big dark eyes; but to judge
by this plainly sincere portrait, the great eyes
were rather bright than dark. If he suddenly
entered the room (and he was likely to have
entered it suddenly) I think we should have
felt first a broad Bonaparte head and broad
Bonaparte shoulders, and then afterwards[Pg 7]
realised that the figure under them was frail
and slight.
His spiritual structure was somewhat similar,
as it slowly built itself up. His character was
queer but quite solid. You might call him a
solid maniac or a solid liar; but you could not
possibly call him a wavering hysteric or a weak
dabbler in doubtful things. With his big owlish
head and small fantastic figure he must have
seemed more like an actual elf than any human
traveller in Elfland; he was a sober native of
that unnatural plain. There was nothing of
the obviously fervid and futile about Blake’s
supernaturalism. It was not his frenzy but his
coolness that was startling. From his first
meeting with Ezekiel under the tree he always
talked of such spirits in an everyday intonation.
There was plenty of pompous supernaturalism
in the eighteenth century; but Blake’s was
the only natural supernaturalism. Many reputable
persons reported miracles; he only
mentioned them. He spoke of having met
Isaiah or Queen Elizabeth, not so much even as
if the fact were indisputable, but rather as if
so simple a thing were not worth disputing.
Kings and prophets came from heaven or hell[Pg 8]
to sit to him, and he complained of them quite
casually, as if they were rather troublesome
professional models. He was angry because
King Edward I. would blunder in between him
and Sir William Wallace. There have been
other witnesses to the supernatural even more
convincing, but I think there was never any
other quite so calm. His private life, as he
laid its foundations in his youth, had the same
indescribable element; it was a sort of abrupt
innocence. Everything that he was destined
to do, especially in these early years, had a
placid and prosaic oddity. He went through
the ordinary fights and flirtations of boyhood;
and one day he happened to be talking about
the unreasonable ways of some girl to another
girl. The other girl (her name was Katherine
Boucher) listened with apparent patience until
Blake used some phrase or mentioned some
incident which (she said) she really thought
was pathetic or, popularly speaking, “hard on
him.” “Do you?” said William Blake with
great suddenness. “Then I love you.” After a
long pause the girl said in a leisurely manner,
“I love you too.” In this brief and extraordinary
manner was decided a marriage of[Pg 9]
which the unbroken tenderness was tried by
a long life of wild experiments and wilder
opinions, and which was never truly darkened
until the day when Blake, dying in an astonishing
ecstasy, named her only after God.
To the same primary period of his life, boyish,
romantic, and untouched, belongs the publication
of his first and most famous books, “Songs
of Innocence and Experience.” These poems
are the most natural and juvenile things Blake
ever wrote. Yet they are startlingly old and
unnatural poems for so young and natural a
man. They have the quality already described—a
matured and massive supernaturalism. If
there is anything in the book extraordinary to
the reader it is clearly quite ordinary to the
writer. It is characteristic of him that he
could write quite perfect poetry, a lyric entirely
classic. No Elizabethan or Augustan could
have moved with a lighter precision than—
But it is also characteristic of him that he
could and would put into an otherwise good
poem lines like—
[Pg 10]
lines that have no sense at all and no connection
with the poem whatever. There is a
stronger and simpler case of contrast. There
is the quiet and beautiful stanza in which
Blake first described the emotions of the nurse,
the spiritual mother of many children.
And here is the equally quiet verse which
William Blake afterwards wrote down, equally
calmly—
That last monstrous line is typical. He would
mention with as easy an emphasis that a
woman’s face turned green as that the fields
were green when she looked at them. That is
the quality of Blake which is most personal[Pg 13]
and interesting in the fixed psychology of his
youth. He came out into the world a mystic
in this very practical sense, that he came out
to teach rather than to learn. Even as a boy
he was bursting with occult information. And
all through his life he had the deficiencies of
one who is always giving out and has no time
to take in. He was deaf with his own cataract
of speech. Hence it followed that he was
devoid of patience while he was by no means
devoid of charity: but impatience produced
every evil effect that could practically have
come from uncharitableness: impatience tripped
him up and sent him sprawling twenty times
in his life. The result was the unlucky
paradox, that he who was always preaching
perfect forgiveness seemed not to forgive even
imperfectly the feeblest slights. He himself
wrote in a strong epigram—
THE LILLY (1789)
But the effect of the epigram is a little lost
through its considerable truth if applied to the
epigrammatist. The wretched Hayley had
himself been a friend to Blake—and Blake[Pg 14]
could not forgive him. But this was not really
lack of love or pity. It was strictly lack of
patience, which in its turn was due to that
bursting and almost brutal mass of convictions
with which he plunged into the world like a
red-hot cannon ball, just as we have already
imagined him plunging into a room with his
big bullet head. His head was indeed a bullet;
it was an explosive bullet.
Of his other early relations we know little.
The parents who are often mentioned in his
poems, both for praise and blame, are the
abstract and eternal father and mother and
have no individual touches. It might be
inferred, perhaps, that he had a special
emotional tie with his elder brother Robert,
for Robert constantly appeared to him in
visions and even explained to him a new
method of engraving. But even this inference
is doubtful, for Blake saw the oddest people
in his visions, people with whom neither he
nor any one else has anything particular to do;
and the method of engraving might just as
well have been revealed by Bubb Doddington
or Prester John or the oldest baker in Brighton.
That is one of the facts that makes one fancy[Pg 15]
that Blake’s visions were genuine. But whoever
taught him his own style of engraving, an
ordinary mortal engraver taught him the
ordinary mortal style, and he seems to have
learnt it very well. When apprenticed by his
father to a London engraving business he was
diligent and capable. All his life he was a
good workman, and his failures, which were
many, never arose from that common idleness
or looseness of life attributed to the artistic
temperament. He was of a bitter and intolerant
temper, but not otherwise unbusiness-like; and
he was prone to insult his patrons, but not, as
a rule, to fail them. But with this part of his
character we shall probably have to deal
afterwards. His technical skill was very
great. This and a certain original touch also
attracted to the young artist the attention and
interest of the sculptor Flaxman.
The influence of this great man on Blake’s
life and work has been gravely underrated.
The mistake has arisen from causes too complex
to be considered, at any rate at this stage; but
they resolve themselves into a misunderstanding
of the nature of classicism and of the nature
of mysticism. But this can be said decisively:[Pg 16]
Blake remained a Flaxmanite to the day of his
death. Flaxman as a sculptor and draughtsman
stood, as everybody knows, for classicism
at its clearest and coldest. He would admit
no line into a modern picture that might not
have been on a Greek bas-relief. Even foreshortening
and perspective he avoided as if
there were something grotesque about them—as,
indeed, there is. Nothing can be funnier,
properly considered, than the fact that one’s
own father is a pigmy if he stands far enough
off. Perspective really is the comic element
in things. Flaxman vaguely felt this;
Flaxman shrank from the almost insolent foreshortenings
of Rubens or Veronese as he would
have shrank from the gigantic boots in the
foreground of an amateur photograph. For him
high art was flat art in painting or drawing,
everything could be done by pure line upon a
single plane. Flaxman is probably best known
to the existing public by his illustrations in line
to Pope’s “Homer,”—which have certainly
copied most exquisitely the austere limitations
of Greek vases and reliefs. Anger may be
uttered by the lifted arm or sorrow by the
sunken head, but the faces of all those gods[Pg 17]
and heroes are, as you may think them,
beautiful or foolish, like the faces of the dead.
Above all, the line must never falter and come
to nothing; Flaxman would regard a line fading
away in such a picture as we should regard a
railway line fading away upon a map.
This was the principle of Flaxman; and this
remained to the day of his death one of the
firmest principles of William Blake. I will not
say that Blake took it from the great sculptor,
for it formed an integral part of Blake’s individual
artistic philosophy; but he must have
been encouraged to find it in Flaxman and
strengthened in it by the influence of an older
and more famous man. No one can understand
Blake’s pictures, no one can understand
a hundred allusions in his epigrams, satires,
and art criticism who does not first of all
realise that William Blake was a fanatic on
the subject of the firm line. The thing he
loved most in art was that lucidity and decision
of outline which can be seen best in the
cartoons of Raphael, in the Elgin Marbles, and
in the simpler designs of Michael Angelo.
The thing he hated most in art was the
thing which we now call Impressionism—the[Pg 18]
substitution of atmosphere for shape, the
sacrifice of form to tint, the cloudland of the
mere colourist. With that cyclopean impudence
which was the most stunning sign of his
sincerity, he treated the greatest names not
only as if they were despicable, but as if they
were actually despised. He reasons mildly with
the artistic authorities, saying—
And then, with one of those sudden lunges
of sense which made him a swordsman after all,
he really gets home upon Rubens—
In another satire he retells the fable of the
dog, the bone, and the river, and permits (with
admirable humour) the dog to expatiate upon
the vast pictorial superiority of the bone’s
reflection in the river over the bone itself; the
shadow so delicate, suggestive, rich in tone, the
real bone so hard and academic in outline. He
was the sharpest satirist of the Impressionists[Pg 21]
who ever wrote, only he satirised the Impressionists
before they were born.
THE DIVINE IMAGE (1789)
The ordinary history of Blake would obviously
be that he was a man who began as a good
engraver and became a great artist. The inner
truth of Blake could hardly be better put than
this: that he was a good artist whose idea of
greatness was to be a great engraver. For
him it was no mere technical accident that the
art of reproduction had to cut into wood or
bite into stone. He loved to think that even
in being a draughtsman he was also a sculptor.
When he put his lines on a decorative page
he would have much preferred to carve them
out of marble or cut them into rock. Like
every true romantic, he loved the irrevocable.
Like every true artist, he detested india-rubber.
Take, for the sake of example, all the designs
to the Book of Job. When he gets the thing
right he gets it suddenly and perfectly right,
as in the picture of all the sons of God shouting
for joy. We feel that the sons of God
might really shout for joy at the excellence
of their own portrait. When he gets it wrong
he gets it completely and incurably wrong, as
in the preposterous picture of Satan dancing[Pg 22]
among paving-stones. But both are equally
final and fixed. If one picture is incurably
bad, the other picture is incurably good.
Courage (which is, with kindness, the only
fundamental virtue in man), is present and
prodigious in both. No coward could have
drawn such pictures.
The chief movement of Blake either in art or
literature was the first publication of the batch of
his own allegorical works. “The Gates of Paradise”
came first, and was followed by “Urizen”
and the “Book of Thel.” With these he introduced
his own mode of engraving and began
his own style of decorative illustration. That
style was steeped in the Blake and Flaxman
feeling for the hard line and the harsh and
heroic treatment. There were, of course, many
other personalities besides that of Flaxman
which were destined to influence the art
of William Blake. Among others, the personality
of William Blake influences it not
inconsiderably. But no influence ever disturbed
the love of the absolute academic line. If the
reader will look at any of the designs of Blake,
many of which are reproduced in this book,
he will see the main fact which I mention[Pg 23]
here. Many of them are hideous, some of
them are outrageous, but none of them are
shapeless; none of them are what would now
be called “suggestive”; none of them (in a
word) are timid. The figure of man may be a
monster, but he is a solid monster. The figure
of God may be a mistake, but it is an unmistakable
mistake. About this same time Blake
began to illustrate books, decorating Blair’s
“Grave” and the Book of Job with his dark
but very definite designs. In these plates
it is quite plain that the artist, when he
errs, errs not by vagueness but by hardness of
treatment. The beauty of the angel upside
down who blows the trumpet in the face of
Blair’s skeleton is the beauty of a perfect
Greek athlete. And if the beauty is the
beauty of an athlete, so the ugliness is the
ugliness of an athlete—or perhaps of an acrobat.
The contortions and clumsy attitudes of some
of Blake’s figures do not arise from his ignorance
of the human anatomy. They arise from
a sort of wild knowledge of it. He is straining
muscles and cracking joints like a sportsman
racing for a cup.
These book illustrations by Blake are among[Pg 24]
the simplest and strongest designs of his pencil,
which at its best (to do him justice) tended to
the simple and the strong. Nothing (for instance)
could well be more comic or more tragic
than the fact that Blake should illustrate Blair’s
elephantine epic called “The Grave.” It was
as well that Blake and Blair should meet over
the grave. It was about all they had in
common. The poet was full of the most
crushing platitudes of eighteenth century
rationalism. The artist was full of a poetry
that would have seemed frightful to the poet,
a poetry inherited from the mystics of all ages
and handed on to the mystics of to-day.
Blake was the child of the Rosy Cross and the
Eleusinian Mysteries; he was the father of
the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and even
of the “Yellow Book.” But of all this the
excellent Mr Blair was innocent, and so,
indeed, in all probability was the excellent
Mr Blake. But the really interesting point
is this: that the illustrations were efficient
and satisfactory, from the Blair as well as the
Blake point of view. The cut, for instance,
with the figure of the old man bowing his
head to enter the black grotto of the grave[Pg 27]
is a fine piece of drawing, apart from its
meaning, and is all the finer for its simplicity.
But wherever he errs it is always in being too
hard and harsh, not too faint or fanciful.
Blake was a greater man than Flaxman, though
a less perfectly poised man. He was harder
than his master, because he was madder. The
figure upside down blowing the trumpet is as
perfect as a Flaxman figure: only it is upside
down. Flaxman upside down is almost a
definition of Blake.
THE LITTLE BLACK BOY (1789)
Such an elementary statement of Blake’s idea
of art is not out of place at this stage; for his
convictions had formed and hardened unusually
early, and his career is almost unintelligible
apart from his opinions. It is fairly eccentric
even with them. Flaxman had introduced
him to literary society, especially to the evening
parties of a Blue-stocking named Mrs
Matthews. Here his force of mind was
admitted; but he was not personally very
popular. Most of his biographers attribute
this to his “unbending deportment,” and a[Pg 28]
certain almost babyish candour which certainly
belonged to him. But I cannot help thinking
that the fact that he was in the habit of singing
his own poems to tunes invented by
himself may perhaps have had something to
do with it. His opinions on all subjects were
not only positive but aggressive. He was a
fierce republican and denouncer of kings.
But Mrs Matthews was probably accustomed
to fierce republicans who denounced kings.
She may have been less accustomed to a
gentleman who insisted on wearing a red cap
of liberty in ordinary society. It is due to
Blake to say that his politics showed nevertheless
that eccentric practicality which was
mixed up with his unworldliness; it was certainly
through his presence of mind that Tom
Paine did not perish on the scaffold.
But Blake had none of the marks of the
poetical weakling, of the mere moon-calf of
mysticism. If he was a madman, one can
emphasise the word man as well as the word
mad. For instance, in spite of his sedentary
trade and his pacific theories, he had extraordinary
physical courage. Not that reasonable
minimum of physical courage which is guaranteed[Pg 29]
by certain conventional sports, but
intrinsic contempt of danger, a readiness to
put himself into unknown perils. He would
suddenly attack men much bigger and stronger
than himself, and that with such violence that
they were often defeated by their own amazement.
He attacked a huge drayman who was
harsh to some women and beat him in the most
excited manner. He leapt upon a Lifeguardsman
who came into his front garden, and ran
that astonished warrior into the road by the
elbows. The vivacity and violence of these
physical outbreaks must be remembered and
allowed for when we are judging some of his
mental outbreaks. The most serious blot
(indeed, the only serious blot) on the moral
character of Blake was his habit of letting his
rage get the better not only of decency but
of gratitude and truth. He would abuse his
benefactors as virulently as his enemies. He
left epigrams lying about in which he called
Flaxman a blockhead and Hayley (as far as the
words can be understood) a seducer and an
assassin. But the curious thing is that he
often did justice to the same people both
before and after such eruptions. The truth[Pg 30]
is, I fancy, that such writings were like sudden
attitudes or bodily movements. We talk of a
word and a blow; with Blake a word had the
same momentary character as a blow. It was
not a judgment, but a gesture. He had little
or no feeling of the idea that “litera scripta
manet.” He did not see any particular reason
why he should not be fond of a man merely
because he had called the man a murderer a few
days before. And he was innocently surprised
if the man was not fond of him. In this he
was perhaps rather feminine than masculine.
He had many friends and acquaintances of
distinction besides Flaxman. Among them was
the great Priestley, whose speculations were the
life of early Unitarianism and whose Jacobin
sympathies led to something not far from
martyrdom; other friends were the wild optimist
Godwin and his daughter Mary Wollstonecraft.
But although he gained many new acquaintances
he gained only one new helper. This
was a Mr Thomas Butts, who lived in Fitzroy
Square, and ought to have a statue there, for
he is an eternal model and monument for all
patrons of art. While in all other respects
apparently a sane and rational British merchant,[Pg 31]
he conceived an affection for Blake’s allegorical
designs. But he gave no commissions for
pictures; he simply gave Blake money for
pictures as fast as Blake chose to paint them.
The subject and size and medium were left
entirely to the artist. One day Blake might
leave at Fitzroy Square a little water-colour of
the “Soul of a Porcupine”; the next day a
gorgeous and intricate illumination in gold of
the obstetrics and birth of Cain; the next day
an enormous mural painting of Hector capturing
the arms of Patroclus; the following day a
simple pen and ink drawing of the prophet
Habbakuk taken from life. All these Mr
Thomas Butts of Fitzroy Square received with
solid benevolence and paid for in solid coin.
Many modern writers and painters may think of
such a patron somewhat dreamily. He had his
reward, though it was unique rather than particularly
practical. Blake regarded him with a
serene affection which was never ruffled by the
flying storms that were too frequent in his
friendships. No allusions can be found in his
poetry to the effect that Thomas Butts was a
Spectre from Satan’s Loins. No epigram was
discovered among Blake’s papers accusing Mr[Pg 32]
Butts of bereaving anybody’s life. If to have
kept one’s own temper with Blake was a large
achievement (and it was not a small one), it
was certainly a truly noble achievement to
have kept Blake’s temper for him. And this
Mr Butts and Mrs Blake can alone really claim
to have done. For Blake was to pass under
a patron who showed him how different is
kindness from sympathy.
In the year 1800 he effected a change of
residence which was in many ways an epoch
in his life. He was a Londoner, though
doubtless a Londoner of the time when
London was small enough to feel itself on
every side to be on the edge of the country.
Still Blake had never in any true sense been
in the heart of the country. In his earliest
poems we read of seraphs stirring in the
trees; but we have somehow a feeling that
they were garden trees. We read of saints
and sages walking in the fields, and we
almost have the feeling that they were brickfields.
The perfect landscape is pastoral to
the point of conventionality; it has not in any
sense the actual smell of England. The sights
of the town are evidently as native (one might[Pg 35]
say vital) with him as any of the sights of the
country. The black chimney-sweep is as
obvious as the white lamb. What is worse
still, the white lamb of England is no more
natural or native than the alien golden lion of
Africa. He was, in fact, a Cockney, like Keats;
and Cockneys as a class tend to have too
poetical and luxuriantly imaginative a view of
life. Blake was about as little affected by
environment as any man that ever lived in this
world. Still he did change his environment,
and it did change him.
THE SWAN (1789)
There lived about this time near the little
village of Eartham, in Sussex, a simple, kind-hearted
but somewhat consequential squire of
the name of Hayley. He was a landlord and
an aristocrat; but he was not one of those whose
vanity can be wholly fulfilled by such functions.
He considered himself a patron of poetry; and
indeed he was one; but, alas! he had a yet
more alarming idea. He also considered himself
a poet. Whether any one agreed with that
opinion while he still ruled the estates and
hunted the country it is difficult now to
discover. It is sufficiently certain that nobody
agrees with it now. “The Triumphs of[Pg 36]
Temper,” the only poem by Hayley that any
modern person can remember, is probably
only remembered because it was used to round
off scornfully one of the ringing sentences in
Macaulay’s Essays. Nevertheless in his own
time Hayley was a powerful and important
man, quite unshaken as yet as a poet, quite
unshakeable as a landed proprietor. But like
almost all quite indefensible English oligarchs,
he had a sort of unreasonable good nature
which somehow balanced or protected his
obvious unfitness and ineptitude. His heart
was in the right place, though he was in the
wrong one. To this blameless and beaming
lord of creation, too self-satisfied to be arrogant,
too solemnly childish to be cynical, too much at
his ease to doubt either others or himself, to him
Flaxman introduced, at him rather Flaxman
threw, the red-hot cannon-ball called Blake.
I wonder whether Flaxman laughed. But
laughter convulses and crumples up the pure
outline of the Greek profile.
Hayley, who was in his way as munificent
as Mæcenas (and I suspect that Mæcenas was
quite as stupid as Hayley), gave Blake a cottage
in Felpham, a few miles from his own house,[Pg 37]
a cottage with which Blake almost literally
fell in love. He writes as if he had never
seen an English country cottage before; and
perhaps he never had. “Nothing,” he cries
in a kind of ecstasy, “can ever be more grand
than its simplicity and usefulness. Simple
and without intricacy, it seems to be the
spontaneous expression of humanity, congenial
to the wants of man. No other formed house
can ever please me so well.” It is probably
true that none ever did. All that was purest
and most chivalrous in his poetry and philosophy
flowered in the great winds that pass and
repass between the noble Sussex hills and the
sea. He was always a happy man, since he
had a God. But here he was almost a contented
man.
By this time had passed over Blake’s head
first the beginning and then the growing
blackness of the great French terror. Blake
was now in a world in which even he could
not venture to walk about in a red cap.
Moreover, like most of the men of genius of
that age and school, like Coleridge and like
Shelley, he seems to have been slightly sickened
with the full sensational actuality of the French[Pg 38]
tragedy; and somewhat unreasonably having
urged the rebels to fight, complained because
they killed people. If sincere revolutionists
like Blake and Coleridge were disappointed at
the Revolution, the English Government and
governing class were against it with a solidity
of desperation. People talk about the reign
of terror in France; but allowing for the
difference of national temperament and
national peril, the two things were twin;
there was a reign of terror in England. A
gentleman was sent to penal servitude (which
some gentlemen find worse than the guillotine)
if he said that the Prince Regent was fat.
Our terror was as cruel as Robespierre’s, but
more cowardly, just as our press-gang was as
cruel as conscription, only more cowardly.
Everywhere that the Government could knock
down an enemy as if by accident, could brain
a Jacobin with some brutal club of legal coincidence,
the thing was done. Many such
blows were struck in that time, and one of
them was struck at Blake.
On a certain morning in the August of 1803
Blake walked out into his garden and found
standing there a trooper of the 1st Dragoons[Pg 41]
in a scarlet coat, surveying the landscape with
a satisfied air of possession. Blake expressed
a desire that the dragoon should leave the
garden. The dragoon expressed a desire to
knock out Blake’s eyes, “with many abominable
imprecations.” Blake sprang upon the
man with startling activity, and catching him
from behind by both elbows ran him out of
the garden as if he were a perambulator.
The man, who was probably drunk and must
certainly have been surprised, went off with
many verbal accusations, but none of a political
nature. A little while afterwards, however,
he turned up with a grave legal statement to
the effect that Blake had taken the opportunity
to utter these somewhat improbable words:
“Damn the king, damn all his subjects, damn
his soldiers, they are all slaves: when
Bonaparte comes it will be cut-throat for cut-throat.
I will help him.” The impartial
critic will be inclined to say that few persons
would have even the breath to utter such
political generalisations while at the same
time running one of the Dragoon Guards
bodily out of the gate; and it was not alleged
that the incident took more than half a minute.[Pg 42]
Blake may possibly or even probably have
said “damn,” but the rest of the sentence
originated, I imagine, in the mind of someone
else. But although most of Blake’s
biography treats the case as a mere clumsy
accident, I can hardly think that it was so.
It involves too much of a coincidence. Why
did not the dragoon wander into some other
garden? Why did not some other poet have
to deal with the dragoon? It seems odd that
the man of the red cap should be the one
man to wrestle with the man of the red
coat. It was a time of tyranny, and tyranny
is always full of small intrigues. It is not
at all impossible that the police, as we should
now put it, really tried to entrap Blake.
But there entered upon the scene something
which in England is stronger even than the
police. Hayley, not the small Hayley who
was the author of the “Triumphs of Temper,”
but the colossal Hayley, who was the squire of
Eartham and Bognor, entered the court with
the extra aristocratic charm of an accident in
the hunting-field. He defended Blake with
generosity and good sense, such as seldom fail
his class on such occasions; and Blake was[Pg 43]
acquitted. It was said that the evidence was
incomplete; but I fancy that if Hayley had not
come the evidence would have been complete
enough.
SPACE (1793)
It is unfortunate that this excellent attitude
of Hayley nevertheless coincides to a great
extent with the solution of the bonds that
bound him to Blake. “The Visions were
angry with me at Felpham,” said the poet,
which was his way of stating that he was
somewhat bored with the benevolence of the
English gentry. “Voices of celestial inhabitants
were more distinctly heard, nor
their forms more distinctly seen,” in the
neighbourhood of the Squire of Eartham than
in that of Mr Butts of Fitzroy Square; and
Blake abruptly returned to London, taking
lodgings just off Oxford Street. He started
at once on a work with the promising title,
“Jerusalem, the Emanation of the Giant
Albion.” I say there is a certain pathos in
this parting from Hayley, for he was now to
fall into the power of a much more unpleasant
kind of capitalist. Poor Blake fell indeed
from bad to worse in the matter of patrons.
Butts was sensible and sympathetic, Hayley[Pg 44]
was honest and silly. And his last protector
seems to have been something very like a
swindler.
The name of this benevolent being was
Richard Hartley Cromek, a Yorkshireman, and
a publisher. He found Blake in bitter poverty
after his breach with Hayley (he and his wife
lived on 10s. a week), and his method of
sweating was of the simplest and most artistic
character. He used to go to Blake, tell him
that he would give him the engraving of a
number of designs; he would easily make
Blake talk enthusiastically, show his sketches
and so on; then having got the sketches he
would go away and give the engraving to
somebody else. This annoyed Blake. It is
pleasant to reflect that it was about Cromek
that the best of his epigrams was written—
Blake’s irritation broke out, as was common
with him, not over the clearest but over the
most confused case of Cromek’s misconduct.
The publisher had seen a design by Blake of
Chaucer’s “Canterbury Pilgrims,” and commissioned[Pg 45]
Blake to complete it. A few days
afterwards Cromek found himself in the studio
of the popular painter Stothard, and suggested
the subject to him. Stothard finished his
picture first and it appeared before Blake’s.
Blake went into one of his worst rages and
wrote one of his best pieces of prose.
A brother artist said of Blake, with beautiful
simplicity, “He is a good man to steal from.”
The remark is as philosophical as it is practical.
Blake had the great mark of real intellectual
wealth; anything that fell from him might be
worth picking up. What he dropped in the
street might as easily be half-a-sovereign as a
halfpenny. Moreover, he invited theft in this
further sense, that his mental wealth existed,
so to speak, in the most concentrated form. It
is easier to steal half-a-sovereign in gold than
in halfpence. He was literally packed with
ideas—with ideas which required unpacking.
In him and his works they were too compressed
to be intelligible; they were too brief to be
even witty. And as a thief might steal a
diamond and turn it into twenty farms, so the[Pg 46]
plagiarist of Blake might steal a sentence and
turn it into twenty volumes. It was profitable
to steal an epigram from Blake for three
reasons—first, that the original phrase was
small and would not leave a large gap; second,
that it was cosmic and synthetic and could be
applied to things in general; third, that it was
unintelligible and no one would know it again.
I could give innumerable instances of what I
mean; I will let one instance stand for the
rest. In the middle of that long poem which
is so disconnected that it may reasonably be
doubted whether it is a long poem at all (I
mean that commonly bearing the title “The
Auguries of Innocence”), he introduces these
two lines:
A careless and honest man would read these
lines and make nothing of them. A careful
thief might make out of them a whole entertaining
and symbolic romance, like “Gulliver’s
Travels” or “Erewhon.” The idea obviously
is this;—that we still for some reason admit the
tools of destruction to be nobler than the tools[Pg 49]
of production, because decorative art is expended
on the one and not on the other. The
sword has a golden hilt; but no plough has
golden handles. There is such a thing as a
sword of state; there is no such thing as a
scythe of state. Men come to court wearing
imitation swords; few men come to court
wearing imitation flails. It is fascinating to
reflect how fantastic a story might be written
upon this hint by Blake. But Blake does not
write the story; he only gives the hint, and
that so hurriedly that even as a hint it may
hardly be understood.
OOTHOON (1793)
Most of Blake’s quarrels were trivial, and
some were little short of discreditable. But
in his quarrel with Cromek and Stothard he
does really stand as the champion of all that
is heroic and ideal, as against all that
is worldly and insincere. The celebrated
Stothard was at this time in the height of
his earlier success; he occupied somewhat the
same relation to art and society that has been
occupied within our own time by Frederic
Leighton. He was, like Leighton, an accomplished
draughtsman, a man of slight but
genuine poetic feeling, an artist who thoroughly[Pg 50]
realised that the aim of art was to
please. Ruskin said of him very truly (I
forget the exact words) that there were no
thorns to his roses. At the same time, his
smoothness was a smoothness of innocence
rather than a smoothness of self-indulgence;
his work has a girlish timidity rather than any
real conventional cowardice; he was a true
artist in a somewhat effeminate style of art.
Nor is there any reason to doubt that his
personal character was as clean and good-natured
as his pictures. It may be that he began
his without any commission
from Cromek, or it may be that he took the
commission from Cromek without the least
idea that the conception had been borrowed
from Blake. That Cromek treated Blake badly
is beyond dispute; that Stothard treated him
badly is unproved; but Blake was not much in
the habit of waiting for proof in such cases.
Stothard, I say, may not have been morally in
the wrong at all. But he was intellectually
and critically very much in the wrong;
and Blake pointed this out in a pamphlet
which, though defaced here and there with
his fantastic malice, is a solid and powerful[Pg 51]
contribution to artistic and literary
criticism.
Stothard, the elegant gentleman, the man
of sensibility, the eighteenth century æsthete,
cast his condescending eye upon the Middle
Ages. He was of that age and school that
only saw the Middle Ages by moonlight.
Chaucer’s Pilgrims were to him a quaint
masquerade of hypocrisy or superstition, now
only interesting from its comic or antiquated
costume. The monk was amusing because he
was fat, the wife of Bath because she was gay,
the Squire because he was dandified, and so
on. Blake knew as little about the Middle
Ages as Stothard did; but Blake knew about
eternity and about man; he saw the image of
God under all garments. And in a rage which
may really be called noble he tore in pieces
Stothard’s antiquarian frivolity, and asked him
to look with a more decent reverence at the
great creations of a great poet. Stothard
called the young Squire of Chaucer “a fop.”
Blake points out forcibly and with fine critical
truth that the daintiness of the Squire’s dress
is the mere last touch to his youth, gaiety, and
completeness; but that he was no fop at all, but[Pg 52]
a serious, chivalrous, and many-sided gentleman
who enjoyed books, understood music, and was
hardy and prompt in battle. Moreover, he is
definitely described as humble, reverent, and
full of filial respect. That such a man should
be called a fop because of a frill or a feather
Blake rightly regarded as a sign of the mean
superficiality of his rival’s ideas. Stothard
spoke of “the fair young wife of Bath”;
Blake placidly points out that she had had
four husbands, and was, as in Blake’s picture, a
loud, lewd, brazen woman of quite advanced
age, but of enormous vitality and humour.
Stothard makes the monk the mere comic
monk of commonplace pictures, shaped like a
wine barrel and as full of wine. Blake points
out that Chaucer’s monk was a man, and an
influential man; not without sensual faults,
but also not without dignity and authority.
Everywhere, in fact, he reminds his opponent
that in entering the world of Chaucer he is
not entering a fancy-dress ball, but a temple
carved with colossal and eternal images of the
gods of good and evil. Stothard was only
interested in Chaucer’s types because they
were dead; Blake was interested in them[Pg 55]
because they cannot die. In many of Blake’s
pictures may be found one figure quite monotonously
recurrent—the figure of a monstrously
muscular old man, with hair and beard like a
snowstorm, but with limbs like young trees.
That is Blake’s root conception; the Ancient
of Days; the thing which is old with all the
awfulness of its past, but young with all the
energies of its future.
SPELLS OF LAW (1793)
I make no excuse for dwelling at length on
this in a life of Blake; it is the most important
event. It is worth while to describe this
quarrel between Blake and Stothard, because
it is really a symbolic quarrel, interesting to
the whole world of artists and important to
the whole destiny of art. It is the quarrel
between the artist who is a poet and the artist
who is only a painter. In many of his merely
technical designs Blake was a better and bolder
artist than Stothard; still, I should admit, and
most people who saw the two pictures would
be ready to admit, that Stothard’s as a mere piece of drawing and painting
is better than Blake’s. But this if anything
only makes the whole argument more
certain. It is the duel between the artist who[Pg 56]
wishes only to be an artist and the artist who
has the higher and harder ambition to be a
man—that is, an archangel. Or, again, it might
be put thus: whether an artist ought to be a universalist
or whether he is better as a specialist.
Now against the specialist, against the man
who studies only art or electricity, or the
violin, or the thumbscrew or what not, there
is only one really important argument, and
that, for some reason or other, is never offered.
People say that specialists are inhuman; but
that is unjust. People say an expert is not a
man; but that is unkind and untrue. The
real difficulty about the specialist or expert
is much more singular and fascinating. The
trouble with the expert is never that he is not
a man; it is always that wherever he is not
an expert he is too much of an ordinary man.
Wherever he is not exceptionally learned he
is quite casually ignorant. This is the great
fallacy in the case of what is called the
impartiality of men of science. If scientific
men had no idea beyond their scientific work
it might be all very well—that is to say, all
very well for everybody except them. But the
truth is that, beyond their scientific ideas, they[Pg 57]
have not the absence of ideas but the presence
of the most vulgar and sentimental ideas that
happen to be common to their social clique. If
a biologist had no views on art and morals it
might be all very well. The truth is that a
biologist has all the wrong views of art and
morals that happen to be going about in the
smart set in his time. If Professor Tyndall
had held no views about politics, he could have
done no harm with his views about evolution.
Unfortunately, however, he held a very low
order of political ideas from his sectarian and
Orange ancestry; and those ideas have
poisoned evolution to this day. In short, the
danger of the mere technical artist or expert is
that of becoming a snob or average silly man
in all things not affecting his peculiar topic of
study; wherever he is not an extraordinary
man he is a particularly stupid ordinary man.
The very fact that he has studied machine
guns to fight the French proves that he has
not studied the French. Therefore he will
probably say that they eat frogs. The very
fact that he has learnt to paint the light on
medieval armour proves that he has not studied
the medieval philosophy. Therefore he will[Pg 58]
probably suppose that medieval barons did
nothing but order vassals into the dungeons
beneath the castle moat. Now all through the
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries art,
that is, the art of painting, suffered terribly from
this conventional and uncultured quality in the
working artist. People talk about something
pedantic in the knowledge of the expert; but
what ruins mankind is the ignorance of the
expert. In the period of which we speak the
experts in painting were bursting with this
ignorance. The early essays of Thackeray are
full of the complaint, that the whole trouble
with painters was that they only knew how to
paint. If they had painted unimportant or
contemptible subjects, all would have been
well; if they had painted the nearest donkey
or lamp-post no one would have complained.
But exactly because they were experts they
fell into the mere snobbish sentimentalism of
their times; they insisted on painting all the
things they had read about in the cheapest
history books and the most maudlin novels.
As Thackeray has immortally described in the
case of Mr Gandish, they painted Boadishia
and declared that they had discovered “in[Pg 59]
their researches into ’istry” the story of King
Alfred and the Cakes. In other words, the
expert does not escape his age; he only lays
himself open to the meanest and most obvious
of the influences of his age. The specialist
does not avoid having prejudices; he only
succeeds in specialising in the most passing
and illiterate prejudices.
Of all this type of technical ignorance
Stothard is absolutely typical. He was an
admirable instance of the highly cultivated
and utterly ignorant man. He had spent his
life in making lines swerve smoothly and
shadows creep exactly into their right place;
he had never had any time to understand the
things that he was drawing except by their
basest and most conventional connotation.
Somebody suggested that he should draw
some medieval pilgrims—that is, some vigorous
types in the heyday of European civilisation
in the act of accepting the European religion.
But he who alone could draw them right was
especially likely to see them wrong. He had
learnt, like a modern, the truth from newspapers,
because he had no time to read even
encyclopedias. He had learnt how to paint[Pg 60]
armour and armorial bearings; it was too
much to expect him to understand them. He
had learnt to draw a horse; it was too late to
ask him to ride one. His whole business was
somehow or other to make pictures; and
therefore when he looked at Chaucer, he could
see nothing but the picturesque.
Against this sort of sound technical artist,
another type of artist has been eternally
offered; this was the type of Blake. It was
also the type of Michael Angelo; it was the
type of Leonardo da Vinci; it was the type of
several French mystics, and in our own country
and recent period, of Rossetti. Blake, as a
painter among other things, belongs to that
small group of painters who did something
else besides paint. But this is indeed a very
inadequate way of stating the matter. The
fuller and fairer way is this: that Blake was
one of those few painters who understood his
subject as well as his picture. I have already
said that I think Stothard’s picture of the
in a purely technical sense
better than his. Indeed, there is nothing to
be said against Stothard’s picture of the , except that it is not a picture[Pg 63]
of the . Blake (to summarise
the whole matter as simply as it
can be summarised) was in the tradition of
the best and most educated ideas about
Chaucer; Stothard was the inheritor of the
most fashionable ideas and the worst. The
whole incident cannot be without its moral
and effect for all discussions about the morality
or unmorality of art. If art could be unmoral
it might be all very well. But the truth is
that unless art is moral, art is not only immoral,
but immoral in the most commonplace,
slangy, and prosaic way. In the future, the
fastidious artists who refuse to be anything
but artists will go down to history as the embodiment
of all the vulgarities and banalities
of their time. People will point to a picture
by Mr Sargent or Mr Shannon and say, “See,
that man had caught all the most middle class
cant of the early twentieth century.”
FRONTISPIECE TO “AMERICA”
We can now recur, however, to the general
relations of Blake with his later patron. In a
phrase of singular unconscious humour Mr
Cromek accused Blake of “a want of common
politeness.” Common politeness certainly can
hardly be said to have been Blake’s strong[Pg 64]
point. But Cromek’s politeness was certainly
an uncommon sort of politeness. One is
tempted to be thankful that it is not a common
sort. Cromek’s notion of common politeness
was to give the artist a guinea a drawing on
the understanding that he should get some
more for engraving them, and then give the
engraving to somebody else who cost him next
to nothing. Blake, as we have said, resented
this startling simplicity of swindling. Blake
was in such matters a singular mixture of
madness and shrewdness in the judgment of
such things. He was the kind of man whom
a publisher found at one moment more vague
and viewless than any poet, and at the next
moment more prompt and rapacious than any
literary agent. He was sometimes above his
commercial enemy, sometimes below him; but
he never was on his level; one never knew
where he was. Cromek’s letter is a human
document of extraordinary sincerity and
interest. The Yorkshire publisher positively
breaks for once in his life into a kind of poetry.
He describes Blake as being “a combination
of the serpent and the dove.” He did not quite
realise, perhaps, that according to the New[Pg 65]
Testament he was paying Blake a compliment.
But the truth is, I fancy, that the painter and
poet had been one too many for the publisher.
I think that on any occasion Cromek would
have willingly forgiven Blake for showing the
harmlessness of the dove. I fancy that on
one occasion Blake must have shown the
wisdom of the serpent.
From the mere slavery of this sweater Blake
was probably delivered by the help of the
last and most human of his patrons, a young
man named John Linnell, a landscape painter
and a friend of the great Mulready. It is
extraordinary to think that he was young
enough to die in 1882; and that a man
who had read in the Prophetic Books the
last crusades of Blake may have lived to
read in the newspapers some of the last
crusades of Gladstone. This man Linnell
covers the last years of Blake as with an
ambulance tent in the wilderness. Blake
never had any ugly relations with Linnell,
just as he had never had any with Butts.
His quarrels had wearied many friends; but
by this time I think he was too weary even to
quarrel. On Linnell’s commission he began[Pg 66]
a system of illustrations to Dante; but I think
that no one expected him to live to finish it.
His last sickness fell upon him very slowly,
and he does not seem to have taken much
notice of it. He continued perpetually his
pictorial designs; and as long as they were
growing stronger he seems to have cared very
little for the fact that he was growing weaker
himself. One of the last designs he made was
one of the strongest he ever made—the tremendous
image of the Almighty bending
forward, foreshortened in a colossal perspective,
to trace out the heavens with a compass.
Nowhere else has he so well expressed his
primary theistic ideas—that God, though
infinitely gigantic, should be as solid as a
giant. He had often drawn men from the
life; not unfrequently he had drawn his dead
men from the life. Here, according to his
own conceptions, he may be said to have
drawn God from the life. When he had
finished the portrait (which he made sitting
up in his sick-bed) he called out cheerfully,
[Pg 69]“What shall I draw after that?” Doubtless[Pg 67]
he racked his brain for some superlative spirit
or archangel which would not be a mere bathos
after the other. His rolling eyes (those round
lustrous eyes which one can always see roll in
his painted portraits) fell on the old frail and
somewhat ugly woman who had been his
companion so long, and he called out,
“Catherine, you have been an angel to me;
I will draw you next.” Throwing aside the
sketch of God measuring the universe, he
began industriously to draw a portrait of his
wife, a portrait which is unfortunately lost, but
which must have substantially resembled the
remarkable sketch which a friend drew some
months afterwards; the portrait of a woman at
once plain and distinguished, with a face that
is supremely humorous and at once harsh and
kind. Long before that portrait was drawn,
long before those months had elapsed, William
Blake was dead.
PRELUDIUM (1793)
Whatever be the explanation, it is quite
certain that Blake had more positive joy on
his death-bed than any other of the sons of
Adam. One has heard of men singing hymns
on their death-beds, in low plaintive voices.
Blake was not at all like that on his death-bed:[Pg 70]
the room shook with his singing. All his songs
were in praise of God, and apparently new: all
his songs were songs of innocence. Every now
and then he would stop and cry out to his wife,
“Not mine! Not mine!” in a sort of ecstatic
explanation. He truly seemed to wait for the
opening of the door of death as a child waits
for the opening of the cupboard on his birthday.
He genuinely and solemnly seemed to hear
the hoofs of the horses of death as a baby
hears on Christmas eve the reindeer-hooves
of Santa Claus. He was in his last moments
in that wonderful world of whiteness in which
white is still a colour. He would have clapped
his hands at a white snowflake and sung as at
the white wings of an angel at the moment
when he himself turned suddenly white with
death.
And now, after a due pause, someone will ask
and we must answer a popular question which,
like many popular questions, is really a somewhat
deep and subtle one. To put the matter
quite simply, as the popular instinct would put
it, “Was William Blake mad?” It is easy[Pg 71]
enough to say, of course, in the non-committal
modern manner that it all depends on how you
define madness. If you mean it in its practical
or legal sense (which is perhaps the most really
useful sense of all), if you mean was William
Blake unfit to look after himself, unable to
exercise civic functions or to administer property,
then certainly the answer is “No.”
Blake was a citizen, and capable of being a very
good citizen. Blake, so far from being incapable
of managing property, was capable (in so
far as he chose) of collecting a great deal of it.
His conduct was generally business-like; and
when it was unbusiness-like it was not through
any subhuman imbecility or superhuman abstraction,
but generally through an unmixed
exhibition of very human bad temper. Again,
if when we say “Was Blake mad?” we mean
was he fundamentally morbid, was his soul
cut off from the universe and merely feeding
on itself, then again the answer is emphatically
“No.” There was nothing defective about
Blake; he was in contact with all the songs
and smells of the universe, and he was entirely
guiltless of that one evil element which is
almost universal in the character of the morbidly[Pg 72]
insane—I mean secrecy. Yet again, if we mean
by madness anything inconsistent or unreasonable,
then Blake was not mad. Blake was one
of the most consistent men that ever lived, both
in theory and practice. Blake may have been
quite wrong, but he was not in the least unreasonable.
He was quite as calm and scientific
as Herbert Spencer on the basis of his own
theory of things. He was vain to the last
degree; but it was the gay and gusty vanity
of a child, not the imprisoned pride of a maniac.
In all these aspects we can say with confidence
that the man was not at least obviously mad
or completely mad. But if we ask whether
there was not some madness about him, whether
his naturally just mind was not subject to some
kind of disturbing influence which was not
essential to itself, then we ask a very different
question, and require, unless I am mistaken, a
very different answer.
When all Philistine mistakes are set aside,
when all mystical ideas are appreciated, there
is a real sense in which Blake was mad. It is
a practical and certain sense, exactly like the
sense in which he was not mad. In fact, in
almost every case of his character and extraordinary[Pg 73]
career we can safely offer this proposition,
that if there was something wrong with it,
it was wrong even from his own best standpoint.
People talk of appealing from Philip drunk to
Philip sober; it is easy to appeal from Blake
mad to Blake sane.
When Blake lived at Felpham angels appear
to have been as native to the Sussex trees as
birds. Hebrew patriarchs walked on the
Sussex Downs as easily as if they were in the
desert. Some people will be quite satisfied
with saying that the mere solemn attestation
of such miracles marks a man as a madman or
a liar. But that is a short cut of sceptical dogmatism
which is not far removed from impudence.
Surely we cannot take an open question
like the supernatural and shut it with a bang,
turning the key of the mad-house on all the
mystics of history. To call a man mad because
he has seen ghosts is in a literal sense religious
persecution. It is denying him his full dignity
as a citizen because he cannot be fitted into
your theory of the cosmos. It is disfranchising
him because of his religion. It is just as intolerant
to tell an old woman that she cannot
be a witch as to tell her that she must be a[Pg 74]
witch. In both cases you are setting your own
theory of things inexorably against the sincerity
or sanity of human testimony. Such dogmatism
at least must be quite as impossible to anyone
calling himself an agnostic as to anyone calling
himself a spiritualist. You cannot take the
region called the unknown and calmly say that
though you know nothing about it, you know
that all its gates are locked. You cannot say,
“This island is not discovered yet; but I am
sure that it has a wall of cliffs all round it and
no harbour.” That was the whole fallacy of
Herbert Spencer and Huxley when they talked
about the unknowable instead of about the
unknown. An agnostic like Huxley must
concede the possibility of a gnostic like Blake.
We do not know enough about the unknown to
know that it is unknowable.
If, then, people call Blake mad merely for
seeing ghosts and angels, we shall venture to
dismiss them as highly respectable but very
bigoted people. But then, again, there is
another line along which the same swift
assumption can be made. While he was at
Felpham Blake’s eccentricity broke out on
another side. A quality that can frankly be[Pg 77]
called indecency appeared in his pictures,
his opinions, and to some extent in his
conduct. But it was an idealistic indecency.
Blake’s mistake was not so much that he
aimed at sin as that he aimed at an impossible
and inhuman sinlessness. It is said that he
proposed to his wife that they should live
naked in their back garden like Adam and
Eve. If the husband ever really proposed
this, the wife succeeded in averting it. But
in his verse and prose, particularly in some of
the Prophetic Books, he began to talk very
wildly. However far he really meant to go
against common morality, he certainly meant
(like Walt Whitman) to go the whole way
against common decency. He professed to
regard the veiling of the most central of
human relations as the unnatural cloaking of a
natural work. He was never at a loss for an
effective phrase; and in one of his poems on
this topic he says finely if fallaciously—
A PROPHECY (1793)
But his speculations went past decorum and
at least touched the idea of primary law. In[Pg 78]
some parts of the Prophetic Books (written
in the period which may fairly be called a
paroxysm) he really seems to be preaching the
idea that sin is sometimes a good thing
because it leads to forgiveness. I cannot
think this idea does much credit to Blake’s
power of logic, which was generally good.
The very fact of forgiveness implies that what
led up to it was evil. But though the position
is hardly rational, it is quite unfair to say that
it is insane. It is no sillier or more untenable
than a hundred sophistries that one may hear
at every tea-table or read in every magazine.
A little while ago the family of a young lady
attempted to shut her up in an asylum because
she believed in Free Love. This atrocious
injustice was stopped; but many people wrote
to the papers to say that marriage was a very
fine thing—as indeed it is. Of course the
answer was simple: that if everyone with silly
opinions were locked up in an asylum, the
asylums of the twentieth century would have
to be somewhat unduly enlarged. The same
common-sense applies to the case of Blake.
That he did maintain some monstrous propositions
proves that he was not always right,[Pg 79]
that he had even a fine faculty for being
exceedingly wrong. But it does not prove
that he was a madman or anything remotely
resembling one. Nor is there any reason to
suppose that he was carried into any practice
inconsistent with his strong domestic affections.
Indeed, I think that much of Blake’s anarchy
is connected with his innocence. I have
noticed the combination more than once,
especially in men of Irish blood like Blake.
Heavy, full-blooded men feel the need of
bonds and are glad to bind themselves. But
the chaste are often lawless. They are
theoretically reckless, because they are practically
pure. Thus Ireland, while it is the
island of rebels is also the island of saints,
and might be called the island of virgins.
But when we have reached this point—that
this ugly element in Blake was an intrusion of
Blake’s mere theory of things—we have come,
I think, very close to the true principle to be
pursued in estimating his madness or his sanity.
Blake the mere poet, would have been decent
and respectable. It was Blake the logician[Pg 80]
who was forced to be almost blackguardly.
In other words, Blake was not mad; for such
part of him as was mad was not Blake. It was
an alien influence, and in a sense even an
accidental one; in an extreme sense it might
even be called antagonist. Properly to
appreciate what this influence was, we must
see the man’s artistic character as a whole and
notice what are its biggest forces and its
biggest defects when taken in the bulk—in
the whole mass of his poetry, his pictures, his
criticism and his conversation. Blake’s position
can be summed up as a sufficiently simple
problem. Blake could do so many things. Why
is it that he could do none of them quite right?
Blake was not a frail or fairy-like sort of
person; he had not the light unity, the capering
completeness of the entirely irresponsible
man. He had not the independence, one
might almost say the omnipotence, that comes
from being hopelessly weak. There was
nothing in him of Mr Skimpole; he was not
a puff of silver thistledown. He was not a
reed shaken in the wind in Jordan. He was
rather an oak rooted in England, but an oak
half killed by the ivy. The interesting[Pg 83]
question of spiritual botany is—What was the
ivy that half killed him? Originally his intellect
was not only strong but strongly rational—one
might almost say strongly sceptical.
There never was a man of whom it was less
true to say (as has been said) that he was a
light sensitive lyrist, a mere piper of pretty
songs for children. His mind was like a
ruined Roman arch; it has been broken by
barbarians; but what there is of it is Roman.
So it was with William Blake’s reason; it had
been broken (or cracked) by something; but
what there was of it was reasonable. In his
art criticism he never said anything that was
not strictly consistent with his first principles.
In his controversies, in the many matters in
which he argued angrily or venomously, he
never lost the thread of the argument. Like
every great mystic he was also a great
rationalist. Read Blake’s attack upon Stothard’s
picture of the , and you
will see that he could not only write a quite
sensible piece of criticism, but even a quite
slashing piece of journalism. By nature one
almost feels that he might have done anything;
have conducted campaigns like Napoleon or[Pg 84]
studied the stars like Newton. But something,
when all is said and done, had eaten away
whole parts of that powerful brain, leaving
parts of it standing like great Greek pillars in
a desert. What was this thing?
A FEMALE DREAM (1793)
Madness is not an anarchy. Madness is a
bondage: a contraction. I will not call Blake
mad because of anything he would say. But
I will call him mad in so far as there was
anything he say. Now, there are notes
of this tyranny in Blake. It was not like
the actual disease of the mind that makes
a man believe he is a cat or a dog; it was
more like the disease of the nerves, which
makes a man say “dog” when he means “cat.”
One mental jump or jerk of this nature may
be especially remarked in Blake. He had in
his poetry one very peculiar habit, a habit
which cannot be considered quite sane. It
was the habit of being haunted, one may say
hag-ridden by a fixed phrase, which gets
itself written in ten separate poems on quite
different subjects, when it had no apparent
connection with any of them. The amusing[Pg 85]
thing is that the omnipresent piece of poetry
is generally the one piece that is quite incomprehensible.
The verse that Blake’s readers
can understand least seems always to be the
verse that Blake likes best. I give an ordinary
instance, if anything connected with Blake
can be called ordinary.
The harmless Hayley, who was a fool, but a
gentleman and a poet (a country gentleman
and a very minor poet), provoked Blake’s
indignation by giving him commissions for
miniatures when he wanted to do something
else, probably frescoes as big as the house.
Blake wrote the epigram—
And then, feeling that there was a lack of
colour and warmth in the portrait, he lightly
added, for no reason in particular, the lines—
There is, apparently, no trace here of any
allusion to fact. Hayley never tried to bereave
anybody’s life. He lacked even the adequate[Pg 86]
energy. Nevertheless I should not say for a
moment that this startling fiction proved Blake
to be mad. It proved him to be violent and
recklessly suspicious; but there was never the
least doubt that he was that. But now turn to
another poem of Blake’s, a merely romantic and
narrative poem called “Fair Eleanor,” which
is all about somebody acting on somebody else’s
wife. Here we find the same line repeated
word for word in quite another connection—
It is not a musical line; it does not resemble
English grammar to any great extent. Yet
Blake is somehow forced to put it into a poem
about a real person exactly as he had put it
into an utterly different poem about a fictitious
person. There seems no particular reason for
writing it even once; but he has to write it
again and again. This is what I do call a mad
spot on the mind. I should not call Blake
mad for hating Hayley or for boiling Hayley
(though he had done him nothing but kindness),
or for making up any statements however
monstrous or mystical about Hayley. I should
not in the least degree think that Blake was[Pg 87]
mad if he had said that he saw Hayley’s soul
in hell, that it had green hair, one eye, and a
serpent for a nose. A man may have a wild
vision without being insane; a man may have
a lying vision without being insane. But I
should smell insanity if in turning over Blake’s
books I found that this one pictorial image
obsessed him apart from its spiritual meaning;
if I found that the arms of the Black Prince
in “King Edward III.” were a cyclops vert
rampant, nosed serpentine; if I found that
Flaxman was praised for his kindness to a one-eyed
animal with green bristles and a snaky
snout; if Albion or Ezekiel had appeared to
Blake and commanded him to write a history
of the men in the moon, who are one-eyed,
green-haired, with long curling noses; if any
flimsy sketch or fine decorative pattern that
came from Blake’s pencil might reproduce
ceaselessly and meaninglessly the writhing
proboscis and the cyclopean eye. I should call
morbidity or even madness; for it would
be the triumph of the palpable image over
its own intellectual meaning. And there is
something of that madness in the dark obstinacy
or weakness that makes Blake introduce again[Pg 88]
and again these senseless scraps of rhyme, as
if they were spells to keep off the devil.
In four or five different poems, without any
apparent connection with those poems, occur
these two extraordinary lines—
In the abstract this might perhaps mean
something, though it would, I think, take most
people some time to see what it could mean.
In the abstract it may perhaps involve some
allusion to a universal law of sacrifice in
nature. In the concrete—that is, in the
context—it involves no allusion to anything in
heaven or earth. Here is another couplet
that constantly recurs—
This is worse still; for this cannot be merely
abstract. The ordinary rational reader will
naturally exclaim at last, with a not unnatural
explosion, “Who the devil is the grey monk?
and why should he be always bleeding in places
where he has no business?” Now to say that
this sort of thing is not insanity of some kind[Pg 91]
is simply to play the fool with the words. A
madman who writes this may be higher than
ordinary humanity; so may any madman in
Hanwell. But he is a madman in every sense
that the word has among men. I have taken
this case of actual and abrupt irrelevance as
the strongest form of the thing; but it has
other forms almost equally decisive. For
instance, Blake had a strong sense of humour,
but it was not under control; it could be
eclipsed and could completely disappear.
There was certainly a spouting fountain of
fierce laughter in the man who could write in
an epigram—
THE TYGER (1794)
Yet the laughter was as fitful as it was
fierce; and it can suddenly fail. Blake’s
sense of humour can sometimes completely
desert him. He writes a string of verses
against cruelty to the smallest creature as a
sort of mystical insult to the universe. It
contains such really fine couplets as these—
[Pg 92]Or again, in a more fanciful but genuinely
weird way—
And then, after all this excellent and quite
serious poetry, Blake can calmly write down
the following two lines—
One could hardly find a more Gilbertian
absurdity in the conjunction of ideas in the
whole of the “Bab Ballads” than the idea
that the success of some gentleman in the
society of ladies depends upon whether he
has previously at some time or other slightly
irritated an ox. Such sudden inaccesibility to
laughter must be called a morbid symptom.
It must mean a blind spot on the brain. The
whole thing, of course, would prove nothing
if Blake were a common ranter incapable of
writing well, or a common dunce incapable of
seeing a joke. Such a man might easily be[Pg 93]
sane enough: he might be as sane as he was
stupid. If Blake had always written badly
he might be sane. But a man who could
write so well and did write so badly must be
mad.
What was it that was eating away a part of
Blake’s brain? I venture to offer an answer
which in the eyes of many people will have
nothing to recommend it except the accident
of its personal sincerity. I firmly believe that
what did hurt Blake’s brain was the reality of
his spiritual communications. In the case of
all poets, and especially in the case of Blake,
the phrase “an inspired poet” commonly
means a good poet. About Blake it is
specially instinctive. And about Blake, I am
quite convinced, it is specially untrue. His
inspired poems were not his good poems. His
inspired poems were very often his particularly
bad ones; they were bad by inspiration. If a
ploughman says that he saw a ghost, it is not
quite sufficient to answer merely that he is a
madman. It may have been seeing the ghost
that drove him mad. His lunacy may not
prove the falsehood of his tale, but rather its
terrible truth. So in the same way I differ[Pg 94]
from the common or sceptical critics of a man
like Blake. Such critics say that his visions
were false because he was mad. I say he was
mad because his visions were true. It was
exactly because he was unnaturally exposed to
a hail of forces that were more than natural
that some breaches were made in his mental
continuity, some damage was done to his
mind. He was, in a far more awful sense
than Goldsmith, “an inspired idiot.” He was
an idiot because he was inspired.
When he said of “Jerusalem” that its
authors were in eternity, one can only say that
nobody is likely to go there to get any more
of their work. He did not say that the author
of “The Tyger” was in eternity; the author
of that glorious thing was in Carnaby Market.
It will generally be found, I think, with some
important exceptions, that whenever Blake
talked most about inspiration he was actually
least inspired. That is, he was least inspired
by whatever spirit presides over good poetry
and good thinking. He was abundantly
inspired by whatever spirit presides over bad
poetry or bad thinking. Whatever god
specialises in unreadable and almost unpronounceable[Pg 97]
verse was certainly present when
he invented the extraordinary history of
“William Bond” or the maddening metre of
the lines “To Mr Butts.” Whatever archangel
rules over utter intellectual error had certainly
spread his wings of darkness over Blake when
he came to the conclusion that a man ought to
be bad in order to be pardoned. But these
unthinkable thoughts are mostly to be found
in his most unliterary productions; notably in
the Prophetic Books. To put my meaning
broadly, the opinions which nobody can agree
with are mostly in the books that nobody can
read. I really believe that this was not from
Blake, but from his spirits. It is all very
well for great men, like Mr Rossetti and Mr
Swinburne, to trust utterly to the seraphim of
Blake. They may naturally trust angels—they
do not believe in them. But I do believe
in angels, and incidentally in fallen
angels.
HOLY THURSDAY (1794)
There is no danger to health in being a mystic;
but there may be some danger to health in
being a spiritualist. It would be a very poor[Pg 98]
pun to say that a taste for spirits is bad for the
health; nevertheless, oddly enough, though a
poor pun it is a perfectly correct philosophical
parallel. The difference between having a real
religion and having a mere curiosity about
psychic marvels is really very like the difference
between drinking beer and drinking brandy,
between drinking wine and drinking gin.
Beer is a food as well as a stimulant; so a
positive religion is a comfort as well as an
adventure. A man drinks his wine because it
is his favourite wine, the pleasure of his palate
or the vintage of his valley. A man drinks
alcohol merely because it is alcoholic. So a
man calls upon his gods because they are good
or at any rate good to him, because they are
the idols that protect his tribe or the saints
that have blessed his birthday. But spiritualists
call upon spirits merely because they are spirits;
they ask for ghosts merely because they are
ghosts. I have often been haunted with a fancy
that the creeds of men might be paralleled
and represented in their beverages. Wine
might stand for genuine Catholicism and ale
for genuine Protestantism; for these at least
are real religions with comfort and strength in[Pg 99]
them. Clean cold Agnosticism would be clean
cold water, an excellent thing, if you can get it.
Most modern ethical and idealistic movements
might be well represented by soda-water—which
is a fuss about nothing. Mr Bernard
Shaw’s philosophy is exactly like black coffee—it
awakens but it does not really inspire.
Modern hygienic materialism is very like
cocoa; it would be impossible to express one’s
contempt for it in stronger terms than that.
Sometimes, very rarely, one may come across
something that may honestly be compared to
milk, an ancient and heathen mildness, an
earthly yet sustaining mercy—the milk of
human kindness. You can find it in a few
pagan poets and a few old fables; but it is
everywhere dying out. Now if we adopt this
analogy for the sake of argument, we shall really
come back to the bad pun; we shall conclude
that a taste for spiritualism is very like a taste
for spirits. The man who drinks gin or
methylated spirit does it only because it
makes him super-normal; so the man who
with tables or planchettes invokes supernatural
beings invokes them only because they
are supernatural. He does not know that they[Pg 100]
are good or wise or helpful. He knows that
he desires the deity, but he does not even know
that he likes him. He attempts to invoke the
god without adoring him. He is interested in
whatever he can find out touching supernatural
existence; but he is not really filled
with joy as by the face of a divine friend, any
more than anyone actually likes the taste of
methylated spirit. In such psychic investigations,
in a word, there is excitement, but not
affectional satisfaction; there is brandy, but no
food.
Now Blake was in the most reckless, and
sometimes even in the most vulgar, sense a
spiritualist. He threw the doors of his mind
open to what the late George Macdonald
called in a fine phrase “the canaille of the
other world.” I think it is impossible to look
at some of the pictures which Blake drew,
under what he considered direct spiritual
dictation, without feeling that he was from
time to time under influences that were not
only evil but even foolishly evil. I give one
case out of numberless cases. Blake drew,
from his own vision a head which he called
. Anyone can[Pg 101]
appreciate the size and mystery of the idea;
and most people would form some sort of
fancy of how a great poetical painter, such as
Michael Angelo or Watts, would have rendered
the idea; they can conceive a face swarthy
and secret, or ponderous and lowering, or staring
and tropical, or Appolonian and pure.
Whatever was the man who built the pyramids,
one feels that he must (to put it mildly) have
been a clever man. We look at Blake’s picture
of the man, and with a start behold the face of
an idiot. Nay, we behold even the face of an
evil idiot, a leering, half-witted face with no
chin and the protuberant nose of a pig. Blake
declared that he drew this face from a real
spirit, and I see no reason to doubt that he
did. But if he did, it was not really the man
who built the pyramids; it was not any spirit
with whom a gentleman ought to wish to be
on intimate terms. That vision of swinish
silliness was really a bad vision to have, it
left a smell of demoniac silliness behind it.
I am very sure that it left Blake sillier than
it found him.
In this way, rightly or wrongly, I explain the
chaos and occasional weakness which perplexes[Pg 102]
Blake’s critics and often perplexed Blake
himself. I think he suffered from the great
modern loneliness and scepticism which is the
root of the sorrows of the mere spiritualist.
The tragedy of the spiritualist simply is that
he has to know his gods before he loves them.
But a man ought to love his gods before he
is sure that there are any. The sublime words
of St John’s Gospel permit of a sympathetic
parody; if a man love not God whom he has
not seen, how shall he love God whom he has
seen? If we do not delight in Santa Claus
even as a fancy, how can we expect to be
happy even if we find that he is a fact? But
a mystic like Blake simply puts up a placard
for the whole universe, like an old woman
letting lodgings. The mansion of his mind
was indeed a magnificent one; but no one
must be surprised if the first man that walked
into it was “the man who built the pyramids,”
the man with the face of a moon-calf. And
whether or no he built the pyramids, he
unbuilt the house.
But this conclusion touching Blake’s original
sanity but incidental madness brings us
abruptly in contact with the larger question[Pg 105]
of how far his soul and creed gained or suffered
from his whole position; his heterodoxy, his
orthodoxy, his attitude towards his age.
Properly to do all this we must do now at the
end of this book what ought (but the form
of the book forbade) more strictly to have
been done at the beginning; we must speak
as shortly as possible about the actual age in
which Blake lived. And we cannot do it
without saying something, which we will say
as briefly as possible, of that whole great
western society and tradition to which he
belonged and we belong equally; that
Christendom or continent of Europe which
is at once too big for us to measure and too
close for us to understand.
ARIEL
What was the eighteenth century? Or
rather (to speak less mechanically and with
more intelligence), what was that mighty
and unmistakable phase or mood through
which western society was passing about the
time that William Blake became its living
child? What was that persistent trend or
spirit which all through the eighteenth century
lifted itself like a very slow and very
smooth wave to the deafening breaker of the[Pg 106]
French Revolution? Of course it meant something
slightly different to all its different
children. Let us here ask ourselves what it
meant to Blake, the poet, the painter, and the
dreamer. Let us try to state the thing as
nearly as possible in terms of his spirit and in
relation to his unique work in this world.
Every man of us to-day is three men. There
is in every modern European three powers so
distinct as to be almost personal, the trinity
of our earthly destiny. The three may be
rudely summarised thus. First and nearest
to us is the Christian, the man of the historic
church, of the creed that must have coloured
our minds incurably whether we regard it (as
I do) as the crown and combination of the
other two, or whether we regard it as an
accidental superstition which has remained for
two thousand years. First, then, comes the
Christian; behind him comes the Roman, the
citizen of that great cosmopolitan realm of
reason and order in the level and equality of
which Christianity arose. He is the stoic who
is so much sterner than the anchorites. He is
the republican who is so much prouder than
kings. He it is that makes straight roads and[Pg 107]
clear laws, and for whom good sense is good
enough. And the third man—he is harder to
speak of. He has no name, and all true tales
of him are blotted out; yet he walks behind
us in every forest path and wakes within us
when the wind wakes at night. He is the
origins—he is the man in the forest. It
is no part of our subject to elaborate the
point; but it may be said in passing that the
chief claim of Christianity is exactly this—that
it revived the pre-Roman madness, yet brought
into it the Roman order. The gods had really
died long before Christ was born. What had
taken their place was simply the god of
government—Divus Cæsar. The pagans of
the real Roman Empire were nothing if not
respectable. It is said that when Christ was
born the cry went through the world that Pan
was dead. The truth is that when Christ was
born Pan for the first time began to stir in his
grave. The pagan gods had become pure
fables when Christianity gave them a new lease
of life as devils. I venture to wager that if
you found one man in such a society who
seriously believed in the personal existence of
Apollo, he was probably a Christian. Christianity[Pg 108]
called to a kind of clamorous resurrection
all the old supernatural instincts of the forests
and the hill. But it put upon this occult
chaos the Roman idea of balance and sanity.
Thus, marriage was a sacrament, but mere sex
was not a sacrament as it was in many of the
frenzies of the forest. Thus wine was a sacrament
with Christ; but drunkenness was not a
sacrament as with Dionysus. In short, Christianity
(merely historically seen) can best be
understood as an attempt to combine the
reason of the market-place with the mysticism
of the forest. It was an attempt to accept all
the superstitions that are necessary to man and
to be philosophic at the end of them. Pagan
Rome has sought to bring order or reason
among men. Christian Rome sought to bring
order and reason among gods.
Given these three principles, the epoch we
discuss can be defined. The eighteenth
century was primarily the return of reason—and
of Rome. It was the coming to the top
of the stoic and civic element in that triple
mixture. It was full, like the Roman world,[Pg 111]
of a respect for law. Note that the priest
still wears, in the main, the popular garb of
the Middle Ages: but the lawyer still wears
the head-dress of the eighteenth century.
Yet while the Roman world was full of rule
it was also full of revolution. But indeed the
two things necessarily go together. The
English used to boast that they had achieved
a constitutional revolution; but every revolution
must necessarily be a constitutional
revolution, in so far that it must have reference
to some antecedent theory of justice. A man
must have rights before he can have wrongs.
So it may be constantly remarked that the
countries which have done most to spread
legal generalisations and judicial decisions are
those most filled with political fury and
potential rebellion—Rome, for instance, and
France. Rome planted in every tribe and
village the root of the Roman law at the very
time when her own town was torn with faction
and bloody with partisan butcheries. France
forced intellectually on nearly all Europe an
excellent code of law, and she did it when her
own streets were hardly cleared of corpses,
when she was in a panting pause between two[Pg 112]
pulverising civil wars. And, on the other
hand, you may remark that the countries
where there is no revolution are the countries
where there is no law; where mental chaos
has clouded every intelligible legal principle—such
countries as Morocco and modern
England.
PRELUDIUM TO URIZEN (1794)
The eighteenth century, then, ended in
revolution because it began in law. It was
the age of reason, and therefore the age of
revolt. It is needless to say how systematically
it revived all the marks and motives of
that ancient pagan society in which Christianity
first arose. Its greatest art was
oratory, its favourite affectation was severity.
Its pet virtue was public spirit, its pet sin
political assassination. It endured the
pompous, but hated the fantastic; it had pure
contempt for anything that could be called
obscure. To a virile mind of that epoch, such
as Dr Johnson or Fox, a poem or picture that
did not at once explain itself was simply
like a gun that did not go off or a clock that
stopped suddenly: it was simply a failure, fit
for indifference or for a fleeting satire. In
spite of their solid convictions (for which they[Pg 113]
died) the men of that time always used the
word “enthusiast” as a term of scorn. All
that we call mysticism they called madness.
Such was the eighteenth century civilisation;
such was the strict and undecorated frame
from which look at us the blazing eyes of
William Blake.
So far Blake and his century are a mere
contrast. But here we must remember that
the three elements of Europe are not the
strata of a rock, but the strands of a rope;
since all three have existed not one of them
has ever appeared entirely unmixed. You
may call the Renascence pagan, but Michael
Angelo cannot be imagined as anything but
a Christian. You may call Thomas Aquinas
Christian, but you cannot say exactly what he
would have been without Aristotle the pagan.
You may, even in calling Virgil the poet of
Roman dignity and good sense, still ask
whether he did not remember something
older than Rome when he spoke of the good
luck of him who knew the field gods and the
old man of the forest. In the same way there
was even in the eighteenth century an element
of the purely Christian and an element of the[Pg 114]
purely primitive. And, as it happens, both
these non-rational (or non-Roman) strains
in the eighteenth century are particularly
important in considering the mental make-up
of William Blake. For the first alien strain in
this century practically represents all that is
effective and fine in this great genius, the
second strain represents without question all
that is doubtful, all that is irritating, and all
that is ineffective in him.
In the eighteenth century there were two
elements not taken from the Roman stoic or
the Roman citizen. The first was what our
century calls humanitarianism—what that
century called “the tear of sensibility.” The
old pagan commonwealths were democratic,
but they were not in the least humanitarian.
They had no tears to spare for a man at the
mercy of the community; they reserved all
their anger and sympathy for the community
at the mercy of a man. That individual compassion
for an individual case was a pure product
of Christianity; and when Voltaire flung
himself with fury into the special case of Calas,[Pg 117]
he was drawing all his energies from the religion
that he denied. A Roman would have
rebelled for Rome, but not for Calas. This
personal humanitarianism is the relic of
Christianity—perhaps (if I may say so) the
dregs of Christianity. Of this humanitarianism
or sentimentalism, or whatever it can best be
called, Blake was the enthusiastic inheritor.
Being the great man that he was, he naturally
anticipated lesser men than himself; and
among the men less than himself I should
count Shelley, for instance, and Tolstoy. He
carried his instinct of personal kindness to the
point of denouncing war as such—
Or, again—
HAR AND HEVA (1795)
No pagan republican, such as those on whom
the eighteenth century ethic was founded,
could have made head or tail of this mere
humanitarian horror. He could not even have
comprehended this idea—that war is immoral[Pg 118]
when it is not unjust. You cannot find this
sentiment in the pagans of antiquity, but you
can find it in the pagans of the eighteenth
century; you can find it in the speeches of
Fox, the soliloquies of Rousseau and even in
the sniggering of Gibbon. Here is an element
of the eighteenth century which is derived
darkly but indubitably from Christianity, and
in which Blake strongly shares. Regulus
has returned to be tortured and pagan Rome
is saved; but Christianity thinks a little of
Regulus. A man must be pitied even when
he must be killed. That individual compassion
provoked Blake to violent and splendid lines—
The eighteenth century did not find that pity
where it found its pagan liberty and its pagan
law. It took this out of the very churches
that it violated and from the desperate faith
that it denied. This irrational individual pity
is the purely Christian element in the eighteenth
century. This irrational individual pity
is the purely Christian element in William
Blake.
[Pg 119]
And second, there was another eighteenth
century element that was neither of Christian
nor of pagan Rome. It was from the origins;
it had been in the world through the whole
history of paganism and Christianity; it had
been in the world, but not of it. This element
appeared popularly in the eighteenth century
in an extravagant but unmistakable shape;
the element can be summed up in one word—Cagliostro.
No other name is quite so adequate;
but if anyone desires a nobler name (a very
noble one), we may say—Swedenborg. There
was in the eighteenth century, despite its obvious
good sense, this strain of a somewhat theatrical
thaumaturgy. The history of that element
is, in the most literal sense of the word, horribly
interesting. For it all works back to the mere
bogey feeling of the beginnings. It is amusing
to remark that in the eighteenth century for
the first time start up a number of societies
which calmly announce that they have existed
almost from the beginning of the world. Of
these, of course, the best known instance is the
Freemasons; according to their own account
they began with the Pyramids; but according
to everyone else’s account that can be effectively[Pg 120]
collected, they began with the eighteenth
century. Nevertheless the Freemasons are
right in the spirit even if they are wrong
in the letter. There is a tradition of things
analogous to mystical masonry throughout all
the historic generations of Paganism and
Christianity. There is a definite tradition
outside Christianity, not of rationalism, but
of paganism, paganism in the original and
frightful forest sense—pagan magic. Christianity,
rightly or wrongly, always discouraged
it on the ground that it was, or tended to be,
black magic. That is not here our concern.
The point is that this non-Christian supernaturalism,
whether it was good or bad, was
continuous in spite of Christianity. Its signs
and traces can be seen in every age: it hung
like a huge fume, in many monstrous forms,
over the dying Roman Empire: it was the
energy in the Gnostics who so nearly captured
Christianity, and who were persecuted for their
pessimism; in the full sunlight of the living
Church it dared to carve its symbols upon the
tombs of the Templars; and when the first
sects raised their heads at the Reformation, its
ancient and awful voice was heard.
[Pg 121]
[Pg 123]
PHILANDER’S DUST (1796)
[Pg 122]
Now the eighteenth century was primarily
the release (as its leaders held) of reason and
nature from the control of the Church. But
when the Church was once really weakened, it
was the release of many other things. It was
not the release of reason only, but of a more
ancient unreason. It was not the release of
the natural, but also of the supernatural, and
also, alas! of the unnatural. The heathen
mystics hidden for two thousand years came
out of their caverns—and Freemasonry was
founded. It was entirely innocent in the
manner of its foundation; but so were all the
other resurrections of this ancestral occultism.
I give but one obvious instance out of many.
The idea of enslaving another human soul,
without lifting a finger or making a gesture of
force, of enslaving a soul simply by willing its
slavery, is an idea which all healthy human
societies would regard and did regard as
hideous and detestable, if true. Throughout
all the Christian ages the witches and warlocks
claimed this abominable power and boasted of
it. They were (somewhat excusably) killed
for their boasting. The eighteenth century
rationalist movement came, intent, thank God,[Pg 124]
upon much cleaner things, upon common
justice and right reason in the state. Nevertheless
it did weaken Christianity, and in weakening
Christianity it uplifted and protected
the wizard. Mesmer stepped forward, and for
the first time safely affirmed this infamous
power to exist: for the first time a warlock
could threaten spiritual tyranny and not be
lynched. Nevertheless, if a mesmerist really
had the powers which some mesmerists have
claimed, and which most novels give to him,
there is (I hope) no doubt at all that any
decent mob would drown him like a witch.
The revolt of the eighteenth century, then,
did not merely release naturalism, but a certain
kind of supernaturalism also. And of this
particular kind of supernaturalism, Blake is
particularly the heir. Its coarse embodiment
is Cagliostro. Its noble embodiment is
Swedenborg. But in both cases it can be
remarked that the mysticism marks an effort
to escape from or even to forget the historic
Christian, and especially the Catholic Church.
Cagliostro, being a man of mean spirituality,
separated himself from Catholicism by rearing
against it a blazing pageant of mystical[Pg 125]
paganism, of triangles, secret seals, Eleusinian
initiation, and all the vulgar refinements of a
secret society. Swedenborg, being a man of
large and noble spirituality, marked his separation
from Catholicism by inventing out of his
own innocence and genius nearly all the old
Catholic doctrines, sincerely believing them to
be his own discoveries. It is startling to note
how near Swedenborg was to Catholicism—in
his insistence on free will, for instance, on the
humanity of the incarnate God, and on the
relative and mystical view of the Old Testament.
There was in Blake a great deal of
Swedenborg (as he would have been the first
to admit), and there was, occasionally, a little
of Cagliostro. Blake did not belong to a secret
society: for, to tell the truth, he had some
difficulty in belonging to any society. But
Blake did talk a secret language. He had
something of that haughty and oligarchic
element in his mysticism which marked the
old pagan secret societies and which marks
the Theosophists and oriental initiates to this
day. There was in him, besides the beneficent
wealth of Swedenborg, some touch of Cagliostro
and the Freemasons. These things Blake did[Pg 126]
inherit from that break up of belief that can
be called the eighteenth century: we will
debit him with these as an inheritance. And
when we have said this we have said everything
that can be said of any debt he owed. His
debts are cleared here. His estate is cleared
with this payment. All that follows is himself.
If a man has some fierce or unfamiliar
point of view, he must, even when he is
talking about his cat, begin with the origin
of the cosmos; for his cosmos is as private
as his cat. Horace could tell his pupils
to plunge into the middle of the thing,
because he and they were agreed about the
particular kind of thing; the author and his
readers substantially sympathised about the
beauty of Helen or the duties of Hector. But
Blake really had to begin at the beginning,
because it was a different beginning. This explains
the extraordinary air of digression and
irrelevancy which can be observed in some of
the most direct and sincere minds. It explains
the bewildering allusiveness of Dante; the
galloping parentheses of Rabelais; the gigantic
prefaces of Mr Bernard Shaw. The brilliant
man seems more lumbering and elaborate than[Pg 129]
anyone else, because he has something to say
about everything. The very quickness of his
mind makes the slowness of his narrative. For
he finds sermons in stones, in all the paving-stones
of the street he plods along. Every
fact or phrase that occurs in the immediate
question carries back his mind to the ages and
the initial power. Because he is original he
is always going back to the origins.
A GROUP (1804)
Take, for instance, Blake’s verse rather than
his pictorial art. When the average sensible
person reads Blake’s verse, he simply comes
to the conclusion that he cannot understand
it. But in truth he has a much better right
to offer this objection to Blake than to most
of the slightly elusive or eccentric writers to
whom he also offers it. Blake is obscure in
a much more positive and practical sense than
Browning is obscure—or, in another manner,
Mr Henry James is obscure. Browning is
generally obscure through an almost brutal
eagerness to get to big truths, which leads
him to smash a sentence and leave only bits
of it. Mr Henry James is obscure because
he wishes to trace tiny truths by a dissection
for which human language (even in his[Pg 130]
exquisite hands) is hardly equal. In short,
Browning wishes almost unscrupulously to
get to the point. Mr James refuses to admit
(on the mere authority of Euclid) that the
point is indivisible. But Blake’s obscurity is
startlingly different to both, it is at once more
simple and more impenetrable. It is not a
different diction but a different language. It is
not that we cannot understand the sentences;
it is that we often misunderstand the words.
The obscurity of Blake commonly consists in
the fact that the actual words used mean one
thing in Blake and quite another thing in the
dictionary. Mr Henry James wants to split
hairs; Browning wants to tear them up by
the roots. But in Blake the enigma is at once
plainer and more perplexing; it is simply this,
that if Blake says “hairs” he may not mean
hairs, but something else—perhaps peacocks’
feathers. To quote but one example out of a
thousand; when Blake uses the word “devils”
he generally means some particularly exalted
order of angels such as preside over energy
and imagination.
[Pg 131]
A VERBAL accident has confused the mystical
with the mysterious. Mysticism is generally
felt vaguely to be itself vague—a thing of
clouds and curtains, of darkness or concealing
vapours, of bewildering conspiracies or impenetrable
symbols. Some quacks have indeed
dealt in such things: but no true mystic ever
loved darkness rather than light. No pure
mystic ever loved mere mystery. The mystic
does not bring doubts or riddles: the doubts
and riddles exist already. We all feel the
riddle of the earth without anyone to
point it out. The mystery of life is the
plainest part of it. The clouds and curtains
of darkness, the confounding vapours,
these are the daily weather of this world.
Whatever else we have grown accustomed to,
we have grown accustomed to the unaccountable.
Every stone or flower is a hieroglyphic
of which we have lost the key; with every
step of our lives we enter into the middle of
some story which we are certain to misunderstand.
The mystic is not the man who makes
mysteries but the man who destroys them.
The mystic is one who offers an explanation
which may be true or false, but which is [Pg 132]
comprehensible—by which I mean, not that
it is always comprehended, but that it always
can be comprehended, because there is
always something to comprehend. The man
whose meaning remains mysterious fails,
I think, as a mystic: and Blake, as we shall
see, did, for certain peculiar reasons of his own,
often fail in this way. But even when he was
himself hard to be understood, it was never
through himself not understanding: it was
never because he was vague or mystified or
groping, that he was unintelligible. While his
utterance was not only dim but dense, his
opinion was not only clear, but even cocksure.
You and I may be a little vague about the
relations of Albion to Jerusalem, but Blake is as
certain about them as Mr Chamberlain about the
relations of Birmingham to the British Empire.
And this can be said for his singular literary
style even at his worst, that we always feel
that he is saying something very plain and
emphatic, even when we have not the wildest
notion of what it is.
There is one element always to be remarked
in the true mystic, however disputed his
symbolism, and that is its brightness of colour[Pg 135]
and clearness of shape. I mean that we may
be doubtful about the significance of a triangle
or the precise lesson conveyed by a crimson
cow. But in the work of a real mystic the
triangle is a hard mathematical triangle not
to be mistaken for a cone or a polygon. The
cow is in colour a rich incurable crimson, and
in shape unquestionably a cow, not to be
mistaken for any of its evolutionary relatives,
such as the buffalo or the bison. This can be
seen very clearly, for instance, in the Christian
art of illumination as practised at its best
in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
The Christian decorators, being true mystics,
were chiefly concerned to maintain the reality
of objects. For the highest dogma of the
spiritual is to affirm the material. By plain
outline and positive colour those pious artists
strove chiefly to assert that a cat was truly in
the eyes of God a cat and that a dog was preeminently
doggish. This decision of tint and
outline belongs not only to Blake’s pictures,
but even to his poetry. Even in his descriptions
there is no darkness, and practically, in the
modern sense, no distance. All his animals
are as absolute as the animals on a shield of[Pg 136]
heraldry. His lambs are of unsullied silver,
his lions are of flaming gold. His lion may
lie down with his lamb, but he will never
really mix with him.
THE WATERS OF LIFE (1804)
Really to make this point clear one would
have to go back to the twelfth century, or
perhaps to Plato. Metaphysics must be
avoided; they are too exciting. But the
root of the matter can be pretty well made
plain by one word. The whole difference is
between the old meaning and the new
meaning of the word “Realist.” In modern
fiction and science a Realist means a man who
begins at the outside of a thing: sometimes
merely at the end of a thing, knowing the
monkey only by its tail or the motor by its
smell. In the twelfth century a Realist meant
exactly the opposite; it meant a man who
began at the inside of a thing. The mediæval
philosopher would only have been interested
in a motor because it moved. He would have
been interested (that is) only in the central
and original idea of a motor—in its ultimate
motorishness. He would have been concerned
with a monkey only because of its monkeyhood;
not because it was like man but because it was[Pg 137]
unlike. If he saw an elephant he would not
say in the modern style, “I see before me a
combination of the tusks of a wild boar in
unnatural development, of the long nose of
the tapir needlessly elongated, of the tail
of the cow unusually insufficient,” and so
on. He would merely see an essence of
elephant. He would believe that this light
and fugitive elephant of an instant, as dancing
and fleeting as the May-fly in May, was nevertheless
the shadow of an eternal elephant,
conceived and created by God. When you
have quite realised this ancient sense in the
reality of an elephant, go back and read
William Blake’s poems about animals, as, for
instance, about the lamb and about the tiger.
You will see quite clearly that he is talking of
an eternal tiger, who rages and rejoices for ever
in the sight of God. You will see that he is
talking of an eternal and supernatural lamb, who
can only feed happily in the fields of Heaven.
It is exactly here that we find the full
opposition to that modern tendency that can
fairly be called “Impressionism.” Impressionism
is scepticism. It means believing
one’s immediate impressions at the expense of[Pg 138]
one’s more permanent and positive generalisations.
It puts what one notices above what
one knows. It means the monstrous heresy
that seeing is believing. A white cow at one
particular instant of the evening light may
be gold on one side and violet on the other.
The whole point of Impressionism is to
say that she really is a gold and violet cow.
The whole point of Impressionism is to say
that there is no white cow at all. What can
we tell, it cries, beyond what we can see?
But the essence of Mysticism is to insist that
there is a white cow, however veiled with
shadow or painted with sunset gold. Blessed
are they who have seen the violet cow and
who yet believe in the white one. To the
mystic a white cow has a sort of solid whiteness,
as if the cow were made out of frozen
milk. To him a white horse has a solid whiteness
as if he were cut out of the firm English
chalk, like the White Horse in the valley of
King Alfred. The cow’s whiteness is more
important than anything except her cowishness.
If Blake had ever introduced a white cow into
one of his pictures, there would at least have
been no doubt about either of those two[Pg 141]
elements. Similarly there would have been
no doubt about them in any old Christian
illumination. On this point he is at one with
all the mystics and with all the saints.
PLOUGHING THE EARTH (1804)
This explanation is really essential to the
understanding of Blake, because to the modern
mind it is so easy to understand him in the
opposite sense. In the ordinary modern
meaning Blake’s symbols are not symbols at
all. They are not allegories. An allegory
nowadays means taking something that does
not exist as a symbol of something that does
exist. We believe, at least most of us do,
that sin does exist. We believe (on highly
insufficient grounds) that a dragon does not
exist. So we make the unreal dragon an
allegory of the real sin. But that is not what
Blake meant when he made the lamb the
symbol of innocence. He meant that there
really is behind the universe an eternal image
called the Lamb, of which all living lambs are
merely the copies or the approximation. He
held that eternal innocence to be an actual
and even an awful thing. He would not have
seen anything comic, any more than the
Christian Evangelist saw anything comic, in[Pg 142]
talking about the Wrath of the Lamb. If
there were a lamb in one of Æsop’s fables,
Æsop would never be so silly as to represent
him as angry. But Christianity is more daring
than Æsop, and the wrath of the Lamb is its
great paradox. If there is an immortal lamb,
a being whose simplicity and freshness are for
ever renewed, then it is truly and really a
more creepy idea to horrify that being into
hostility than to defy the flaming dragon or
challenge darkness or the sea. No old wolf
or world-worn lion is so awful as a creature
that is always young—a creature that is always
newly born. But the main point here is
simpler. It is merely that Blake did not
mean that meekness was true and the lamb
only a pretty fable. If anything he meant
that meekness was a mere shadow of the everlasting
lamb. The distinction is essential to
anyone at all concerned for this rooted spirituality
which is the only enduring sanity of
mankind. The personal is not a mere figure
for the impersonal; rather the impersonal is a
clumsy term for something more personal than
common personality. God is not a symbol of
goodness. Goodness is a symbol of God.
[Pg 143]
Some very odd passages in Blake become
clear if we keep this in mind. I do not wish
in this book to dwell unduly on the other side
of Blake, the literary side. But there are
queer facts worth remarking, and this is
one of them. Blake was sincere; if he was
insane he was insane with the very solidity
and completeness of his sincerity. And the
quaintest mark of his sincerity is this, that in
his poetry he constantly writes things that
look like mere mistakes. He writes one of
his most colossal convictions and the average
reader thinks it is a misprint. To give only
one example not connected with the matter
in hand, the fine though somewhat frantic
poem called “The Everlasting Gospel” begins
exactly as the modern humanitarian and
essential Christian would like it to begin—
It goes on (to the modern Christian’s complete
satisfaction) with denunciations of priests and
praise of the pure Gospel Jesus; and then
comes a couplet like this—
[Pg 144]
And the modern humanitarian Christian finds
the orthodox Christ calmly rebuked because
he is the friend of all mankind. The
modern Christian simply blames the printer.
He can only suppose that the words “Thine”
and “Mine” have been put in each other’s
places by accident. Blake, however, as it
happens, meant exactly what he said. His
private vision of Christ was the vision of a
violent and mysterious being, often indignant
and occasionally disdainful.
When the reader has fully realised this idea of
a fierce and mysterious Jesus, he may then see
the sense in the statement that this Jesus
speaks in parables to the blind while the lower
and meaner Jesus pretends to be the friend of
all men. But you have to know Blake’s
doctrine before you can understand two lines
of his poetry.
[Pg 147]
Now in the point which is here prominently
before us there is a quotation (indeed there is
more than one) which follows this same fantastic
line. Let the ordinary modern man,
who is, generally speaking, not a materialist
and not a mystic, read first these two lines
from the poem falsely called “The Auguries
of Innocence”—
THE EAGLE (1804)
He will not find anything objectionable in
that, at any rate; probably he will bow his head
slightly to a truism, as if he were in church.
Then he will read the next two lines—
And there the modern man will sit down
suddenly on the sofa and come finally to the
conclusion that William Blake was mad and
nothing else.
But those last two lines express all that is
best in Blake and all that is best in all the
tradition of the mystics. Those two lines[Pg 148]
explain perfectly all that I have just pointed
out concerning the palpable visions and the
ponderous cherubim. This is the point about
Blake that must be understood if nothing else
is understood. God for him was not more and
more vague and diaphanous as one came near
to Him. God was more and more solid as one
came near. When one was far off one might
fancy Him to be impersonal. When one came
into personal relation one knew that He was a
person. The personal God was the fact. The
impersonal God of the Pantheists was a
kind of condescending symbol. According
to Blake (and there is more in the mental
attitude than most modern people will willingly
admit) this vague cosmic view is a mere merciful
preparation for the old practical and
personal view. God is merely light to the
merely unenlightened. God is a man to the
enlightened. We are permitted to remain for
a time evolutionary or pantheist until the time
comes when we are worthy to be anthropomorphic.
Understand this Blake conception that the
Divine is most bodily and definite when we
really know it, and the severe lines and sensational[Pg 149]
literalism of his other and more pictorial
work will be easily understood. Naturally his
divinities are definite, because he thought that
the more they were definite, the more they
were divine. Naturally God was not to him
a hazy light breaking through the tangle of
the evolutionary undergrowth, nor a blinding
brilliancy in the highest place of the heavens.
God was to him the magnificent old man depicted
in his dark and extraordinary illustrations
of “Job,” the old man with the monstrous
muscles, the mild stern eyebrows, the long
smooth silver hair and beard. In the dialogues
between Jehovah and Job there is little difference
between the two ponderous and palpable
old men, except that the vision of Deity is a
little more solid than the human being. But
then Blake held that Deity is more solid than
humanity. He held that what we call the
ideal is not only more beautiful but more
actual than the real. The ordinary educated
modern person staring at these “Job” designs
can only say that God is a mere elderly twin
brother of Job. Blake would have at once
retorted that Job was an image of God.
[Pg 150]
On consideration I incline to think that the
best way to summarise the art of Blake
from its most superficial to its most subtle
phase would be simply to take one quick
characteristic picture and discuss it fully;
first its title and subject, then its look and
shape, then its main principles and implications.
Let us take as a good working
example the weird picture which is reproduced
on one of the pages of Gilchrist’s “Life
of Blake.”
Now the obvious, prompt, and popular view
of Blake is very well represented by the mere
title of the picture. The first thing any
ordinary person will notice about it is that it
is called “The Ghost of a Flea”; and the
ordinary person will be very justifiably amused.
This is the first fact about William Blake—that
he is a joke; and it is a fact by no means
to be despised. Simply considered as a puzzle
or parlour game, Blake is extraordinarily
entertaining. I have known many cultivated
families made happy on winter evenings by
trying to understand the poem called “The
Mental Traveller,” or wondering what can be
the significance of the stanza that runs:
[Pg 153]
“ALBION! AROUSE THYSELF!” (1804)
The first fact is that we are puzzled and also
honestly amused. It is as if we had a highly
eccentric neighbour in the next garden.
Long before we like him we like gossiping
about him. And the mere title, “The Ghost
of a Flea,” represents all that makes Blake a
centre of literary gossip.
And now, having enjoyed the oddity of the
title, let us look at the picture. Let us
attempt to describe, so far as it can be done
in words instead of lines, what Blake thought
that the ghost of a flea would be like. The
scene suggests a high and cheerless corridor,
as in some silent castle of giants. Through
this a figure, naked and gigantic, is walking
with a high-shouldered and somewhat stealthy
stride. In one hand the creature has a
peculiar curved knife of a cruel shape; in
the other he has a sort of stone basin. The
most striking line in the composition is the
hard long curve of the spine, which goes up
without a single flicker to the back of the[Pg 154]
brutal head, as if the whole back view were
built like a tower of stone. The face is in
no sense human. It has something that is
aquiline and also something that is swinish;
its eyes are alive with a moony glitter that is
entirely akin to madness. The thing seems
to be passing a curtain and entering a room.
With this we may mark the second fact
about Blake—that if his only object is to
make our flesh creep, he does it well. His
bogeys are good reliable bogeys. There is
really something that appeals to the imagination
about this notion of the ghost of a flea
being a tall vampire stalking through tall
corridors at night. We have found Blake an
amusing madman and now an interesting
madman; let us go on with the process.
The third thing to note about this picture
is that for Blake the ghost of a flea means
the idea or principle of a flea. The principle
of a flea (so far as we can see it) is bloodthirstiness,
the feeding on the life of another,
the fury of the parasite. Fleas may have
other nobler sentiments and meditations,
but we know nothing about them. The
vision of a flea is a vision of blood; and that[Pg 155]
is what Blake has made of it. This is the
next point, then, to be remarked in his make-up
as a mystic; he is interested in the ideas
for which such things stand. For him the
tiger means an awful elegance; for him the
tree means a silent strength.
If it be granted that Blake was interested,
not in the flea, but in the idea of the flea, we
can proceed to the next step, which is a particularly
important one. Every great mystic
goes about with a magnifying glass. He sees
every flea as a giant—perhaps rather as an
ogre. I have spoken of the tall castle in which
these giants dwell; but, indeed, that tall tower
is the microscope. It will not be denied that
Blake shows the best part of a mystic’s attitude
in seeing that the soul of a flea is ten thousand
times larger than a flea. But the really interesting
point is much more striking. It is
the essential point upon which all primary
understanding of the art of Blake really turns.
The point is this: that the ghost of a flea is
not only larger than a flea, the ghost of a flea
is actually more solid than a flea. The flea
himself is hazy and fantastic compared to
the hard and massive actuality of his ghost.[Pg 156]
When we have understood this, we have understood
the second of the great ideas in Blake—the
idea of ideas.
To sum up Blake’s philosophy in any phrase
sufficiently simple and popular for our purpose
is not at all easy. For Blake’s philosophy was
not simple. Those who imagine that because
he was always talking about lambs and daisies,
about Jesus and little children, that therefore
he held a simple gospel of goodwill, entirely
misunderstand the whole nature of his mind.
No man had harder dogmas; no one insisted
more that religion must have theology. The
Everlasting Gospel was far from being a simple
gospel. Blake had succeeded in inventing in
the course of about ten years as tangled and
interdependent a system of theology as the
Catholic Church has accumulated in two
thousand. Much of it, indeed, he inherited
from ancient heretics who were much more
doctrinal than the orthodoxy which they
opposed. Notable among these were the
Gnostics, and in some degree the mad Franciscans
who followed Joachim de Flor. Very
few modern people would know an Akamoth
or an Æon if they saw him. Yet one would[Pg 159]
really have to be on rather intimate terms
with these old mystical gods and demons
before one could move quite easily in the
Cosmos which was familiar to Blake.
THE CRUCIFIXION (1804)
Let us, however, attempt to find a short and
popular statement of the position of Blake
and all such mystics. The plainest way of
putting it, I think, is this: this school especially
denied the authority of Nature. Some
went the extreme length of the mad Manichæans,
and declared the material universe
evil in itself. Some, like Blake, and most
of the poets considered it as a shadow or
illusion, a sort of joke of the Almighty. But
whatever else Nature was, Nature was not our
mother. Blake applies to her the strange
words used by Christ to Mary, and says to
Mother-Earth in many poems: “What have I
to do with thee?” It is common to connect
Blake and Wordsworth because of their ballads
about babies and sheep. They were utterly
opposite. If Wordsworth was the Poet of
Nature, Blake was specially the Poet of Anti-Nature.
Against Nature he set a certain entity
which he called Imagination; but the word as
commonly used conveys very little of what he[Pg 160]
meant by it. He did not mean something
shadowy or fantastic, but rather something
clear-cut, definite, and unalterable. By Imagination,
that is, he meant images; the
eternal images of things. You might shoot
all the lions on the earth; but you could not
destroy the Lion of Judah, the Lion of the
Imagination. You might kill all the lambs
of the world and eat them; but you could not
kill the Lamb of the Imagination, which was
the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sins
of the world. Blake’s philosophy, in brief,
was primarily the assertion that the ideal is
more actual than the real: just as in Euclid
the good triangle in the mind is a more actual
(and more practical) than the bad triangle on
the blackboard.
Many of Blake’s pictures become intelligible
(or as intelligible as they can become) if we
keep this principle in mind. For instance,
there is a fine design representing a naked and
heroic youth of great beauty tracing something
on the sand. The reader, when he looks at the
title of it, is interested to discover that this is
a portrait of Sir Isaac Newton. It was not so
much of an affectation as it seems. Blake from[Pg 161]
his own point of view really did think that
the Eternal Isaac Newton as God beheld him
was more of an actuality than the terrestrial
gentleman who happened to be elderly or
happened by some sublunary accident to wear
clothes. Therefore, when he calls it a
“portrait” he is not, from his own point of
view, talking nonsense. It is the form and
feature of someone who exists and who is
different from everyone else, just as if it were
the ordinary oil-painting of an alderman.
The most important conception can be found
in one sentence which he let fall as if by accident,
“Nature has no outline, but imagination
has.” If a clear black line when looked
at through a microscope was seen to be a ragged
and confused edge like a mop or a doormat,
then Blake would say, “So much the worse for
the microscope.” If pure lines existed only
in the human mind, then Blake would say,
“So much the better for the human mind.”
If the real earth grew damp and dubious when
it met and mixed itself with the sea, so much
the worse for the real earth. If the idea of
clean-cut truth existed only in the intellect, that
was the most actual place in which anything[Pg 162]
could exist. In short, Blake really insisted that
man as the image of God had a right to impose
form upon nature. He would have laughed to
scorn the notion of the modern evolutionist—that
Nature is to be permitted to impose formlessness
upon man. For him the lines in a
landscape were boundaries which he drew like
frontiers, by his authority as the plenipotentiary
ambassador of heaven. When he drew his
line round Leviathan he was drawing the
divine net around him; he tamed his bulls and
lions even by creating them. And when he
made in some picture a line between sea and
land that does not exist in Nature, he was
saying by supernatural right, “Thus far shalt
thou come, and no farther, and here shall thy
proud waves be stayed.”
I select the symbol of the sea partly because
Blake was himself fond of such elemental
images, and partly because it is an image
especially appropriate to Blake’s great conception
of the outline in the eternal imagination.
Nearly all phrases about the sea are specially
and spiritually false. People talk of the sea[Pg 165]
as vast and vague, drifting and indefinite; as
if the magic of it lay in having no lines or
boundaries. But the spell of the sea upon the
eye and the soul is exactly this: that it is the
one straight line in nature. They talk of the
infinite sea. Artistically it would be far truer
to talk of an infinite haystalk; for the haystalk
does slightly fade into a kind of fringe against
the sky. But the horizon line is not only hard
but , like a fiddle-string. I have always
a nervous fear that the sea-line will snap
suddenly. And it is exactly this mathematical
decision in the sea that makes it so romantic
a background for fighting and human figures.
England was called in Catholic days the garden
of Mary. The garden is all the more beautiful
because it is enclosed in four hard angular
walls of sapphire or emerald. Any mere tuft
or twig can curve with a curve that is incalculable.
Any scrap of moss can contain in itself
an irregularity that is infinite. The sea is the
one thing that is really exciting because the
sea is the one thing that is flat.
THE JUDGMENT DAY (1806)
Whether, however, these conclusions can be
accepted by the reader as true, they can at
least be accepted as typifying the kind of thing[Pg 166]
which William Blake believed to be true. He
would have felt the sea not as a waste but as
a wall. Nature had no outline, but imagination
had. And it was imagination that was
trustworthy.
This definition explains other things. Blake
was enthusiastically in favour of the French
Revolution; yet he enthusiastically hated that
school of sceptics which, in the opinion of
many, made the Revolution possible. He did
not mind Marat; but he detested Voltaire.
The reason is obvious in the light of his views
on Nature and Imagination. The Republican
Idealists he liked because they were Idealists,
because their abstract doctrines about justice
and human equality were abstract doctrines.
But the school of Voltaire was naturalistic; it
loved to remind man of his earthly origin and
even of his earthly degradation. The war, which
Blake loved, was a war of the invisible against
the visible. Valmy and Arcola were part of such
a war; it was a war between the visible kings
and the invisible Republic. But Voltaire’s war
was exactly the opposite; it was a discrediting
of the invisible Church by the indecent exhibition
of the real Church, with its fat friars or its[Pg 167]
foolish old women. Blake had no sympathy
with this mere flinging of facts at a great
conception. In a really powerful and exact
metaphor he describes the powerlessness of
this earthly and fragmentary sceptical attack.
An excellent image for a mere attack by
masses of detail.
There were some of Blake’s intellectual
conceptions which I have not professed either
to admire or to defend. Some of his views
were really what the old mediæval world called
heresies and what the modern world (with an
equally healthy instinct but with less scientific
clarity) calls fads. In either case the definition
of the fad or heresy is not so very difficult. A
fad or heresy is the exaltation of something
which, even if true, is secondary or temporary
in its nature against those things which are
essential and eternal, those things which always
prove themselves true in the long run. In
short, it is the setting up of the mood against[Pg 168]
the mind. For instance: it is a mood, a
beautiful and lawful mood, to wonder how
oysters really feel. But it is a fad, an ugly
and unlawful fad, to starve human beings
because you will not let them eat oysters. It
is a beautiful mood to feel impelled to assassinate
Mr Carnegie; but it is a fad to maintain
seriously that any private person has a right
to do it. We all have emotional moments in
which we should like to be indecent in a
drawing-room; but it is faddist to turn all
drawing-rooms into places in which one is
indecent. We all have at times an almost
holy temptation suddenly to scream out very
loud; but it is heretical and pedantic really to
go on screaming for the remainder of your
natural life. If you throw one bomb you
are only a murderer; but if you keep on
persistently throwing bombs you are in awful
danger of at last becoming a prig. It has been
this trouble that has partly poisoned the people
from which William Blake inherited, if not his
blood, at least his civilization. The real trouble
with Puritanism was not that it was a senseless
prejudice nor yet altogether (as would seem
superficially obvious) that it was a mere form[Pg 171]
of devil-worship. It was none of these things
in its first and freshest motive.
THE TOMB (1806)
Puritanism was an honourable mood; it was
a noble fad. In other words, it was a highly
creditable mistake. We have all felt the
frame of mind in which one wishes to smash
golden croziers and mitres merely because
they are golden. We all know how natural it
is at certain moments to feel a profound thirst
to kick clergymen simply because they are
clergymen. But if we seriously ask ourselves
whether in the long run humanity is not
happier with gold in its religion rather than
mere drab, then we come to the conclusion
that the gold on cross or cope does give more
pleasure to most men than it gives pain, for a
moment, to us. If we really ask ourselves if
religions do not work better with a definite
priesthood to do the drudgery of religion, we
come to the conclusion that they do work
better. Anti-clericalism is a generous and
ideal mood; clericalism is a permanent and
practical necessity. To put the matter in an
easier and more everyday metaphor, it is
natural for any poor Londoner to feel at times
an abstract aspiration to beat the Lord Mayor[Pg 172]
of London. But it does not follow that it
would really have been a kindness to poor
Londoners to abolish the Lord Mayor’s Show.
Now it is in this sense that we may truly
say that Blake (upon one side of his mind)
was something worse than a maniac—he was a
faddist. He did permit aspirations or prejudices
which are accidental or one-sided to capture
and control him at the expense of things really
more human and enduring: things which he
shared with all the children of men. I do
not allude to his supernaturalism; for on that
he is in no sense alone, nor even specially
eccentric. I do not refer to his love of the
gorgeous, the terrible or even the secretive
of temples, initiations, and hieroglyphic religion.
For that sort of mystery is really quite popular
and even democratic. That sort of secrecy
is a very open secret.
It is usual to hear a man say in modern
England that he has too much common sense
to believe in ghosts. But common sense is in
favour of a belief in ghosts, the common sense
of mankind. It is usual to hear a man say
that he likes common sense and does not like
the mummeries and flummeries of church[Pg 173]
ritual. But common sense is in favour of
mummery and ritualism, the common sense
of mankind. The man who attempts to do
without symbols is a prophet so austere and
isolated as to be dangerously near to a
madman. The man who does not believe in
ghosts is a solitary fanatic and lonely dreamer
among the sons of men. Therefore I do not
in any sense count even his craziest visions or
wildest symbols among the real fads or
eccentricities of Blake. But he had mental
attitudes which were really fads and eccentricities,
in this essential sense, that they were
not exaggerations of a general human feeling
but definite denials of it. He did not lead
humanity, but attacked or even obstructed it.
Many instances might be given of the kind of
thing I mean; there was something of it in
Blake’s persistent and even pedantic insistence
that war as war is evil. There was something
of Tolstoy in Blake; and that means something
that is inhuman as well as something
that is heroic. But his allusions to this were
occasional and perhaps even accidental, and
better cases could certainly be found. The
essential of all the cases is, however, that when[Pg 174]
he went wrong it was as an intellectual and
not as a poet.
Take, for example, his notion of going naked.
Here I think Blake is merely a sort of hard
theorist. Here, in spite of his imagination
and his laughter, there was even a touch of
the prig about him. He was obscene on
principle. So to a great extent was Walt
Whitman. A dictionary is supposed to contain
all words, so it has to contain coarse words.
“Leaves of Grass” was planned to praise all
things, so it had to praise gross things. There
was something of this pedantic perfection in
Blake’s escapades. As the hygienist insists
on wearing Jäger clothes, he insisted on wearing
no clothes. As the æsthete must wear
sandals, he must wear nothing. He is not
really lawless at all; he is bowing to the law
of his own outlawed logic.
There is nothing at all poetical in this revolt.
William Blake was a great and real poet; but
in this point he was simply unpoetical. Walt
Whitman was a great and real poet; but on
this point he was prosaic and priggish. Two
extraordinary men are not poets because they
tear away the veil from sex. On the contrary[Pg 177]
it is because all men are poets that they all
hang a veil over sex. The ploughman does
not plough by night, because he does not
feel specially romantic about ploughing. He
does love by night, because he does feel
specially romantic about sex. In this matter
Blake was not only unpoetical, but far less
poetical than the mass of ordinary men.
Decorum is not an over-civilised convention.
Decorum is not tame, decorum is wild, as wild
as the wind at night.
THE SELFHOOD OF DECEIT (1807)
Modesty is too fierce and elemental a thing
for the modern pedants to understand; I had
almost said too savage a thing. It has in it
the joy of escape and the ancient shyness of
freedom. In this matter Blake and Whitman
are merely among the modern pedants. In
not admiring sexual reticence these two great
poets simply did not understand one of the
greatest poems of humanity.
I have given as an instance his disregard of
the idea of mystery and modesty as involved
in dress; it was an unpoetical thought that[Pg 178]
there should be no curtains of gold or scarlet
round the shrine of the Holy Spirit. But
there is stronger instances in his theology
and philosophy. Thus he imbibed the idea
common among early Gnostics and not unknown
to Christian Science speculators of
our day, that it was a confession of weakness
in Christ to be crucified at all. If he had
really attained divine life (so ran the argument)
he ought to have attained immortal life; he
ought to have lived for ever upon the earth.
With an excess of what can only be called
impudence, he even turned Gethsemane into
a sort of moral breakdown; the sudden weakness
which accepted death. The general
claim that vices are poetical is largely unfounded;
and this is an excellent example of
how unpoetical is the vice of profanity. Blasphemy
is not wild; blasphemy is in its nature
prosaic. It consists in regarding in a commonplace
manner something which other and
happier people regard in a rapturous and
imaginative manner. This is well exemplified
in poor Blake and his Gnostic heresy about
Jesus. In holding that Christ was weakened
by being crucified he is certainly a pedant,[Pg 179]
and certainly not a poet. If there is one point
on which the spirit of the poets and the poetic
soul in all peoples is on the side of Christianity,
it is exactly this one point on which Blake is
against Christianity—“was crucified, dead and
buried.” The spectacle of a God dying is
much more grandiose than the spectacle of
a man living for ever. The former suggests
that awful changes have really entered the
alchemy of the universe; the latter is only
vaguely reminiscent of hygienic octogenarians
and Eno’s Fruit Salts. Moreover, to the poet
as to the child, death must be dreadful even
if it is desirable. To talk (as some modern
theosophists do) about death being nothing,
the mere walking into another room, to talk
like this is not only prosaic and profoundly
un-Christian; it is decidedly vulgar. It is
against the whole trend of the secret emotions
of humanity. It is indecent, like persuading
a decent peasant to go without clothes. There
is more of the song and music of mankind in
a clerk putting on his Sunday clothes than
in a fanatic running naked down Cheapside.
And there is more real mysticism in nailing
down a coffin lid than in pretending, in[Pg 180]
mere rhetoric, to throw open the doors of
death.
I have given two cases of the presence in
Blake of these anti-human creeds which I call
fads—the case of clothes and the case of the
crucifixion. I could give a much larger
number of them, but I think their nature is
here sufficiently indicated. They are all cases
in which Blake ceased to be a poet, through
becoming entirely, instead of only partially,
separated from the people. And this, I think,
is certainly connected with that quality in him
to which I referred in analysing the eighteenth
century; I mean the element of oligarchy and
fastidiousness in the mystics and masonries of
that epoch. They were all founded in an
atmosphere of degrees and initiations. The
chief difference between Christianity and the
thousand transcendental schools of to-day is
substantially the same as the difference nearly
two thousand years ago between Christianity
and the thousand sacred rites and secret
societies of the Pagan Empire. The deepest
difference is this: that all the heathen
mysteries are so far aristocratic, that they are
understood by some, and not understood by[Pg 183]
others. The Christian mysteries are so far democratic
that nobody understands them at all.
THE SHEPHERDS (1821)
When we have fairly stated this doubtful
and even false element in Blake’s philosophy,
we can go on with greater ease and thoroughness
to state where the solid and genuine
value of that philosophy lay. It consisted in
its placid and positive defiance of materialism,
a work upon which all the mystics, Pagan and
Christian, have been employed from the beginning.
It is not unnatural that they should
have fallen into many errors, employed
dangerous fallacies, and even ruined the earth
for the sake of the cloudland. But the war
in which they were engaged has been none
the less the noblest and most important effort
of human history, and in their whole army
there was no greater warrior than Blake.
One of the strange and rooted contradictions
of the eighteenth century is a combination
between profound revolution and superficial
conventionality. It might almost be said that
the men of that time had altered morals long
before they thought of altering manners. The
French Revolution was especially French in
this respect, that it was above all things a[Pg 184]
respectable revolution. Violence was excused;
madness was excused; but eccentricity was
inexcusable. These men had taken a king’s
head off his shoulders long before they
had thought of taking the powder off their
own heads. Danton could understand the
Massacres of September, but he could not
understand the worship of the Goddess of
Reason or all the antics of the German madman
Clootz. Robespierre grew tired of the
Terror, but he never grew tired of shaving
every morning. It is impossible to avoid the
impression that this is rather a characteristic
of the revolutions which really make a difference
and defy the world. The same is true
of that fallacious but most powerful and
genuine English monument which was
covered by the words Darwin and Evolution.
If there was one striking thing about the
fine old English agnostics, it was that they
were entirely indifferent to alterations in the
externals of pose or fashion, that they seem
to have supposed that the huge intellectual
overturn of agnosticism would leave the
obvious respectability of life exactly as it was.
They thought that one might entirely alter a[Pg 185]
man’s head without in the least altering his
hat. They thought that one might shatter
the twin wings of an archangel without throwing
the least doubt upon the twin whiskers
of a mid-Victorian professor. And though
there was undoubtedly a certain solemn
humour about such a position, yet, on the
whole, I think the mid-Victorian agnostics
were employing the right kind of revolution.
It is broadly a characteristic of all valuable
new-fashioned opinions that they are brought
in by old-fashioned men. For the sincerity of
such men is proved by both facts—the fact
that they do care about their new truth and
the fact that they do not care about their
old clothes. Herbert Spencer’s philosophy is
all the more serious because his appearance
(to judge by his photographs) was quite startlingly
absurd. And while the Tory caricatures
were deriding Gladstone because he introduced
very new-fangled legislation, they were
also deriding him because he wore very antiquated
collars.
But though this strange combination of
convention in small things with revolt in
big ones is not uncommon in hearty and[Pg 186]
human reformers, there is a quite special
emphasis on this combination in the case of the
eighteenth century. The very men who did
deeds which were more dreadful and daring
than we can dream to achieve, were the very
men who spoke and wrote with a mincing
propriety and almost effeminate fastidious
distinction such as we should scarcely condescend
to employ. The eighteenth century
man called the eighteenth century woman “an
elegant female”; but he was quite capable of
saving her from a mad bull. He described his
ideal republic as a place containing all the refined
sensibilities of virtue with all the voluptuous
seductions of pleasure. But he would be
hacked with an axe and blown out of a gun
to get it. He could pursue new notions with
a certain solid and virile constancy, as if they
were old ones. And the explanation is partly
this: that however revolutionary, they were
old ones—in this sense at least, that they involved
the pursuit of some primary human
hope to its original home. They powdered
their hair because they really thought that a
civilized man should be civilized—or, if you
[Pg 188]will, artificial. They spoke of “an elegant[Pg 189]
female” because they really thought, with
their whole souls, that a female ought to be
elegant. The old rebels preserved the old
fashions—and among others the old fashion
of rebelling. The new rebels, the revolutionists
of our time, are intent upon introducing
new fashions in boots, beds, food or furniture;
so they have no time to rebel. But if we
have once grasped this eighteenth century
element of the insistence upon the elegant
female because she is elegant, we have got
hold of a fundamental fact in the relation of
that century to Blake.
THE MORNING STARS (1821)
It is instinctive to describe Blake as a
fantastic artist; and yet there is a very real
sense in which Blake is conventional. If any
reader thinks the phrase paradoxical, he can
easily discover that it is true; he can discover
it simply by comparing Blake even in his
most wild and arbitrary work with any merely
modern artist who has the name of being
wild; with Aubrey Beardsley or even with
Rossetti. All Blake’s heroes are conventional
heroes made unconventionally heroic. All
Blake’s heroines are elegant females without
their clothes. But in both cases they exaggerate[Pg 190]
and insist upon the traditional ideal
of the sexes—the broad shoulders of the god
and the broad hips of the goddess. Blake detested
the sensuality of Rubens. But if he
had been obliged to choose between the
women of Rubens and the women of Rossetti,
he would have flung himself on the neck of
Rubens. For we have a false conception of
what constitutes exaggeration. The end of
the eighteenth century (being a dogmatic
period) believed in certain things and exaggerated
them. The end of the nineteenth
century simply did not know what things to
exaggerate; so it fell back upon merely underrating
them. Blake tried to make Wallace
look even bolder and fiercer than Wallace can
possibly have looked. That was his exaggeration
of Wallace. But Burne-Jones’ exaggeration
of Perseus is not an exaggeration at all.
It is an under-statement; for the whole
fascination of Burne-Jones’ Perseus is that he
looks frightened. Blake’s figure of a woman
is aggressively and monstrously womanly.
That is its fascination, if it has any. But the
fascination of a Beardsley woman (if she has
any) is exactly that she is not quite a woman.[Pg 191]
So much of what we have meant by exaggeration
is really diminution; so much of what
we have meant by fancy is simply falling short
of fact. The Burne-Jones’ man is interesting
because he is not quite brave enough to be a
man. The Beardsley woman is interesting
because she is not quite pretty enough to be
a woman. But Blake’s men are brave beyond
all decency: and Blake’s women are so
swaggeringly bent on being beautiful that
they become quite ugly in the process. If
anyone wishes to know exactly what I mean,
I recommend him to look at one of those
extraordinary designs of nymphs in which a
woman (or, as Blake loved to call it, the
Female Form) is made to perform an impossible
feat of acrobatics. It is impossible, but it is
quite female; perhaps the words are not wholly
inconsistent. A living serpent might perform
such a piece of athletics; but even then only
a female living serpent. But nobody would
ask a Burne-Jones or Beardsley female to
perform any athletics at all.
Blake in pictorial art was not a mere master
of the moonstruck or the grotesque. On the
contrary, he was, as artists go, exceptionally a[Pg 192]
champion of the smooth and sensible. In so
far as being “modern” means being against
the great conventions of mankind, indifferent
to the difference of the sexes, or inclined to
despise doctrinal outline, then there was
never any man who was so little of a modern
as Blake. He may have been mad; but there
are varieties even in madness. There are
madmen, like Blake, who go mad on health,
and there are madmen who go mad on
sickness.
The distinction is a solid one. You may
think the queerly and partially clothed women
of Aubrey Beardsley ugly. You may think the
naked women of William Blake ugly. But you
must perceive this peculiar and extraordinary
effect about the women of William Blake, that
they are women. They are exaggerated in the
direction of the female form; they swing upon
big hips; they let out and loosen long and
luxuriant hair. Now the queer females of
Aubrey Beardsley are queerest of all in this,
that they are not even female. They are
narrow where women have a curve and cropped
where women have a head of hair. Blake’s
women are often anatomically impossible.[Pg 195]
But they are so far women that they could
not possibly be anything else.
THE WHIRLWIND (1825)
This comparison between Blake’s art and
such art as Aubrey Beardsley’s is not an invidious
impertinence, it is really an important
distinction. Blake’s work may be fantastic;
but it is a fantasia on an old and recognisable
air. It exaggerates characteristics. Blake’s
women are too womanish, his young men are
too athletic, his old men are too preposterously
old. But Aubrey Beardsley does not really
exaggerate; he understates. His young men
have less than the energy of youth. His
women fascinate by the weakness of sex rather
than by its strength. In short, if one is really
to exaggerate the truth, one must have some
truth to exaggerate. The decadent mystic
produces an effect not by exaggerating but by
distorting. True exaggeration is a thing both
subtle and austere. Caricature is a serious
thing; it is almost blasphemously serious.
Caricature really means making a pig more like
a pig than even God has made him. But anyone
can make him not like a pig at all; anyone
can create a weird impression by giving him
the beard of a goat. In Aubrey Beardsley the[Pg 196]
artistic thrill (and there is an artistic thrill)
consists in the fact that the women are not
quite women nor the men quite men. Blake
had absolutely no trace of this morbidity of
deficiency. He never asks us to consider a
tree magical because it is a stunted tree; or a
man a magician merely because he has one eye.
His form of fantasy would rather be to give
a tree more branches than it could carry and
to give a man bigger eyes than he could keep
in his head. There is really a great deal of
difference between the fantastic and the exaggerative.
One may be fantastic by merely
leaving something out. One might call it a
fantasy if the official portrait of Wellington
represented him without a nose. But one
could hardly call it an exaggeration.
There is an everlasting battle in which Blake
is on the side of the angels, and what is much
more difficult and dangerous, on the side of all
the sensible men. The question is so enormous
and so important, that it is difficult to state
even by reason of its reality. For in this world
of ours we do not so much go on and discover
small things; rather we go on and discover
big things. It is the details that we see first;[Pg 197]
it is the design that we only see very slowly;
and some men die never having seen it at all.
We all wake up on a battle-field. We see
certain squadrons in certain uniforms gallop
past; we take an arbitrary fancy to this or
that colour, to this or that plume. But it
often takes us a long time to realise what the
fight is about or even who is fighting whom.
One may say, to keep up the metaphor, that
many a man has joined the French army from
love of the Horse Guards Blue; many an old-fashioned
eighteenth century sailor has gone
over to the Chinese merely because they wore
pigtails. It is so easy to turn against what is
really yourself for the sake of some accidental
resemblance to yourself. You may envy the
curled hair of Hercules; but do not envy
curly hair until you wish that you were a nigger.
You may regret that you have a short nose;
but do not dream of its growing longer and
longer till it is like the trunk of an elephant.
Wait until you know what the battle is
broadly about before you rush roaring after
any advancing regiment. For a battle is a
complicated thing; each army contains coats
of different colour; each section of each army[Pg 198]
advances at a different angle. You may fancy
that the Greens are charging the Blues exactly
at the moment when both are combining to
effect a fine military manœuvre. You may conceive
that two similar-looking columns are
supporting each other at the very instant
when they are about to blaze at each other
with cannon, rifle, and revolver. So in the
modern intellectual world we can see flags of
many colours, deeds of manifold interest; the
one thing we cannot see is the map. We
cannot see the simplified statement which tells
us what is the origin of all the trouble. How
shall we manage to state in an obvious and
alphabetical manner the ultimate query, the
primordial pivot on which the whole modern
problem turns? It cannot be done in long
rationalistic words; they convey by their very
sound the suggestion of something subtle.
One must try to think of something in the way
of a plain street metaphor or an obvious analogy.
For the thing is not too hard for human
speech; it is actually too obvious for human
speech.
The fundamental fight in which, despite
all this heat and headlong misunderstanding,[Pg 201]
William Blake is on the right side, is one
which would require a book about the battle
and not about William Blake. By an accident
at once convenient and deceptive, it can largely
be described as geographical as well as philosophical.
It is crudely true that there are two
types of mysticism, that of Christendom and
that of Orientalism. Now this scheme of east
and west is inadequate; but it does happen to
fit in with the working facts. For the odd
thing is this, not only are most of the merely
modern movements of idealism Oriental, but
their Orientalism is all that they have in
common. They all come together, and yet
their only apparent point of union is that they
all come from the East. Thus a modern vegetarian
is generally also a teetotaller, yet there
is certainly no obvious intellectual connection
between consuming vegetables and not consuming
fermented vegetables. A drunkard,
when lifted laboriously out of the gutter,
might well be heard huskily to plead that
he had fallen there through excessive devotion
to a vegetable diet. On the other hand, a
man might well be a practised and polished
cannibal and still be a strict teetotaller. A[Pg 202]
subtle parallelism might doubtless be found;
but the only quite obvious parallelism is that
vegetarianism is Buddhist and teetotalism is
Mahometan. In the same way, it is the
cold truth that there is no kind of logical
connection between being an Agnostic and
being a Socialist. But it is the fact that the
Chinese are as agnostic as oxen; and it is the
fact that the Japanese are as socialistic as rats.
These appalling ideas, that a man has no divine
individual destiny, that making a minute item
in the tribe or hive, is his only earthly destiny,
these ideas do come all together out of the
same quarter; they do in practise blow upon
us out of the East, as cold and inhuman as the
east wind.
THE JUST UPRIGHT MAN (1825)
Nevertheless, I do not accept this dull
definition by locality; I think it is a spirit
in Asia, and even a spirit that can be named.
It is approximately described as an insane
simplicity. In all these cases we find people
attempting to perfect a thing solely by simplification;
by obliterating special features: this
cosmos is full of wingless birds, of hornless
cattle, of hairless women, and colourless wine,
all fading into a formless background. There[Pg 203]
is a Christian simplicity, of course, opposed to
this pessimist simplicity. Both the western
and eastern mystic may be called children;
but the eastern child treads the sand-castle
back into sand, and enjoys seeing the silver
snow man melt back into muddy water.
This return to chaos and a comfortless simplicity
is the only intelligent meaning of the words
reaction and reactionary. In this sense much
of modern science is reaction, and most modern
scientists are reactionaries. But where this reversion
to the void can be seen most clearly is
in all the semi-oriental sects to which I have
referred. Teetotalism is a simplification; its
objection to beer is not really that beer makes
a man like a beast. On the contrary, its real
objection is that beer most unmistakably
separates a man from a beast. Vegetarianism
is a simplification; the herb-eating Hindoo
saint does not really dislike the carnivorous
habit because it destroys an animal. Rather,
he dislikes it because it creates an animal;
renews the special aims and appetites of the
separate animal, man. Agnosticism, the ancient
creed of Confucius, is a simplification; it is a
shutting out of all the shadowy splendours[Pg 204]
and terrors; an Arcadian exclusiveness; . Japanese patriotism, the
blind collectivism of the tribe, is a simplification;
it is an attempt to turn our turbulent
and varied humanity into one enormous
animal, with twenty million legs, but only
one head. There is an utterly opposite kind
of simplicity that springs from joy; but this
kind of simplicity certainly is rooted in
despair.
Now, for practical purposes, there is an
antagonistic order of mysticism; that which
celebrates personality, positive variety, and
special emphasis: just as in broad fact the
mystery of dissolution is emphasized and
typified in the East, so in practice the mystery
of concentration and identity is manifest in
the historic churches of Christendom. Even
the foes of Christianity would readily agree
that Christianity is “personal” in the sense
that a vulgar joke is “personal”: that is
corporeal, vivid, perhaps ugly. This being so,
it has been broadly true that any mystic who
broke with the Christian tradition tended to
drift towards the eastern and pessimist tradition.
In the Albigensian and other heresies[Pg 207]
the East crawled in with its serpentine combination
of glitter and abasement, of pessimism
and pleasure. Every dreamer who strayed
outside the Christian order strayed towards
the Hindu order, and every such dreamer
found his dream turning to a nightmare. If
a man wandered far from Christ he was drawn
into the orbit of Buddha, the other great
magnet of mankind—the negative magnet.
The thing is true down to the latest and the
most lovable visionaries of our own time; if
they do not climb up into Christendom, they
slide down into Thibet. The greatest poet
now writing in the English language (and it is
surely unnecessary to say that I mean Mr
Yeats) has written a whole play round the
statement, “Where there is nothing there is
God.” In this he sharply and purposely cuts
himself off from the real Christian position,
that where there is anything there is God.
FOR HIS EYES ARE UPON THE WAYS
OF MAN (1825)
But though, by an almost political accident,
Oriental pessimism has been the practical
alternative to the Christian type of transcendentalism,
there is, and always has been,
a third thing that was neither Christian in an
orthodox sense nor Buddhistic in any sense.[Pg 208]
Before Christianity existed there was a European
school of optimist mystics; among whom
the great name is Plato. And ever since there
have been movements and appearances in
Europe of this healthier heathen mysticism,
which did not shrink from the shapes of things
or the emphatic colours of existence. Something
of the sort was in the Nature worship of
Renaissance philosophers; something of the
sort may even have been behind the strange
mixture of ecstacy and animality in the isolated
episode of Luther. This solid and joyful
occultism appears at its best in Swedenborg;
but perhaps at its boldest and most brilliant in
William Blake.
The present writer will not, in so important
a matter, pretend to the absurd thing called
impartiality; he is personally quite convinced
that if every human being lived a thousand
years, every human being would end up either
in utter pessimistic scepticism or in the Catholic
creed. William Blake, in his rationalist and
highly Protestant age, was frequently reproached
for his tenderness towards Catholicism;
but it would have surprised him very
much to be told that he would join it. But[Pg 209]
he would have joined it—if he had lived a
thousand years, or even perhaps a hundred.
He was on the side of historic Christianity on
the fundamental question on which it confronts
the East; the idea that personality is the glory
of the universe and not its shame; that creation
is higher than evolution, because it is more
personal; that pardon is higher than Nemesis,
because it is more personal; that the forgiveness
of sins is essential to the communion of
saints; and the resurrection of the body to the
life everlasting. It was a mark of the old
eastern initiations, it is still a mark of the
grades and planes of our theosophical thinkers,
that as a man climbs higher and higher, God
becomes to him more and more formless,
ethereal, and even thin. And in many of
these temples, both ancient and modern, the
final reward of serving the god through vigils
and purifications, is that one is at last worthy
to be told that the god doesn’t exist.
Against all this emasculate mysticism Blake
like a Titan rears his colossal figure and his
earthquake voice. Through all the cloud and
chaos of his stubborn symbolism and his
perverse theories, through the tempest of[Pg 210]
exaggeration and the full midnight of madness,
he reiterates with passionate precision
that only that which is lovable can be adorable,
that deity is either a person or a puff of wind,
that the more we know of higher things the
more palpable and incarnate we shall find
them; that the form filling the heavens is
the likeness of the appearance of a man. Much
of what Blake thus wildly thundered has been
put quietly and quaintly by Coventry Patmore,
especially in that delicate and daring passage
in which he speaks of the bonds, the simpleness
and even the narrowness of God. The
wise man will follow a star, low and large and
fierce in the heavens; but the nearer he comes
to it the smaller and smaller it will grow, till
he finds it the humble lantern over some little
inn or stable. Not till we know the high
things shall we know how lowly they are.
Meanwhile, the modern superior transcendentalist
will find the facts of eternity incredible
because they are so solid; he will not
recognise heaven because it is so like the
earth.
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The following corrections were made to the text by the transcriber:
Page 30, “Mary Woolstonecroft” corrected to “Mary Wollstonecraft”.
Page 46, “Erywhon” corrected to “Erewhon”.
Page 60, “Leonardo de Vinci” corrected to “Leonardo da Vinci”.
Page 70, “rheindeer” corrected to “reindeer”.
Page 88, “four of five different poems” corrected to “four or five
different poems”.
Page 91, “Oh, Mr Cromek, how do you do?” corrected to “Oh, Mr. Cromek, how do you do?”
Page 161, “If pure lines existed only on the human mind” corrected to
“If pure lines existed only in the human mind”.
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