|
Wikimedia Commons Fitzwilliam Museum Songs of Innocence and of Experience Plate 22, Spring |
|
|
William Blake's
mother Catherine had been a Moravian during her first marriage. Her
husband Thomas Armitage died of consumption in 1751 and she married
James Blake in 1752. James and Catherine had four sons and a daughter born
between 1753 and 1764. When Catherine married James she gave up
membership in the Fetter Lane Society which was her Moravian connection
because of the total commitment they required. However the principles
and practices of her Moravian community would have stayed with her.
Lets look at some
ways in which the Moravian traditions may have continued to influence
Catherine as she raised her children. Characteristic of Moravian worship
was the use of song. They wrote their own hymns, committed them to
memory and often based their whole worship service on singing. They were
dependent on the Bible in public and private worship for instruction
and inspiration. Work, learning and spiritual nurture were woven
together in their daily lives. They engaged in missionary activities to
bring the Gospel of Jesus Christ to far flung parts of the world. They
developed a sensitivity to the Holy Spirit to bring them
emotional and visionary experiences. Unity and Brotherhood were major
themes in their activities. The sexual union of man and wife played a
strong role in Moravian thought.
Now look at young
William, a boy of exceptional intellectual and artistic talent, growing
up with the nurture of such a mother. The accounts of Blake's childhood
tell us he saw visions from a young age. The only formal schooling he
had before his apprenticeship was at Pars School of Drawing. He reported
that he was befriended by Old Testament prophets in childhood. His
early attempts at writing poetry were published by friends in 1784. The
fragments of a manuscript which goes by the name of Island in the Moon
records singing among his circle of friends and includes preliminary
poems of Songs of Innocence.
In Blake's major
poetry we see the frequent but not explicit themes which can be traced
back to the influence of his mother's Moravian background.
Letters, (E 707)
"To My Dearest Friend John Flaxman these lines
I bless thee O Father of Heaven & Earth that ever I saw Flaxmans face
Angels stand round my Spirit in Heaven. the blessed of Heaven are my friends upon Earth
When Flaxman was taken to Italy. Fuseli was giv'n to me for a season
And now Flaxman hath given me Hayley his friend to be mine such my lot upon Earth
Now my lot in the Heavens is this; Milton lovd me in childhood & shewd me his face
Ezra came with Isaiah the Prophet, but Shakespeare in riper years gave me his hand
Paracelsus & Behmen appeard to me. terrors appeard in the Heavens above
And in Hell beneath & a mighty & awful change threatend the Earth
The American War began All its dark horrors passed before my face
Across the Atlantic to France.
Then the French Revolution commencd in thick clouds
And My Angels have told me. that seeing such visions I could not subsist on the Earth
But by my conjunction with Flaxman who knows to forgive Nervous Fear
I remain for Ever Yours
WILLIAM BLAKE
Ram Horn'd with Gold
By Larry Clayton
Chapter Eight
Bible
Like Los Blake walks up and down the biblical scene
from Adam to John of Patmos. He takes what best serves his
purpose, or rather the biblical symbols rearrange themselves
kaleidoscopically into his visions of eternity. These together
add
up to a cogent and provocative commentary on the Bible and on its
child, the Christian faith. Out of this intuitive unconscious process
arose the great themes of his faith, embodied in his art: the universal
man, fallen and fractured, struggling, redeemed and returning in the
fullness of time into the blessed unity from which he came. This is the
essential story of the Bible for one who reads it whole and without the
constraints and blinders of what I have called the black book.
It should be said
however that Blake found inspiration for his myth from many other
sources beside the Bible; the secular critics have pointed them out in
great detail. He drew impartially on everything in his experience, but
found the Bible his richest fountain. The other sources were secondary
and for the most part commentaries on or elaborations of the biblical
truths.
Much as he loved
the Bible, Blake ascribed paramount authority to his visions. The true
man of God has visions which refine, bring up to date, and correct the
earlier visions of the earlier prophets. This is where Blake departed
from the orthodox attitude to the Bible, which he called reading it
black. This is where he acted on the heritage of English dissent.
This is how he saw the New
Light and became a man of the New Age."
To be Continued.
No comments:
Post a Comment