Blake in the Academe
an essay by David X. Novak
In
1969, Northrop Frye introduced the new edition of his groundbreaking study of
the works of the poet William Blake, with some offhand comments about its
genesis: "The doctoral thesis is useful for encouraging intensive reading,
but of very little use for gaining literary perspective, which takes years to develop
and cannot be hurried. The present book never went through the thesis stage,
and my interest in Blake had from the beginning been of the extensive
kind." He does not go into specifics as to the nature of that involvement,
but a later edition does the courtesy of reprinting a 1935 letter from Frye to
his fiancée, in which he details something of that encounter — an immersion
really, precipitated (to use Ian Singer's words) by a paper on Blake's
epic Milton — as anything but casual:
I
don't know what dimension I'm working in any more. Nothing has mattered,
nothing has even existed, for the past six weeks, but Blake, Blake, Blake: I've
spun the man around like a teetotum, I've torn him into tiny shreds and teased
and atomized him with pincers, I've stretched my mind over passages as though
it were on a rack, I've plunged into darkness and mist, out again into the
clear light — where I started from in the first place — rushed up blind alleys
of comparison and sources, broken down completely from sheer inertia, worked
all night on a paragraph no better in the morning. . . But what I have done is
a masterpiece. . . the best, clearest and most accurate exposition of Blake's
thought yet written. If it's no good I'm no good. There isn't a sentence, and
there won't be a sentence, in the whole work that hasn't gone through
purgatory.
It is the kind of involvement one might expect
Blake to elicit, and the eventual book,Fearful Symmetry (which
was published in 1947), was instantly recognized as something of a classic in
its field.
Frye's book represents the culmination of a style
of writing about literature that, reaching its apex, would gradually be
superseded by other modes: "Academic literary criticism has. . . become
hung up on 'textuality': intertextuality, paratextuality, subtextuality,
contextuality — count the ways", writes John Sutherland in Literary Review: "'Text' is a noumenon" which "does
not exist materially, and as such "can be materialized in an infinite
variety of ways." "The whole [academic] profession is following the
pipes of Pan" in what might be considered its wholesale subscription to
Jacques Derrida's motto: "Il n'ya pas de hors-texte ('there is nothing outside the text')."
This of course dovetails neatly with the academic
need of teaching to students who, by virtue of their youth (in the main), have
not had the time to gain the requisite "literary perspective". One
easily stumbles upon sentences like, "In the transition from the era of
Classicism into the era of Romanticism there was a time in English literature
when there were artists who showed the first signs of incoming time in their
writings marked with romantic attitude towards the world, respect for
individualism and awakening of the idea of Rousseau's 'natural man'." This
is taken from a work titled William Blake, Dichotomy of Existence in Songs of
Experience vs [sic] Songs of Experience by
Bojana Stretenovic, which was done "for the purpose of obtaining a
Master's degree in English literature" according to the publisher's
description at Amazon.com. I take it to be representative.
It is hard, when one is struggling to achieve a
literary (or even a historical) perspective, to realize that the classifying
names by which we, in hindsight, recognize our forbears, can only perhaps be
loosely applied to them, and that the transition from one "era" to
another usually does not occur so cleanly or abruptly, as though it were the
changing from a Republican administration to a Democratic one. A poet like
Blake, peripheral to the power bases of society, witnessed power relations
shifting, such as that between wages and labor, and responded accordingly.
The New Pelican Guide to English
Literature (From Blake to Byron) summarizes
the transition from the weirdly named Augustan era to the Romantic period by noting
new "conditions which created the demand for writers of a higher standard
of performance than the Grub Street hack of Pope's day." This is Edgell
Rickword, acknowledging an "increase in the literate and relatively
well-to-do sections of the population" which transformed the economics of
publishing entirely. Moreover, "none of [the new breed of] writers was
intimately associated with those holding political power, none had moved so
close to the control-room of the State as had Swift and Prior, Milton, Marvell,
or Donne."
He is reporting a general trend, not easy to
simplify, vaguely derived from the insertion of machines into industry, which
disrupted "the social order [which] had been fixed most sharply in England
in the subservience of the villager to the landed gentleman", to quote
Joseph Bronowski from the introduction to his book on Blake, William Blake and the Age of
Revolution. He titles that first chapter,
"A Turbulent Age."
It is too much to try to encompass the whole period
into a few glib sentences, but I cannot refrain from mentioning that I've never
liked the appellation of "Romantic" to describe the broad spectrum of
individuals it envelops. A swath of the English population — including Blake
among other notables — greeted the coming of the French Revolution with
romantic idealism, only to be crushed when it was betrayed. That is how I
understand the term. Blake was not crushed — but that was perhaps owed to the
strength of his vision: his wife said "I have very little of Mr. Blake's
company; he is always in Paradise", and Paradise for Blake meant the
imagination.
He said, "I must create a system or be
enslaved by another man's". Keeping to the realm of
"textuality," it might be suggested that Blake was deliberately
raising a fist at the rationalism of John Locke, positing instead "his own
system of values such as creative power, imagination, intuition, spiritual
development all united in 'poetic genius'" (Stretenovic) or even a
"Sexual Path to Spiritual Vision" to quote a recent popular title.
However, Blake's next sentence is telling: "I will not reason and compare:
my business is to create."
It would be apropos to say "Blake opposes the
exploitative industrial system he sees around him in London." In
Rickover's summary of the social milieu, he describes recently introduced
"mechanical contrivances" such as James Watt's improved steam engine:
"Although steam-power is the most spectacular of the innovations of the
time, it was not the effective instrument of the great change, though these
engines' clangour and belching of smoke and flame made them appropriate symbols
of a baleful modernity." One such machine "operated the Albion Flour
Mills in Southwark" (before it burned down) and "was certainly
familiar to Blake. The snorting, ear-shattering monster must have been
impressive in action, and may have helped to condition the [Romantic] poets'
attitude to the new technology."
Sven Birkerts, in the wake of 9/11, suggested
"[p]oetry does not. . . defeat trauma". Rather, it "is the
reverse of the terrorist act, its antithesis" creating "something to
hold against horror. . .that is equally persistent." In such a way poetry
offers a means to "[help] restore the delicate inner balance we call
sanity." The irony there is that it is hard to find a poet labeled
"insane" by his peers more frequently than Blake, even when meant as
a backhanded compliment from a discerning reader like Wordsworth: "the
insanity of this man interests me more than the sanity of Byron and
Moore." (I take my quote from E. de Selincourt, though I believe it to be
more meaningful than precise: the Blake Records have
it slightly different.)
The Industrial Revolution was beginning in Europe.
"Only in England had there been, by 1873, any substantial progress towards
the large-scale introduction of labour-saving machinery," wrote George
Rudé in his history, Revolutionary
Europe. "In England alone a distinct
class of industrial entrepreneurs was arising in the wake of the technical
innovations introduced by the Darbys, Hargreaves, Cort, Arkwright and Watt. . .
. Its leaders, new men sprung from farming and commercial stock, were rapidly
amassing fortunes and finding a place in society." This was the class
Blake was born into.
Though his father, a hosier, would not have been as
successful as some, his shop commanded prime Golden Square real estate (a
corner with double frontage) at 28 Broad Sreet. The family lived upstairs, and
it was here when he was age four Blake famously saw God peek through the
window.
Thanks to biographical work found in books such
as The
Stranger in Paradise, by G.E. Bentley, Jr., compiler of
the Blake
Records, we know quite a lot about Blake's
life. For example, the poverty and isolation for which Blake is renowned
definitely did not obtain at least during the first half of his life. Not
disposed toward the family trade, Blake, with the indulgence of his father (the
word is Bentley's and is the right word), was able to attend Pars Drawing
School, from the age of ten, for four years. It was his wish, and evidently the
family could afford both the tuition and the sacrifice of a boy's labor for
that duration. It was a blessing for the young and would-be artist, for it
gained him entry to some of the best collections in private hands, usually only
accessible with presentation of "a suitable douceur."
At age fifteen, he apprenticed to an engraver,
which would become his life's profession. The contract agreement of his
seven-year indenture deserves reprinting. "During that term", runs
the standard legalistic jargon,
the
said Apprentice his said Master faithfully shall serve, his Secrets keep, his
lawful Commandments every where gladly do. . .. He shall not waste the Goods of
his said Master, nor lend them unlawfully to any. He shall not commit
Fornication, nor contract Matrimony within the said Term. He shall not play at
Cards, Dice, Tables, or any other unlawful Games, whereby his said Master may
have any loss. With his own Goods or others, during the Said Term, without
License of his said Master he shall neither buy nor sell. He shall not haunt
Taverns, or Play-Houses, nor absent himself from this said Master's Service Day
nor Night unlawfully. . .. And the said Master. . . his said Apprentice in the
same Art and Mystery which he useth, by the best Means that he can, shall teach
and instruct, or cause to be taught and instructed, finding unto his said
Apprentice, Meat, Drink, Apparel, Lodging, and all other Necessaries, according
to the Custom of London, during the said Term.
A consideration of fifty guineas was paid by Blake's
father (I have followed Bentley's ellipses throughout).
Upon successful completion of his indenture, Blake
moved home, and then became a student at the Royal Academy, "the obvious
step for any Londoner aspiring to be an artist." Blake was not without his
admirers, but the requisite funds for a "finishing" trip to Rome
("the greatest ambition of every serious European artist") lay beyond
his means, and so, after a time, he set up shop, and he married.
The origins of Blake's literary art remain a
mystery. He would say that it was inspired. While we know so much about his
life, the interior details of Blake's intellectual development are woefully
lacking. Where did he get his books? Possibly at his Master's when he was an
Apprentice. Perhaps his mother encouraged his early reading of poetry. We do
not know, and speculation is fruitless. Blake became a highly educated man, and
was probably self-taught, but more than that we cannot say. His antipathy
toward formalized education is well known:
Thank
God I never was sent to School
To
be Flogd into following the Style of a Fool[.]
A Blake follower wrote after his death that
"his theories wanted solidity". In Matthew Arnold's phrase, "The
less a literature has felt the influence of a supposed centre of correct information,
correct judgment, correct taste, the more we shall find in it this note of
provinciality." T.S. Eliot takes it further: "We have the same
respect for Blake's philosophy. . . that we have for an ingenious piece of
home-made furniture: we admire the man who has put it together out of the odds
and ends about the house. . .. What his genius required, and what it sadly
lacked, was a framework of accepted and traditional ideas which would have
prevented him from indulging in a philosophy of his own". In other words,
compelled to create his own system, the ad hoc resultant conurbation precluded
Blake from reaching the consistency and cohesion of Dante's Commedia.
Yet, to return to Frye, the poems "make a
vivid impact on the reader at once," indisputably. Blake has "the
peculiar quality of a definitive poet [in] that he always seems to have a
special relevance to the preoccupations of one's own age, whatever they may
be." Especially in his lyrics, "Blake makes an immense appeal to a
great variety of people outside the academic profession," as Frye puts it.
In his influential essay "An Introduction to
William Blake", Alfred Kazin suggests some reasons as to why. "His
theme is always the defense of the integral human personality," Kazin
writes. "Blake's fight is against secrecy, unnatural restraint, the fear
of life — the distortions of the personality that follow from deception and
resignation to it." What themes could be more universal, or have more
resonance — not just with the downtrodden public, but with "members of the
elite" as we today would call such eminent personages as Wordsworth and
Coleridge, Walter Savage Landor, Edward FitzGerald, to name a few of the
better-known poetic voices who immediately recognized Blake's talent.
The assault against integrity — spurred on by the
Industrial Revolution which was only just beginning to make itself felt — seems
akin to ours today (brought on by the Information Revolution, I suppose) in its
ferocity. Kazin writes:
Blake's
need of certainty, whatever its personal roots, is also one of the great
tragedies of modern capitalist society; particularly of that loss of personal
status that was the immediate fate of millions in the industrial England of the
"dark satanic mills." Blake was only one of many Englishmen who felt
himself being slowly ground to death, in a world of such brutal exploitation
amid such inhuman ugliness, that the fires of the new industrial furnaces and
the cries of the child laborers are always in his work. His poems and designs
are meant to afford us spiritual vision; a vision beyond the factory system,
the hideous new cities, the degradation of children for the sake of profit, the
petty crimes for which children could still be hanged.
Not just children, I might add. The economics
surrounding Blake — and he was no Dickens waif — must have made an impression.
An economic tract — something of a national survey but done in a Q&A format
— was published in 1757, the year of Blake's birth, and offers a glimpse into
that world. Its author, Josiah Tucker, was "[a]n acute observer", and
my Pelican Guide quotes him from his Instructions for Travellers: "Few countries are equal, perhaps none
excel, the English in the Numbers and Contrivances of their Machines to abridge
Labour. . ." His argument runs deeper than that, however. After a passage
in which he makes the case — convincingly, I might add — that this influx of
labor-abridging machines will increase overall consumption (and thereby
employment) by putting low-cost goods into the hands of many more consumers,
Tucker embarks on a marvelous discourse to explain, ideally, how well the
system might function. I quote at length, beyond what is strictly necessary,
because of the delicious insight it affords into economic policy at the time of
Blake's birth:
Q.
Is that Labour, which is still to be performed by the human Kind, so
judiciously divided, that Men, Women and Children have their respective Shares
in Proportion to their Strength, Sex, and Abilities? And is every Branch so
contrived, that there is no Waste of Time, or unnecessary Expence of Strength
or Labour? Moreover, what good Consequences attend these Circumstances in such
Parts of the Kingdom, where they are observed, and what bad ones in other
Parts, where they are not?
A.
In many Provinces of the Kingdom, particularly, Staffordshire, Warwickshire,
and certain Districts of Yorkshire,
with the Town of Manchester, Norwich,
and some others, the Labour, for the most Part, is very properly proportioned,
and great Judgment appears in the Methods and Contrivances for bringing the
several Parts of the Manufacture so within the Reach of each other, that no
Time should be wasted in passing the Goods to be manufactured from Hand to
Hand, and that no unnecessary Strength should be employed. For instance of both
Kinds, take one among a Thousand at Birmingham, viz.
When a Man stamps a metal Button by means of an Engine, a Child stands by him
to place the Button in readiness to receive the Stamp, and to remove it when
received, and then to place another. By these means the Operator can stamp at
least double the Number, which he could otherwise have done, had he been
obliged to have stopped each Time to have shifted the Buttons: And as his
Gettings may be from 14d. to 18d. and the Child's from a Penny to 2d. per Day
for doing the same Quantity of Work, which must have required double the Sum,
had the Man alone been employed; this single Circumstance saves above 80, or
near 100 per
Cent. At the same Time that it trains up
Children to an Habit of Industry, almost as soon as they can speak. And hence
it is, that the Bijoux
d' Angleterre, or the Birmingham Toys, are rendered so exceedingly cheap as to
astonish all Europe; and that the Roman Catholic Countries are
supplied with such vast Quantities of Crucifixes, Agnus Dei's, &c. from
England. A Dozen of these Crucifixes, as I am informed, being to be sold, in
the wholesale Way, for 7-1/2d. — But the good Effects of this proportioning of
Labour to different Strengths and Sexes, is still more extensive than it at first
appears. For in Birmingham the Numbers of poor Women on the Pay Bill, compared
to those of poor Men, are hardly as three to two; whereas in Bristol, where no
such good Politics obtain, the Numbers are upwards of four to one; and in many
Parts of London, it is still much worse: So great is the Difference, and such
the Expensiveness and heavy Burdens of a wrong Conduct even in this Respect:
not to mention, that Prostitution and Debauchery seem to be an unavoidable
Consequence in the female Sex of Poverty and Idleness, when they are young, and
when they grow old, what Refuge can they have, if they do not soon rot with
their Diseases, but the Parish Pay?
Further on he asks, "What Politics are
established by the Constitution to prevent the monopolizing of landed Property
into a few Hands?" When one "Master of the whole Manufacture from
first to last. . . employs perhaps a thousand Persons under him. . ."
will
they not also sometimes look upon him as their Tyrant? And as great Numbers of
them work together in the same Shop, will they not have it the more in their
Power to vitiate and corrupt each other, to cabal and associate against their
Masters, and to break out into Mobs and Riots upon every little occasion?
After some rigamarole, the answer comes down to
something like, "the Tenant who pays his Rent, has as little to fear from
his Landlord, as from any other person", which sounds curiously like
Blake's line from "The Chimney Sweeper": "So if all do their
duty, they need not fear harm."
Working conditions were no picnic. Yet Frye
discounts "portrayal[s] of Blake as a mystical snail who retreated from
the hard world of reality into the refuge of his own mind, and evolved his
beautifully obscure visions there in contemplative loneliness".
Circumscribed by circumstance, writes Kazin, "his ability to hit back
ended in his notebook."
This is not entirely true. The historical record
belies Kazin's assertion — just look up the incident when Blake ejected the
dragoon from his garden. He more than capable of interfering actively when he
witnessed an injustice. Frederick Tatham, an early biographer, reports "an
anecdote showing his courage" in which Blake intervenes upon seeing a boy
maltreated: "Blakes blood boiled & his indignation surpassed his
forebearance, he sallied forth & demanded in no very quiescent terms that
the Boy should be loosed. . ." and so forth; an anecdote which is matched
by others.
What Blake was not, however, was foolhardy:
"To defend the Bible in this year 1798 would cost a man his life" he
scribbled, but did not publish. At question were "perversions of Christ's
words & acts" by those in authority — but then Blake was raised
"in the Dissenting tradition of private devotion and private Bible reading
rather than public catechism and public worshippers" whose adherents
"believed that all truth lies in the Bible and that the proper interpreter
of that truth is the individual conscience, not the priest or the church"
(Bentley). Regarding one such occasion, Bronowski points out: "Neither
Wordsworth nor Blake printed their [privately written] attacks, and both
remained free all their lives. Wakefield printed his, and was imprisoned for it
from 1799 to 1801."
Though he later fell away from it — and how! —
Blake and his wife signed a charter in 1789 affirming, "We whose names are
hereunto subscribed, do each of us approve of the Theological Writings of
Emanuel Swedenborg, believing that the Doctrines contained therein are genuine
Truths, revealed from Heaven, and that the New Jerusalem Church ought to be
established, distinct and separate from the Old Church", which
demonstrates, incidentally, that the lines "Till we have built Jerusalem /
In England's green and pleasant land" were more than a metaphor
idiosyncratic to Blake.
In 1795 Blake published Songs of Innocence and of Experience, the work which provides most of us our
introduction to his poetry. Songs of Innocence had been published five years earlier as a
stand-alone work, but Songs
of Experience (including a few poems shifted
from Innocence) never existed independently. One of the better-known lyrics is
"The Garden of Love":
I
went to the Garden of Love,
And
saw what I never had seen:
A
Chapel was build in the midst,
Where
I used to play on the green.
And
the gates of this Chapel were shut,
And Thou shalt not writ over the door;
So
I turned to the Garden of Love,
That
so many sweet flowers bore,
And
I saw it was filled with graves,
And
tomb-stones where flowers should be:
And
Priests in black gowns, were walking their rounds,
And
binding with briars, my joys and desires.
The theme is a common one in Blake. In "The
Little Vagabond" he contrasted the "cold" church with the
"Ale-house [which] is healthy & pleasant & warm". In
"The School-Boy" he makes explicit, in contrast to the lovely
"summer morn / When the birds sing on every tree", that "to go
to school on a summer morn, / O! it drives all joy away."
Here we get into territory of Blake's philosophy.
As Robert Gleckner writes (in "Point of View and Context in Blake's
Songs"), "Blake created a system in which innocence and experience
are vital parts" — though this "basic symbology" draws
interpretation manifold in variety. "Innocence is belief and experience is
doubt", Kazin tells us. Frye says, "The fallen world is the world of
the Songs
of Experience: the unfallen world is the world of
the Songs
of Innocence." For Bronowski,
"the Songs
of Experience are, at bottom, songs of
indignation", whereas theSongs of Experience reflect "that happy child mood which the
French Revolution seemed to fulfill" before the British government entered
the fray in opposition. Gleckner distinguishes between the piper and the bard
who host (or introduce) their respective sections: "for the piper the past
can only be the primal unity, for the present is innocence and the immediate
future is experience; for the Bard the past is innocence, the present
experience, and the future a higher innocence."
This last strikes to the core of what Blake is
attempting: reconciliation, if you will, of "the Two Contrary States of
the Human Soul." He was not, as Keats, "ambitious of doing the world
some good", so much as demarcating the good, as Frye indicates:
In
reading about child labor and slavery in Blake's time (or their equivalents in
our time) we hardly know which is more detestable: the cruelty involved or the
complacency with which that cruelty was rationalized in pamphlets,
Parliamentary debates, newspapers, and sermons. Blake was struck with this too,
and never failed to see the rationalizing of evil as an essential part of the
evil itself. . . .
The stultifying classroom may have been a crime
against the childish spirit yearning to breathe free in the summertime; but how
much more so the button factory, wherein one earned (if we believe Josiah
Tucker) perhaps a tenth of the adult machinist for the privilege of having
inculcated "the Habit of Industry". The economics of it must have
seemed astounding; though never so staggering as the even wider disparities we
know about today, in America — especially taking the perspective of global
commerce. And yet, Blake's words ring no less true now: "Pity would be no
more / If we did not make somebody Poor."
If expedience and high profit justified the
employment of young boys (and sometimes girls) as low-wage factory drudges,
necessity did the same for their use as chimney sweepers. Mark Edmundson
explains: "the need for the sweeps was strong. Chimney fires could beget
larger blazes that would destroy blocks and blocks of wooden houses."
Blake biographer Peter Ackroyd likewise write, "The average size of these
vents was something like seven inches square, and the small child was prodded
or pushed into the even smaller spaces within; sometimes they were encouraged
with poles, or pricked with pins, or scorched with fire to make them climb with
more enthusiasm." Martin K. Nurmi writes, "Blake does not really
describe the living and working conditions of the sweeps; he presupposes a
knowledge of them." The poem succeeds because of meticulous
understatement:
When
my mother died I was very young,
And
my father sold me while yet my tongue
Could
scarcely cry " 'weep! 'weep! 'weep! 'weep!' "
So
your chimneys I sweep & in soot I sleep.
There's
little Tom Dacre, who cried when his head
That
curled like a lamb's back, was shaved: so I said,
"Hush,
Tom! never mind it, for when your head's bare
You
know that the soot cannot spoil your white hair."
And
so he was quiet, & that very night,
As
Tom was a-sleeping he had such a sight!
That
thousands of sweepers, Dick, Joe, Ned & Jack,
Were
all of them locked up in coffins of black.
And
by came an Angel who had a bright key,
And
he opened the coffins & set them all free;
Then
down a green plain, leaping, laughing, they run,
And
wash in a river and shine in the Sun.
Then
naked & white, all their bags left behind,
They
rise upon clouds and sport in the wind.
And
the Angel told Tom, if he'd be a good boy,
He'd
have God for his father & never want joy.
And
so Tom awoke; and we rose in the dark,
And
got with our bags & our brushes to work.
Though
the morning was cold, Tom was happy & warm;
So
if all do their duty, they need not fear harm.
From the ritualistic head shearing to the
"coffins of black", Blake details the conditions of degradation
inherent to the profession. In our minds the lines might evoke imagery from
Auschwitz — which in the individual "worst case scenario" would
probably not be far from wrong. Yet the underpinning of the system depended on
an aversion, or a looking away from, those basic conditions on the part of a
public that knew, nevertheless, all too well what those were.
In Songs of Experience, Blake's corresponding poem (also titled "The
Chimney Sweeper") takes a different tack: he notes the underpinning
rationale, or malign rationalization, and rubs people's faces in it:
A
little black thing among the snow,
Crying
" 'weep! 'weep!" in notes of woe!
"Where
are thy father and mother? say?" —
"They
are both gone up to the church to pray.
"Because
I was happy upon the heath,
And
smiled among the winter's snow,
They
clothed me in the clothes of death,
And
taught me to sing the notes of woe.
"And
because I am happy and dance and sing,
They
think they have done me no injury,
And
are gone to praise God and his Priest and King,
Who
make up a heaven of our misery."
The poem closes not with a pious platitude, but
with an acute irony: the case against religious hypocrisy could not be plainer.
"Both poems," writes Robert Pinsky, "dramatize the way religion,
government, and custom collaborate in social arrangements that impose cruel
treatment on some people while enhancing the lives of others."
Blake considered "the Eye of Imagination [to
be] the Real Man." This being the case, Blake — a businessman himself, by
force of circumstance predominantly — yet recognized, reportedly, "Were I
to love money, I should lose all power of original thought". Moreover, he
was not shy about intoning: "Christianity is Art & not Money. Money is
its Curse." That may account for Blake's estrangement from both
philosophical creeds and the New Church, or, as Frye puts it, "Blake's
conception of art is not only central in his thinking, but distinctive of him
as a thinker, and though he reminds us frequently of [George] Berkeley or
Swedenborg, he was what neither Berkeley nor Swedenborg was, a practicing
artist."
In a phrase which enraged T.S. Eliot, Matthew
Arnold defined one aspect of the functionality of poetry: "Poetry is, at
bottom, a criticism of life." Eliot rejoined, "At bottom: that is a
great way down; the bottom is the bottom" in a rant that continued several
more sentences over a seemingly innocuous figure of speech. Sometime Blake
scholar Mark Edmundson, well-known for his attacks against college students (in
the main) and the university system (overall), must accept enough of Arnold's
definition to enable him to render them this stinging judgement: "What
they will not generally do. . . is indict the current system. They won't talk
about how the exigencies of capitalism lead to a reserve army of the unemployed
and nearly inevitable misery." This is strong stuff, if remarkably
selective in his singling out "the unemployed."
Eliot also finds fault with Arnold's subsequent
assertion — not original to Arnold but extrapolated directly from Epictetus —
"that the greatness of a poet lies in his powerful and beautiful
application of ideas to life." To this, Eliot storms: "Not a happy
way of putting it, as if ideas were a lotion for the inflamed skin of suffering
humanity." Yet both by Arnold's measurement and by general consensus, I
think there can be no doubt that Blake qualifies as a "great poet,"
one of the greatest in the English tradition — if only of the "second
tier" as Eliot would have it ("Dante is a classic, and Blake only a
poet of genius").
That time has not vitiated the trenchancy of
Blake's moral vision is amply attested by references in contemporary media
reports "exposing" labor practices at factories making goods for the
American market, such as this last year from China Daily (August 19, 2011):
"Workers toil in the heat and noise inside the grim workshop that conjures
up images of Dickensian conditions and William Blake's 'dark, satanic
mills'". Eliot's grousing aside, Blake conjures in the human conscience a
righteous indignation against inhumane labor practices where they are found,
much as Oscar Wilde said that fogs and sunsets exist "because poets and
painters have taught [people to see] the mysterious loveliness of such
effects." Frye finds an affinity in Blake's Vision of the Last Judgment with George Berkeley's phrase esse est percipi ("to be is to perceive"), citing
this passage: "Mental Things alone are Real; what is call'd Corporeal,
Nobody Knows of its Dwelling Place: it is in Fallacy, & its Existence an
Imposture." This also forms the basis of Blake's Wordsworthian criticism:
"Wordsworth must know that what he Writes Valuable is Not to be found in
Nature."
The moral sense in Blake, almost a stridency,
reaches out across the generations to shape our image of the past; however less
certain its application to ourselves. David V. Erdman writes, "In an age
when Luxury was still a sin and every fat man was a living comment on the
inequitable distribution of a meager food supply, Blake shared the popular
belief that the drone or waster was the wolf at the door." How popular
this actually was then, it is hard to gauge. I suppose it is possible for our
peers abroad to have a better sense of America's "luxury" and
spendthrift profligacy than we have ourselves — though such a connection might
not be drawn in some "self-enclosed" critical system.
Blake was not, however, a poet of social reform.
While he may have signed petitions — he opposed slavery as well — his poems
operated on another level. His work educated consciousness, in the Wildean
sense. The real question to be asked is, why did so many of his peers not
appear to take notice? The answers are already obvious from contemporary
analogy: some are "being slowly ground to death, in a world of. . . brutal
exploitation" and others occupy themselves climbing the flues of
intellectual systems designed "to debunk wordviews" that they may
find untenable. In this sense, as Eliot said, Blake was an artist of
exceptional honesty.
All language is reducible to symbol. But to say
that, and nothing more, is not saying much. The symbolism of Blake's poems may
be extrapolated — stretched and teased and atomized (to echo Frye's letter to
his fiancée) — for the betterment of understanding. Yet that is not all.
"No symbol in Blake is single and fixed", writes Bronowski. Moreover,
the chimney sweeper in Blake's poems, was not, and cannot ever be, merely a
symbol, any more than a subsistence worker in Wenzhou, China's "Button
City" wherein "almost two-thirds of all the buttons in the world are
made", can be a symbol. The chimney sweeper was a real person.
In a sense, Blake had it wrong. There is no need
for students in "School / To be Flogd into following the Style of a
Fool". When it comes to justifying the policies of empire, our students
may be pinpricked, poled, or even scorched (by verbal admonition) to get them
to climb. What holds true for university students increasingly applies to
grammar school students as well. Tailored to become a cog in the machine,
children are deprived of their opportunity to bask in the "summer
morn/When the birds sing on every tree". They are even sold into an
economic system of drudgery by their very parents (with the best of
intentions). In a process which he cited as "the pathetic surrender of
babes" (the phrase is from sociologist Jules Henry), psychiatrist R.D.
Laing explained: "Children do not give up their innate imagination,
curiosity, dreaminess easily. You have to love them to get them to do
that." Psychology had not yet been invented in Blake's day; but it is hard
to see that he would have disagreed with that.
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