121-) English Literature
William Blake
William
Blake (born Nov. 28, 1757, London, Eng.—died Aug. 12, 1827, London) was an
English poet engraver,, painter, and printmaker, visionary ,and author of
exquisite lyrics in Songs of Innocence (1789) and Songs of Experience (1794)
and profound and difficult “prophecies,” such as Visions of the Daughters of
Albion (1793), The First Book of Urizen (1794), Milton (1804[–?11]), and
Jerusalem (1804[–?20]). The dating of Blake’s texts is explained in the
Researcher’s Note: Blake publication dates. These works he etched, printed,
coloured, stitched, and sold, with the assistance of his devoted wife,
Catherine. Among his best known lyrics today are “The Lamb,” “The Tyger,”
“London,” and the “Jerusalem” lyric from Milton, which has become a kind of
second national anthem in Britain.Largely unrecognised during his life, Blake
is now considered a seminal figure in the history of the poetry and visual art
of the Romantic Age. What he called his "prophetic works" were said
by 20th-century critic Northrop Frye to form "what is in proportion to its
merits the least read body of poetry in the English language". His visual
artistry led 21st-century critic Jonathan Jones to proclaim him "far and
away the greatest artist Britain has ever produced". In 2002, Blake was
placed at number 38 in the BBC's poll of the 100 Greatest Britons. While he
lived in London his entire life, except for three years spent in Felpham, he
produced a diverse and symbolically rich collection of works, which embraced
the imagination as "the body of God" or "human existence
itself".
Although
Blake was considered mad by contemporaries for his idiosyncratic views, he came
to be highly regarded by later critics and readers for his expressiveness and
creativity, and for the philosophical and mystical undercurrents within his
work. His paintings and poetry have been characterised as part of the Romantic
movement and as "Pre-Romantic". A committed Christian who was hostile
to the Church of England (indeed, to almost all forms of organised religion),
Blake was influenced by the ideals and ambitions of the French and American revolutions.
Though later he rejected many of these political beliefs, he maintained an
amicable relationship with the political activist Thomas Paine; he was also
influenced by thinkers such as Emanuel Swedenborg. Despite these known
influences, the singularity of Blake's work makes him difficult to classify.
The 19th-century scholar William Michael Rossetti characterised him as a
"glorious luminary", and "a man not forestalled by predecessors,
nor to be classed with contemporaries , nor to be replaced by known or readily
surmisable successors".
In the early 21st century, Blake was regarded as the
earliest and most original of the Romantic poets, but in his lifetime he was
generally neglected or (unjustly) dismissed as mad.
"The
Tyger" from the combined volume of the Songs of Innocence and of
Experience by William Blake, ca. 1825; relief etching printed in orange-brown
ink and hand-colored with watercolor and gold.(poems, poetry)
Early
life
William
Blake was born on 28 November 1757 at 28 Broad Street (now Broadwick Street) in
Soho, London. He was the third of seven children, two of whom died in infancy. Blake's
father, James, was a hosier, who had lived in London.Blake was born over his
father’s modest hosiery shop at 28 Broad Street, Golden Square, London. He
attended school only long enough to learn reading and writing, leaving at the
age of 10, and was otherwise educated at home by his mother Catherine Blake
(née Wright). Even though the Blakes were English Dissenters, William was
baptised on 11 December at St James's Church, Piccadilly, London.[20]His
parents were James Blake (1722–84) and Catherine Wright Armitage Blake
(1722–92). His father came from an obscure family in Rotherhithe, across the
River Thames from London, and his mother was from equally obscure yeoman stock
in the straggling little village of Walkeringham in Nottinghamshire. His mother
had first married (1746) a haberdasher named Thomas Armitage, and in 1748 they
moved to 28 Broad Street. In 1750 the couple joined the newly established
Moravian church in Fetter Lane, London. The Moravian religious movement,
recently imported from Germany, had had a strong attraction to the powerful
emotions associated with nascent Methodism (see Moravian church). Catherine
Armitage bore a son named Thomas, who died as a baby in 1751, and a few months
later Thomas Armitage himself died.
Catherine
left the Moravians, who insisted on marriages within the faith, and in 1752
married James Blake in the Church of England chapel of St. George in Hanover
Square. James moved in with her at 28 Broad Street. They had six children:
James (1753–1827), who took over the family haberdashery business on his
father’s death in 1784; John (born 1755, died in childhood); William, the poet
and artist; another John Blake (born 1760, died by 1800), whom Blake referred
to in a letter of 1802 as “my Brother John the evil one” and who became an
unsuccessful gingerbread baker, enlisted as a soldier, and died; Richard
(1762–87), called Robert, a promising artist and the poet’s favourite, at times
his alter ego; and Catherine Elizabeth (1764–1841), the baby of the family, who
never married and who died in extreme indigence long after the deaths of all
her brothers.
William
Blake grew up in modest circumstances. What teaching he received as a child was
at his mother’s knee, as most children did. This he saw as a positive matter,
later writing, “Thank God I never was sent to school/ To be Flogd into
following the Style of a Fool[.]”
The
Bible was an early and profound influence on Blake, and remained a source of
inspiration throughout his life. Blake's childhood, according to him, included
mystical religious experiences such as "beholding God's face pressed
against his window, seeing angels among the haystacks, and being visited by the
Old Testament prophet Ezekiel."
Blake
started engraving copies of drawings of Greek antiquities purchased for him by
his father, a practice that was preferred to actual drawing. Within these
drawings Blake found his first exposure to classical forms through the work of Raphael,
Michelangelo, Maarten van Heemskerck and Albrecht Dürer. The number of prints
and bound books that James and Catherine were able to purchase for young
William suggests that the Blakes enjoyed, at least for a time, a comfortable
wealth. When William was ten years old, his parents knew enough of his
headstrong temperament that he was not sent to school but instead enrolled in
drawing classes at Henry Pars' drawing school in the Strand. He read avidly on
subjects of his own choosing. During this period, Blake made explorations into
poetry; his early work displays knowledge of Ben Jonson, Edmund Spenser, and
the Psalms.
Apprenticeship
On
4 August 1772, Blake was apprenticed to engraver James Basire of Great Queen
Street, at the sum of £52.10, for a term of seven years. At the end of the
term, aged 21, he became a professional engraver. No record survives of any
serious disagreement or conflict between the two during the period of Blake's
apprenticeship, but Peter Ackroyd's biography notes that Blake later added
Basire's name to a list of artistic adversaries; and then crossed it out. This
aside, Basire's style of line-engraving was of a kind held at the time to be
old-fashioned compared to the flashier stipple or mezzotint styles. It has been
speculated that Blake's instruction in this outmoded form may have been
detrimental to his acquiring of work or recognition in later life.
After
two years, Basire sent his apprentice to copy images from the Gothic churches
in London (perhaps to settle a quarrel between Blake and James Parker, his
fellow apprentice). His experiences in Westminster Abbey helped form his
artistic style and ideas. The Abbey of his day was decorated with suits of
armour, painted funeral effigies and varicoloured waxworks. Ackroyd notes that
"...the most immediate [impression] would have been of faded brightness
and colour". This close study of the Gothic (which he saw as the
"living form") left clear traces in his style. In the long afternoons
Blake spent sketching in the Abbey, he was occasionally interrupted by boys
from Westminster School, who were allowed in the Abbey. They teased him and one
tormented him so much that Blake knocked the boy off a scaffold to the ground,
"upon which he fell with terrific Violence". After Blake complained to
the Dean, the schoolboys' privilege was withdrawn. Blake claimed that he
experienced visions in the Abbey. He saw Christ with his Apostles and a great
procession of monks and priests, and heard their chant.
Royal
Academy
On
8 October 1779, Blake became a student at the Royal Academy in Old Somerset
House, near the Strand. While the terms of his study required no payment, he
was expected to supply his own materials throughout the six-year period. There,
he rebelled against what he regarded as the unfinished style of fashionable
painters such as Rubens, championed by the school's first president, Joshua
Reynolds. Over time, Blake came to detest Reynolds' attitude towards art,
especially his pursuit of "general truth" and "general beauty".
Reynolds wrote in his Discourses that the "disposition to abstractions, to
generalising and classification, is the great glory of the human mind";
Blake responded, in marginalia to his personal copy, that "To Generalize
is to be an Idiot; To Particularize is the Alone Distinction of Merit".
Blake also disliked Reynolds' apparent humility, which he held to be a form of
hypocrisy. Against Reynolds' fashionable oil painting, Blake preferred the
Classical precision of his early influences, Michelangelo and Raphael.
David
Bindman suggests that Blake's antagonism towards Reynolds arose not so much
from the president's opinions (like Blake, Reynolds held history painting to be
of greater value than landscape and portraiture), but rather "against his
hypocrisy in not putting his ideals into practice." Certainly Blake was
not averse to exhibiting at the Royal Academy, submitting works on six
occasions between 1780 and 1808.
Blake
became a friend of John Flaxman, Thomas Stothard and George Cumberland during
his first year at the Royal Academy. They shared radical views, with Stothard
and Cumberland joining the Society for Constitutional Information.
Gordon
Riots
Blake's
first biographer, Alexander Gilchrist, records that in June 1780 Blake was
walking towards Basire's shop in Great Queen Street when he was swept up by a
rampaging mob that stormed Newgate Prison. The mob attacked the prison gates
with shovels and pickaxes, set the building ablaze, and released the prisoners
inside. Blake was reportedly in the front rank of the mob during the attack.
The riots, in response to a parliamentary bill revoking sanctions against Roman
Catholicism, became known as the Gordon Riots and provoked a flurry of
legislation from the government of George III, and the creation of the first
police force.
Marriage to Catherine Boucher
In 1781 Blake fell in love with Catherine Sophia
Boucher (1762–1831), the pretty, illiterate daughter of an unsuccessful market
gardener from the farm village of Battersea across the River Thames from
London. The family name suggests that they were Huguenots who had fled
religious persecution in France.
According to Blake’s friend John Thomas Smith, at
their first meeting he told her how he had been jilted by Polly Wood , and
Catherine said she pitied him from her heart.
“Do you pity me?” asked Blake.
“Yes, I do, most sincerely.”
“Then,” said he, “I love you for that.”
“Well, and I love you.”
Blake returned to Soho to achieve financial security
to support a wife, and 12 months later, on Aug. 18, 1782, the couple married in
her family’s church, Saint Mary’s, Battersea, the bride signing the marriage
register with an X.
It was an imprudent and highly satisfactory marriage.
Blake taught Catherine to read and write (a little), to draw, to colour his
designs and prints, to help him at the printing press, and to see visions as he
did. She believed implicitly in his genius and his visions and supported him in
everything he did with charming credulity. After his death she lived chiefly
for the moments when he came to sit and talk with her.
Not
long after his marriage, Blake acquired a rolling press for printing engravings
and joined his fellow apprentice James Parker in opening a print shop in 1784.
Within a year, however, Blake had left the business and returned to making
rather than selling prints.
Marriage
In
1781 Blake met Catherine Boucher when he was recovering from a relationship
that had culminated in a refusal of his marriage proposal. He recounted the
story of his heartbreak for Catherine and her parents, after which he asked Catherine:
"Do you pity me?" When she responded affirmatively, he declared:
"Then I love you". Blake married Catherine, who was five years his
junior, on 18 August 1782 in St Mary's Church, Battersea. Illiterate, Catherine
signed her wedding contract with an X. The original wedding certificate may be
viewed at the church, where a commemorative stained-glass window was installed
between 1976 and 1982. The marriage was successful and Catherine became Blake's
"partner in both life and work", undertaking important roles as an
engraver and colorist. In 2019 Tate Britain's Blake exhibition gave particular
focus to Catherine's role in Blake's work.
Education as artist and engraver
From
childhood Blake wanted to be an artist, at the time an unusual aspiration for
someone from a family of small businessmen and Nonconformists (dissenting
Protestants). His father indulged him by sending him to Henry Pars’s Drawing
School in the Strand, London (1767–72). The boy hoped to be apprenticed to some
artist of the newly formed and flourishing English school of painting, but the
fees proved to be more than the parental pocket could withstand. Instead he
went with his father in 1772 to interview the successful and fashionable
engraver William Wynne Ryland. Ryland’s fee, perhaps £100, was both “more
attainable” than that of fashionable painters and still, for the Blakes, very
high; furthermore the boy interposed an unexpected objection: “Father, I do not
like the man’s face; it looks as if he will live to be hanged.” Eleven years later,
Ryland was indeed hanged—for forgery—one of the last criminals to suffer on the
infamous gallows known as Tyburn Tree.
The
young Blake was ultimately apprenticed for 50 guineas to James Basire
(1730–1802), a highly responsible and conservative line engraver who
specialized in prints depicting architecture. For seven years (1772–79) Blake
lived with Basire’s family on Great Queen Street, near Lincoln’s Inn Fields,
London. There he learned to polish the copperplates, to sharpen the gravers, to
grind the ink, to reduce the images to the size of the copper, to prepare the
plates for etching with acid, and eventually to push the sharp graver through
the copper, with the light filtered through gauze so that the glare reflected
from the brilliantly polished copper would not dazzle him. He became so
proficient in all aspects of his craft that Basire trusted him to go by himself
to Westminster Abbey to copy the marvelous medieval monuments there for one of
the greatest illustrated English books of the last quarter of the 18th century,
the antiquarian Richard Gough’s Sepulchral Monuments in Great Britain (vol. 1,
1786).
Death of Robert Blake
One
of the most traumatic events of Blake’s life was the death of his beloved
24-year-old brother, Robert, from tuberculosis in 1787. At the end, Blake
stayed up with him for a fortnight, and when Robert died Blake saw his
“released spirit ascend heavenward through the matter-of-fact ceiling,
‘clapping its hands for joy,’” as Alexander Gilchrist wrote. The occasion
entered into Blake’s psyche and his poetry. In the epic poem Vala or The Four
Zoas (manuscript 1796?–1807?), he writes, “Urizen rose up from his couch / On
wings of tenfold joy, clapping his hands,” and, in his poem Milton, plates 29
and 33 portray figures, labeled “William” and “Robert,” falling backward as a
star plunges toward their feet. Blake claimed that in a vision Robert taught
him the secret of painting his designs and poems on copper in a liquid
impervious to acid before the plate was etched and printed. This method, which
Blake called “Illuminated Printing,” made it possible for Blake to be his own
compositor, printer, binder, advertiser, and salesman for all his published
poetry thereafter, from Songs of Innocence to Jerusalem (1804[–20?]).
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