<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?xml-model href="../../../../Schema,%20CSS%20and%20Template%20Files/YB_schema2.rnc" type="application/relax-ng-compact-syntax"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
   <teiHeader>
      <fileDesc>
         <titleStmt>
            <title>Yellow Nineties 2.0</title>
            <title>The Savoy, Volume III.&#8212;July 1896</title>
            <title type="Savoyv3_yeats_blake"/>
            <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
         </titleStmt>
         <editionStmt>
            <edition>
               <date>2019</date>
            </edition>
         </editionStmt>
         <publicationStmt>
            <idno>SAVOYV3_12pr</idno>


            <publisher>Yellow Nineties 2.0</publisher>
            <pubPlace>Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities</pubPlace>
            <address>
               <addrLine>English Department</addrLine>
               <addrLine>350 Victoria Street,</addrLine>
               <addrLine>Toronto ON,</addrLine>
               <addrLine>M5B 2K3</addrLine>
               <addrLine>Canada</addrLine>
            </address>
            <availability>
               <p>Usable according to the Creative Commons License <ref
                     target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/">Attribution
                     Non-commercial Share-alike</ref>.</p>
            </availability>
         </publicationStmt>
         <sourceDesc>
            <biblStruct>
               <monogr>
                  <editor>Symons, Arthur</editor>
                  <author>Yeats, W.B.</author>
                  <title level="j">William Blake and His Illustrations To the Divine Comedy</title>
                  <imprint>
                     <publisher>Leonard Smithers</publisher>
                     <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
                     <date>July 1896</date>
                     <biblScope>Yeats, W.B. "William Blake and His Illustrations To the Divine Comedy." <emph rend="italic">The
                        Savoy</emph> vol. 3, July 1896, pp. 41-57.
                        <emph rend="italic">Savoy Digital Edition</emph>,
                        edited by Christopher Keep and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2018-2020. <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/savoyv3-yeats-blake/ </biblScope>
                  </imprint>
               </monogr>
            </biblStruct>
         </sourceDesc>
      </fileDesc>
      <encodingDesc>
         <editorialDecl>
            <p>Our editorial method is informed by social-text editing principles. By “text” we mean
               verbal and visual printed material, including non-referential physical elements such
               as bindings, page layouts, and ornaments. We view any text as the outcome of
               collaborative processes that have specific manifestations at precise historical
               moments. The Yellow Nineties Online publishes facsimile editions of a select
               collection of fin-de- siècle aesthetic periodicals, together with paratexts of
               production and reception such as cover designs, advertising materials, and reviews.
               This historical material is enhanced by two kinds of peer-reviewed scholarly
               commentary: biographies of the periodicals’ contributors and associates; and critical
               introductions to each title and volume by experts in the field. All scholarly
               material on the site is vetted by the editor(s) and peer- reviewed by them and/or an
               international board of advisors. The site as a whole is peer- reviewed by NINES
               (Networked Infrastructure for Nineteenth-Century Electronic Scholarship).
               Contributors to the site retain personal copyright in their material. The site is
               licensed with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 license.
               Both primary and secondary materials, including all visual images, are marked up in
               TEI- (Textual-Encoding Initiative) compliant XML (Extensible Markup Language). To
               ensure maximum flexibility for users, magazines are available on the site as virtual
               objects (facsimiles) in FlipBook form; in HTML for online reading; in PDF for
               downloading and collecting; and in XML for those who wish to review and/or adapt our
               tag sets. In order to make ornamental devices, such as initial letters, head- and
               tail- pieces, searchable, we have developed a Database of Ornament in OMEKA, and
               linked it to the relevant pages of each magazine edition. As a dynamic structure, a
               scholarly website is always in process; Phase One of The Yellow Nineties Online
               (2010-2015) is completed and Phase Two (2016-2021) is underway. </p>
         </editorialDecl>
      </encodingDesc>
      <profileDesc>
         <creation>
            <date>1896</date>
         </creation>
         <langUsage>
            <language ident="en">English</language>
         </langUsage>
         <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="#lcsh">
               <list>
                  <item>English literature -- 19th century -- Periodicals</item>
                  <item>Great Britain -- Periodicals</item>
               </list>
            </keywords>
            <keywords scheme="ninesGenre">
               <list>
                  <item>Review</item>
                  <item>Criticism</item>
                  <item>Periodical</item>

                  <note>Possible genres: Architecture, Ephemera, Music, Poetry, Artifacts, Fiction,
                     Nonfiction, Religion, Bibliography, History, Paratext, Review, Collection,
                     Leisure, Periodical, Visual Art, Criticism, Letters, Philosophy, Translation,
                     Drama, Life Writing, Photograph, Travel, Education, Manuscript, Citation, Book
                     History, Politics, Reference Works, Family Life, Law, Folklore, Humor. Please
                     include as many as apply. Place each in its own item tag </note>

               </list>
            </keywords>
            <keywords scheme="ninesType">
               <list>
                  <item>Periodical</item>
                  <note>Possible Types (singular): "Periodical" (texts/most stuff), "Interactive
                     Resource" (current writing, biographies, not old reviews), "Still Image"
                     (images, visual art), "Physical Object" (posters, prospecti)</note>
                  <!-- only choose one item-->
               </list>
            </keywords>

            <keywords scheme="ninesDiscipline">
               <list>
                  <item>Book History</item>
                  <item>Literature</item>
                  <note>Possible Disciplines (multiple): "Book History (include for all periodical
                     items)," "Literature," "Art History (use for art, also use for reviews),"
                     "History (don't use in a general sense)," "Theatre Studies," "Musicology,"
                     "Philosophy," "Anthropology," "Science"</note>
                  <!--Add items as necessary. Remove items not used.-->
               </list>
            </keywords>
         </textClass>
      </profileDesc>
   </teiHeader>
   <text>
      <body>

         <head>
            <title level="a"><emph rend="bold"><emph rend="indent">WILLIAM BLAKE AND HIS
                     ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE DIVINE COMEDY</emph></emph></title>
         </head>


         <p><emph rend="indent4">I. HIS OPINIONS UPON ART </emph></p>

         <p><emph rend="indent">THE recoil from scientific naturalism has created in our
            </emph><lb/> day the movement the French call <emph rend="italic">symboliste</emph>,
            which, be- <lb/> ginning with the memorable "Axel," by Villiers de l'lsle <lb/> Adam,
            has added to drama a new kind of romance, at <lb/> once ecstatic and picturesque, in the
            works of M. Maeter-<lb/> linck ; and beginning with certain pictures of the pre- <lb/>
            Raphaelites, and of Mr. <ref target="#TWA">Watts</ref> and Mr. Burne-Jones, has brought
            into art<lb/> a new and subtle inspiration. This movement, and in art more especially,
            <lb/> has proved so consonant with a change in the times, in the desires of <lb/> our
            hearts grown weary with material circumstance, that it has begun to <lb/> touch even the
            great public ; the ladies of fashion and men of the world <lb/> who move so slowly ; and
            has shown such copious signs of being a movement, <lb/> perhaps the movement of the
            opening century, that one of the best known of <lb/> French picture dealers will store
            none but the inventions of a passionate sym- <lb/> bolism. It has no sufficient
            philosophy and criticism, unless indeed it has them <lb/> hidden in the writings of M.
               <ref target="#STM">Mallarm&#xe9;</ref>, which I have not French enough to <lb/>
            understand, but if it cared it might find enough of both philosophy and <lb/> criticism
            in the writings of <ref target="#WBL">William Blake</ref> to protect it from its
            opponents, <lb/> and what is perhaps of greater importance, from its own mistakes, for
            he was <lb/> certainly the first great <emph rend="italic">symboliste</emph> of modern
            times, and the first of any time to<lb/> preach the indissoluble marriage of all great
            art with symbol. There had <lb/> been allegorists and teachers of allegory in plenty,
            but the symbolic imagina-<lb/> tion, or as Blake preferred to call it, "Vision," is not
            allegory, being "a <lb/> representation of what actually exists really and unchangeably"
            : a symbol is <lb/> indeed the only possible expression of some invisible essence, a
            transparent lamp <lb/> about a spiritual flame, while allegory is one of many possible
            representations <lb/> of an embodied thing, or familiar principle, and belongs to fancy
            and not to <lb/> imagination ; the one is a revelation, the other an amusement. It is
            happily </p>



         <fw type="runningHead">
            <fw type="pageNumLeft">42</fw><fw type="head">THE SAVOY</fw>
         </fw>


         <p>no part of my purpose to expound in detail the relations he believed to <lb/> exist
            between symbol and mind ; for in doing so I should come upon not a <lb/> few doctrines
            which, though they have not been difficult to many simple- <lb/> persons, ascetics
            wrapped in skins, women who had cast away all common <lb/> knowledge, peasants dreaming
            by their sheep-folds upon the hills, are full of<lb/> obscurity to the man of modern
            culture ; but it is necessary to just touch <lb/> upon these relations, because in them
            was the fountain of much of the practice<lb/> and of all the precept of his artistic
            life. </p>

         <p><emph rend="indent">If a man would enter into "Noah's rainbow," he has written, and
               "make a </emph><lb/> friend" of one of "the images of wonder" which dwell there, and
            which always<lb/> entreat him "to leave mortal things," "then would he arise from the
            grave <lb/> and meet the Lord in the air ;" and by this rainbow ; this sign of a
            covenant<lb/> granted to him who is with Shem and Japhet, "painting, poetry and music,"
            "the <lb/> three powers in man of conversing with Paradise which the flood 'of time and
            <lb/> space' did not sweep away" ; Blake represented the shapes of beauty haunting <lb/>
            our moments of inspiration : shapes held by most for the frailest of ephemera,<lb/> but
            by him for a people older than the world, citizens of eternity, appearing <lb/> and
            reappearing in the minds of artists and of poets, creating all we touch <lb/> and see by
            casting distorted images of themselves upon "the vegetable glass <lb/> of nature" ; and
            because beings, none the less symbols ; blossoms, as it were, <lb/> growing from
            invisible immortal roots ; hands, as it were, pointing the way into <lb/> some divine
            labyrinth. If "the world of imagination" was "the world of <lb/> eternity" as this
            doctrine implied, it was of less importance to know men and <lb/> nature than to
            distinguish the beings and substances of imagination from those <lb/> of a more
            perishable kind, created by the fantasy, in uninspired moments, out <lb/> of memory and
            whim ; and this could best be done by purifying one's mind, as <lb/> with a flame, in
            study of the works of the great masters, who were great because <lb/> they had been
            granted by divine favour a vision of the unfallen world, from <lb/> which others are
            kept apart by the flaming sword that turns every way ; and <lb/> by flying from the
            painters who studied "the vegetable glass" for its own sake,<lb/> and not to discover
            there the shadows of imperishable beings and substances, <lb/> and who entered into
            their own minds, not to make the unfallen world a test <lb/> of all they saw and heard
            and felt with the senses, but to cover the naked <lb/> spirit with "the rotten rags of
            memory" of older sensations. To distinguish <lb/> between these two schools, and to
            cleave always to the Florentine, and so <lb/> to escape the fascination of those who
            seemed to him to offer a spirit, weary <lb/> with the labours of inspiration, the sleep
            of nature, had been the struggle of the<lb/> first half of his life ; and it was only
            after his return to London from Felpham </p>
         <div type="image4">

            <figure>
               <graphic width="750px"
                  url="http://https://beta.1890s.ca/wp-content/uploads/SAVOYV3_icon4_blake_portico.jpg"/>

               <figDesc>This halftone reproduction of a water-colour drawing by William Blake
                  illustrating Dante’s Inferno appears in portrait orientation. The image shows two
                  central figures with their back to the viewer standing at the gate [“portico”] of
                  hell and about to enter. On either side of the portal is a tall tree with leaves
                  swirling around the trunk, extending the entire height of the image.. The
                  mirroring trees have roots that creep towards each other toward the centre bottom
                  of the image. The two lightly robed figures [the poets Dante and Virgil] stand in
                  front of these roots, on a threshold that leads into a vision of hell. The figure
                  on the left is standing with his left arm lifted straight up and palm turned up to
                  the sky. He is in mid-step, with his right leg lagging slightly behind and lifted
                  as if it were about to step forwards. His face is turned to look up at his left
                  hand, and his light-coloured hair falls down his back. His right arm is extended
                  down and slightly to his right, reaching towards the other figure. The other
                  figure mirrors the first in having the outside arm, this time their right arm,
                  extended up and out to the side. This figure has shorter hair, and has their face
                  turned toward the other figure, giving the viewer a three-quarters profile. Both
                  figures are wearing a transparent veil of material surrounding their legs and
                  draping around their feet. Through the threshold of the gates of hell there is a
                  path, a sea, and a series of five layers of hills and jagged triangular shapes.
                  The hills are shaded in an ombre effect, going from dark at the top edge to light
                  near the bottom. There appears three roughly sketched figures atop the second hill
                  from the front. Across the surface of the portal appears various random streaks of
                  shading. In the small section above the portal is the open sky. In the bottom
                  right corner of the page appears the text: “HELL [caps] Canto 3” [citing Dante’s
                  Inferno].</figDesc>

            </figure>
         </div>
         <div>
            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="head2">BLAKE'S ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE DIVINE COMEDY</fw>
               <fw type="pageNumRight">45</fw>
            </fw>


            <p>in 1804 that he finally escaped from "temptations and perturbations" which <lb/>
               sought "to destroy the imaginative power" at "the hands of Venetian and <lb/> Flemish
               Demons." "The spirit of Titian," and one must always remember <lb/> that he had only
               seen poor engravings, and what his disciple, Palmer, has <lb/> called "picture
               dealers' Titians," "was particularly active in raising doubts <lb/> concerning the
               possibility of executing without a model ; and when once he <lb/> had raised the
               doubt it became easy for him to snatch away the vision time <lb/> after time," and
               Blake's imagination "weakened" and "darkened" until a <lb/> "memory of nature and of
               the pictures of various schools possessed his mind, <lb/> instead of appropriate
               execution" flowing from the vision itself. But now <lb/> he wrote, "O glory ! and O
               delight ! I have entirely reduced that spectrous <lb/> fiend to his
               station"&#x2014;he had overcome the merely reasoning and sensual <lb/> portion of the
               mind&#x2014;"whose annoyance has been the ruin of my labours for <lb/> the last
               twenty years of my life .... I speak with perfect confidence and <lb/> certainty of
               the fact which has passed upon me. Nebuchadnezzar had seven <lb/> times passed over
               him, I have had twenty ; thank God I was not altogether a <lb/> beast as he was ....
               suddenly, on the day after visiting the Truchsessian <lb/> Gallery of pictures,"
               &#x2014;this was a gallery containing pictures by Albert D&#xfc;rer and <lb/> by the
               great Florentines, &#x2014;"I was again enlightened with the light I enjoyed in <lb/>
               my youth, and which has for exactly twenty years been closed from me <lb/> as by a
               door and window shutters. . . . Excuse my enthusiasm, or rather <lb/> madness, for I
               am really drunk with intellectual vision whenever I take a <lb/> pencil or graver in
               my hand, as I used to be in my youth."</p>

            <p><emph rend="indent">This letter may have been the expression of a moment's
                  enthusiasm, but </emph><lb/> was more probably rooted in one of those intuitions
               of coming technical <lb/> power which every creator feels, and learns to rely upon ;
               for all his greatest<lb/> work was done, and the principles of his art were
               formulated after this date. <lb/> Except a word here and there, his writings hitherto
               had not dealt with the <lb/> principles of art except remotely and by implication ;
               but now he wrote <lb/> much upon them, and not in obscure symbolic verse, but in
               emphatic prose, <lb/> and explicit if not very poetical rhyme. In his "Descriptive
               Catalogue," <lb/> in "The Address to the Public," in the notes on Sir Joshua
               Reynolds, in "The <lb/> Book of Moonlight," of which some not very dignified rhymes
               alone remain ; <lb/> in beautiful detached passages in "the MS. Book," he explained
               spiritual <lb/> art, and praised the painters of Florence and their influence, and
               cursed all <lb/> that has come of Venice and Holland. The limitation of his view was
               from <lb/> the very intensity of his vision ; he was a too literal realist of
               imagination, as <lb/> others are of nature, and because he believed that the figures
               seen by the mind's </p>

            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNumLeft">46</fw><fw type="head">THE SAVOY</fw>
            </fw>

            <p>eye, when exalted by inspiration, were "eternal existences," symbols of divine <lb/>
               essences, he hated every grace of style that might obscure their lineaments. <lb/> To
               wrap them about in reflected lights was to do this, and to dwell over <lb/> fondly
               upon any softness of hair or flesh was to dwell upon that which was <lb/> least
               permanent and least characteristic, for "The great and golden rule of <lb/> art, as
               of life, is this : that the more distinct, sharp, and wiry the boundary <lb/> line,
               the more perfect the work of art ; and the less keen and sharp, the <lb/> greater is
               the evidence of weak imitation, plagiarism, and bungling." Inspira- <lb/> tion was to
               see the permanent and characteristic in all forms, and if you had <lb/> it not, you
               must needs imitate with a languid mind the things you saw or <lb/> remembered, and so
               sink into the sleep of nature where all is soft and melting.<lb/> "Great inventors in
               all ages knew this. Protogenes and Apelles knew each <lb/> other by their line.
               Raphael and Michael Angelo and Albert D&#xfc;rer are <lb/> known by this and this
               alone. How do we distinguish the owl from the <lb/> beast, the horse from the ox, but
               by the bounding outline? How do we <lb/> distinguish one face or countenance from
               another, but by the bounding line<lb/> and its infinite inflections and movements ?
               What is it that builds a house <lb/> and plants a garden but the definite and
               determinate? What is it that <lb/> distinguishes honesty from knavery but the hard
               and wiry line of rectitude <lb/> and certainty in the actions and intentions ? Leave
               out this line and you <lb/> leave out life itself ; and all is chaos again, and the
               line of the Almighty must<lb/> be drawn out upon it before man or beast can exist."
               He even insisted that <lb/> "colouring does not depend on where the colours are put,
               but upon where the <lb/> lights and darks are put, and all depends upon the form or
               outline ;" meaning, <lb/> I suppose, that a colour gets its brilliance or its depth
               from being in light or <lb/> in shadow. He does not mean by outline the bounding line
               dividing a form <lb/> from its background, as one of his commentators has thought,
               but the line <lb/> that divides it from surrounding space, and unless you have an
               overmastering <lb/> sense of this you cannot draw true beauty at all, but only "the
               beauty that is <lb/> appended to folly," a beauty of mere voluptuous softness, "a
               lamentable <lb/> accident of the mortal and perishing life," for "the beauty proper
               for sublime<lb/> art is lineaments, or forms and features capable of being the
               receptacles of <lb/> intellect," and "the face or limbs that alter least from youth
               to old age are <lb/> the face and limbs of the greatest beauty and perfection." His
               praise of a <lb/> severe art had been beyond price had his age rested a moment to
               listen, in <lb/> the midst of its enthusiasm for Correggio and the later Renaissance,
               for <lb/> Bartolozzi and for Stothard ; and yet in his visionary realism, and in his
               <lb/> enthusiasm for what, after all, is perhaps the greatest art, and a necessary
            </p>
         </div>
         <div type="image4">

            <figure>
               <graphic width="750px"
                  url="http://https://beta.1890s.ca/wp-content/uploads/SAVOYV3_icon5_blake_francesca.jpg"/>

               <figDesc>This halftone reproduction of a steel-plate engraving by William Blake is in
                  landscape orientation. The image shows a scene from Dante’s Inferno, in which the
                  poet, Dante, sees the shades of the adulterous lovers, Paolo and Francesca, in the
                  first circle of hell, where the damned writhe in endless torment. These three
                  figures form the centre of the composition. Dante is positioned In the mid-ground
                  to the right of centre on a piece of rocky land jutting out into a sea. He is
                  wearing a long robe and has long hair; his hands are out to the side, palms down.
                  He stands facing the viewer with his body slightly turned to the left of the page,
                  and bent down at the waist. He is looking down at a body that lies horizontally at
                  his feet. The body is lying prone with its arms at its sides and face to the sky.
                  The land on which he stands is covered by some water from the crashing waves.
                  Dante turns to the shades of Paolo and Francesca, in an enclosed flame beside and
                  above him. Paolo, is on the left and Francesca on the right; they are holding each
                  other in their arms. Francesca, the woman, is wearing a flowing dress and Paolo,
                  the man, appears to be naked. To the right of the flame that encloses them, and
                  above the figure of Dante, in the top right corner, is a bright sun-like circle
                  with two figures inside of it. Within the circle is one faceless figure seated on
                  the left and another seated to the right; they appear to be on a rock. Dark lines
                  extend out to the left and right, and then extend down to the sealine and up to
                  the top of the page, forming the sky. The foreground of the image is comprised of
                  swirls of flame containing naked bodies of the damned above the sea [of
                  brimstone].</figDesc>

            </figure>
         </div>
         <div>

            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="head2">BLAKE'S ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE DIVINE COMEDY</fw>
               <fw type="pageNumRight">49</fw>
            </fw>

            <p>part of every picture that is art at all, he forgot how he who wraps the vision<lb/>
               in lights and shadows, in irridescent or glowing colour ; having in the midst <lb/>
               of his labour many little visions of these secondary essences ; until form be<lb/>
               half lost in pattern, may compel the canvas or paper to become itself a <lb/> symbol
               of some not indefinite because unsearchable essence : for is not the<lb/> Bacchus and
               Ariadne of Titian a talisman as powerfully charged with intel- <lb/> lectual virtue
               as though it were a jewel-studded door of the city seen on <lb/> Patmos ? </p>

            <p><emph rend="indent">To cover the imperishable lineaments of beauty with shadows and
                  reflected</emph><lb/> lights was to fall into the power of his "Vala," the
               indolent fascination of nature,<lb/> the woman divinity who is so often described in
               "the prophetic" books as <lb/> "sweet pestilence," and whose children weave webs to
               take the souls of men ; <lb/> but there was yet a more lamentable chance, for nature
               has also a "masculine <lb/> portion," or "spectre," which kills instead of merely
               hiding and is continually at<lb/> war with inspiration. To "generalize" forms and
               shadows, to "smooth out"<lb/> spaces and lines in obedience to "laws of composition,"
               and of painting ; <lb/> founded, not upon imagination, which always thirsts for
               variety and delights in <lb/> freedom, but upon reasoning from sensation, which is
               always seeking to reduce <lb/> everything to a lifeless and slavish uniformity ; as
               the popular art of Blake's <lb/> day had done, and as he understood Sir Joshua
               Reynolds to advise, was to fall <lb/> into "Entuthon Benithon," or "the Lake of Udan
               Adan," or some other of <lb/> those regions where the imagination and the flesh are
               alike dead, and which he<lb/> names by so many resonant fantastical names. "General
               knowledge is remote <lb/> knowledge," he wrote; "it is in particulars that wisdom
               consists, and happiness <lb/> too. Both in art and life general masses are as much
               art as a paste-board man <lb/> is human. Everyman has eyes, nose, and mouth; this
               every idiot knows. But <lb/> he who enters into and discriminates most minutely the
               manners and intentions, <lb/> the characters in all their branches, is the alone wise
               or sensible man, and on <lb/> this discrimination all art is founded. . . . As poetry
               admits not a letter that <lb/> is insignificant, so painting admits not a grain of
               sand or a blade of grass <lb/> insignificant, much less an insignificant blot or
               blur." </p>

            <p><emph rend="indent">Against another desire of his time, derivative also from what he
                  has </emph><lb/> called "corporeal reason," the desire for a tepid "moderation,"
               for a lifeless <lb/> "sanity" in both art and life, he had protested years before
               with a paradoxical <lb/> violence : "The roadway of excess leads to the palace of
               wisdom," and we <lb/> must only "bring out weight and measure in a time of dearth."
               This protest ; <lb/> carried, in the notes on Sir Joshua Reynolds, to the point of
               dwelling almost <lb/> with pleasure on the thought that "The Lives of the Painters
               say that </p>



            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNumLeft">50</fw><fw type="head">THE SAVOY</fw>
            </fw>
            <p>Raphael died of dissipation," because dissipation is better than emotional <lb/>
               penury ; seemed as important to his old age as to his youth. He taught it <lb/> to
               his disciples, and one finds it in its purely artistic shape in a diary written<lb/>
               by Samuel Palmer, in 1824: "excess is the essential vivifying spirit, vital <lb/>
               spark, embalming spice of the finest art. There are many mediums in the <lb/>
               <emph rend="italic">means</emph>&#x2014;none, oh, not a jot, not a shadow of a jot,
               in the <emph rend="italic">end</emph> of great art. In<lb/> a picture whose merit is
               to be excessively brilliant, it can't be too brilliant : <lb/> but individual tints
               may be too brilliant ... we must not begin with medium <lb/> but think always on
               excess and only use medium to make excess more <lb/> abundantly excessive."</p>

            <p><emph rend="indent">These three primary commands, to seek a determinate outline, to
                  avoid </emph><lb/> a generalized treatment, and to desire always abundance and
               exuberance, <lb/> were insisted upon with vehement anger, and their opponents called
               again <lb/> and again "demons," and "villains," "hired" by the wealthy and the idle ;
               but<lb/> in private, Palmer has told us, he could find "sources of delight throughout
               <lb/> the whole range of art," and was ever ready to praise excellence in any school,
               <lb/> finding, doubtless, among friends no need for the emphasis of exaggeration.
               <lb/> There is a beautiful passage in "Jerusalem," in which the merely mortal part
               <lb/> of the mind, "the spectre," creates "pyramids of pride," and "pillars in the
               <lb/> deepest hell to reach the heavenly arches," and seeks to discover wisdom in
               <lb/> "the spaces between the stars," not "in the stars," where it is, but the
               immortal<lb/> part makes all his labours vain, and turns his pyramids to "grains of
               sand," <lb/> his "pillars" to "dust on the fly's wing," and makes of "his starry
               heavens a <lb/> moth of gold and silver mocking his anxious grasp." So when man's
               desire to <lb/> rest from spiritual labour, and his thirst to fill his art with mere
               sensation, and <lb/> memory, seem upon the point of triumph, some miracle transforms
               them to a <lb/> new inspiration ; and here and there among the pictures born of
               sensation <lb/> and memory is the murmuring of a new ritual, the glimmering of new
               talis- <lb/> mans and symbols. </p>

            <p><emph rend="indent">It was during and after the writing of these opinions that Blake
                  did the </emph><lb/> various series of pictures which have brought him the bulk of
               his fame. He <lb/> had already completed the illustrations to Young's "Night
               Thoughts," in <lb/> which the great sprawling figures, a little wearisome even with
               the luminous <lb/> colours of the original water-colour, become nearly intolerable in
               plain black <lb/> and white ; and almost all the illustrations to "the prophetic
               books," which <lb/> have an energy like that of the elements, but are rather rapid
               sketches <lb/> taken while some phantasmic procession swept over him, than elaborate
               <lb/> compositions, and in whose shadowy adventures one finds not merely, as did </p>
         </div>
         <div type="image4">

            <figure>
               <graphic width="750px"
                  url="http://https://beta.1890s.ca/wp-content/uploads/SAVOYV3_icon6_blake_angry.jpg"/>

               <figDesc>This half-tone reproduction of a water-colour drawing by William Blake for
                  Dante’s Inferno is in portrait orientation. The image shows six figures in a line
                  in the top two-thirds of the picture plane and three figures lying on their backs
                  below in the bottom third. The three figures at the bottom are lying very close
                  together, with their knees bent and the backs of their heads facing the viewer.
                  The figure on the left has their left arm bent up with their hand resting above
                  their head. The face is not visible, with only hair showing at the top of the
                  head. The central figure is lying with their arms covered underneath the bodies of
                  the two figures on either side. They have a head scarf wrapping tightly around the
                  sides of their face. The figure’s eyes are closed. The figure on the right is a
                  man with his head twisted far to the right and his bearded face visible by the
                  viewer. The man’s eyes are closed. His left arm is wrapped across his body, with
                  his hand tucked into his armpit. He has long hair that flows in waves around his
                  head. The series of six figures at the top of the composition are floating above
                  the three figures on the bottom. The six floating figures are a mirror image of
                  each other in poses, with each figure’s outer arm raised up with a clenched fist.
                  The figure on the far left is a man who has his body facing the left side, but his
                  upper body twisted to face to the right. He has bare feet and bare legs that are
                  translucent, giving way to the background coming through. He has his right arm
                  raised in a fist, and his left arm is reaching across his body. He has a long wavy
                  beard and long hair on his head. Slightly to his right and backgrounded is the
                  second figure. This figure is limitedly visible, showing only a raised right fist
                  and a face with a crease between the eyebrows, and a mouth opened in an “O” shape.
                  To the right of this figure and slightly backgrounded is the third figure. This
                  figure has the right fist raised as well, and only the face visible. This figure
                  is visible only in profile. The figure has large lips that are extended far out
                  from the face. The figure also has a long and protruding nose. To the right of
                  this figure, and equally backgrounded, is a figure also visible only in profile,
                  but turned to face to the left and staring directly at the opposition. This figure
                  has the left fist raised and clenched. The figure has downturned lips and a crease
                  between the eyebrows. To the right and slightly foregrounded is another figure
                  with the left fist raised. This figure has a wavy beard and matching hair, both
                  long. The figure has slightly downturned lips and large pupils. The figure is
                  looking off into the distant left of the page, with a crease between the eyebrows.
                  To the right and foregrounded is the sixth figure. This figure has his whole body
                  visible. The figure has his left fist raised and his legs are sticking out towards
                  the centre of the composition. He has a long wavy beard and hair, which covers up
                  his whole upper body. He has wide eyes and raised eyebrows. His mouth is in an “O”
                  shape. In the background of all of the figures on the page is a series of
                  horizontal wavy lines, in wave-like shapes in the bottom half. In the upper half
                  the lines become less wavy and look like air waves in the sky. Between the lines
                  is dark shading until the top fifth of the page where the background becomes much
                  lighter. In the bottom right corner there is the text: “HELL Canto 7”.</figDesc>

            </figure>
         </div>
         <div>

            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="head2">BLAKE'S ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE DIVINE COMEDY</fw>
               <fw type="pageNumRight">53</fw>
            </fw>

            <p>Dr. Garth Wilkinson, "the hells of the ancient people, the Anakim, the<lb/> Nephalim,
               and the Rephaim ; . . . gigantic petrifactions from which the fires<lb/> of lust and
               intense selfish passion have long dissipated what was animal and <lb/> vital" ; not
               merely the shadows cast by the powers who had closed the light <lb/> from him as
               "with a door and window shutters," but the shadows of those who <lb/> gave them
               battle. He did now, however, the many designs to Milton, of which <lb/> I have only
               seen those to "Paradise Regained" ; the reproductions of those <lb/> to "Comus" ;
               published, I think, by Mr. Quaritch ; and the three or four to <lb/> "Paradise Lost"
               ; engraved by Bell Scott ; a series of designs which one good <lb/> judge considers
               his greatest work ; the illustrations to Blair's "Grave," whose <lb/> gravity and
               passion struggle with the mechanical softness and trivial smooth- <lb/> ness of
               Schiavonetti's engraving ; the illustrations to Thornton's "Virgil," <lb/> whose
               influence is, I think, perceptible in the work of the little group of land- <lb/>
               scape painters who gathered about him in his old age and delighted to call him <lb/>
               master. The member of the group, whom I have already so often quoted, has <lb/> alone
               praised worthily these illustrations to the first <emph rend="italic">Eclogue</emph>
               : "There is in<lb/> all such a misty and dreamy glimmer as penetrates and kindles the
               inmost <lb/> soul and gives complete and unreserved delight, unlike the gaudy
               daylight <lb/> of this world. They are like all this wonderful artist's work, the
               drawing <lb/> aside of the fleshly curtain, and the glimpse which all the most holy,
               studious <lb/> saints and sages have enjoyed, of the rest which remains to the people
               of <lb/> God." Now, too, he did the two great series, the crowning work of his life,
               "the <lb/> illustrations to the book of Job" and the designs to "The Divine
               Comedy."<lb/> They were commissioned from him by his patron and disciple John
               Linnell, <lb/> who paid him a good price, the best he had yet received ; but the
               material <lb/> circumstance of their origin has been often described, and is of less
               importance<lb/> than the influence upon his method of engraving of certain engravings
               of <lb/> Marc Antonio, which were shown him by Mr. Linnell. Hitherto he had pro-
               <lb/> tested against the mechanical "dots and lozenges" and "blots and blurs" of<lb/>
               Woollett and Strange, but had himself used both "dot and lozenge," "blot<lb/> and
               blur," though always in subordination "to a firm and determinate outline" ;<lb/> but
               in Marc Antonio he found a style full of delicate lines, a style where all <lb/> was
               living and energetic, strong and subtle. And almost his last words, a <lb/> letter
               written upon his death-bed, attack the "dots and lozenges" with even <lb/> more than
               usually quaint symbolism, and praise expressive lines. "I know <lb/> that the
               majority of Englishmen are bound by the indefinite . . . . a line is a <lb/> line in
               its minutest particulars, straight or crooked. It is itself, not inter- <lb/>
               measurable by anything else . . . . but since the French Revolution" ; since </p>



            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNumLeft">54</fw><fw type="head">THE SAVOY</fw>
            </fw>

            <p>the reign of reason began, that is ; "Englishmen are all intermeasurable with <lb/>
               one another, certainly a happy state of agreement in which I do not agree."<lb/> The
               Dante series occupied the last years of his life ; even when too weak to <lb/> get
               out of bed he worked on, propped up with the great drawing book before <lb/> him. He
               sketched a hundred designs, but left all incomplete, some very <lb/> greatly so, and
               partly engraved seven plates, of which the Francesca and <lb/> Paolo is the most
               finished. It is given here instead of a photographic repro- <lb/> duction of the
               water-colour, although accessible in the engraved set, to show <lb/> the form the
               entire series would have taken had he lived. It is not, I think, <lb/> inferior to
               any but the finest in the Job, if indeed to them, and shows in its <lb/> perfection
               Blake's mastery over elemental things, the swirl in which the lost <lb/> spirits are
               hurried, "a watery flame" he would have called it, the haunted <lb/> waters and the
               huddling shapes. The luminous globe, a symbol used again <lb/> in the Purgatory, is
               Francesca's and Paolo's dream of happiness, their "Heaven<lb/> in Hell's despite."
               The other three drawings have never been published before, <lb/> and appear here, as
               will those which will follow them, through the courtesy of <lb/> the Linnell family.
               The passing of Dante and Virgil through the portico of <lb/> Hell is the most
               unfinished and loses most in reproduction, for the flames, <lb/> rising from the
               half-seen circles, are in the original full of intense and various<lb/> colour ;
               while the angry spirits fighting on the waters of the Styx above the <lb/> sluggish
               bodies of the melancholy, loses the least, its daemonic energy being <lb/> in the
               contour of the bodies and faces. Both this and the Antaeus setting <lb/> down Virgil
               and Dante upon the verge of Cocytus, a wonderful piece of <lb/> colour in the
               original, resemble the illustrations to his "prophetic books" in<lb/> exuberant
               strength and lavish motion, and are in contrast with the illustrations<lb/> to the
               Purgatory, which are placid, marmoreal, tender, starry, rapturous. </p>

            <p><emph rend="indent">All in this great series are in some measure powerful and moving,
                  and </emph><lb/> not, as it is customary to say of the work of Blake, because a
               flaming <lb/> imagination pierces through a cloudy and indecisive technique, but
               because <lb/> they have the only excellence possible in any art, a mastery over
               artistic <lb/> expression. The technique of Blake was imperfect, incomplete, as is
               the <lb/> technique of wellnigh all artists who have striven to bring fires from
               remote<lb/> summits ; but where his imagination is perfect and complete, his
               technique <lb/> has a like perfection, a like completeness. He strove to embody more
               subtle <lb/> raptures, more elaborate intuitions than any before him ; his
               imagination and <lb/> technique are more broken and strained under a great burden
               than the <lb/> imagination and technique of any other master. "I am," wrote Blake,
               "like <lb/> others, just equal in invention and execution." And again, "No man can
            </p>
         </div>
         <div type="image4">

            <figure>
               <graphic width="750px"
                  url="http://https://beta.1890s.ca/wp-content/uploads/SAVOYV3_icon7_blake_antaeus.jpg"/>

               <figDesc>The half-tone reproduction of a water-colour by William Blake is in portrait
                  orientation and is an illustration of a scene in Dante’s Inferno. The image shows
                  the classical Giant, Anteus in Hell, leaning backwards in an impossibly balanced
                  posture on one toe, with one hand on a high rocky outcropping, reaching down to
                  set a figure (Dante) down on a small ledge (the Verge of Cocytus) below, where
                  another figure (Virgil) stands waiting. The naked giant fills the upper centre of
                  the picture plane. In the foreground and the bottom left corner, the small rocky
                  ledge appears just visible within the frame, extending out to almost the halfway
                  point of the image width. Atop the small ledge stands a man facing to the right of
                  the page and visible in profile, wearing a long robe, with his arms extended out
                  in front, reaching toward the man being set down by the Giant (Dante). He appears
                  resting in the gigantic hand of Antaeus. In the bottom right corner the tall rocky
                  outcropping begins, extending to a third of the image width and nearly the
                  entirety of its height. The outcropping has vertical lines drawn to show pieces of
                  rock that are shifted out of line with the structure. Halfway up the height of the
                  outcropping a stream of mist or cloud extends to the left of the page before
                  looping up and back to the right side, leaving a semi-circle of cloud around the
                  exterior of Giant. In the distance between the two rocky ledges lies a barren
                  surface of land, with cracks delineating the flatness. The gigantic man takes up
                  the rest of the space on the upper page. He has his left foot rested on the high
                  rocky outcropping, with his right foot hanging off of the edge closest to the
                  viewer. The rest of his body is leaned back horizontal to the ground. The man’s
                  upper body is twisted to extend his right arm down to hold the figure below. His
                  chest faces the viewer and his left arm clings to a piece of rock on the top edge
                  of the high outcropping. His head is turned to face down below him, and he has a
                  crease between his eyebrows. He has slightly downturned lips, and his nose is
                  scrunched up. He has short wavy hair. He is extremely muscular a. The sky behind
                  the scene is dark, almost black and the semi-circle cloud cuts through with its
                  light colouring. In the bottom right corner is the text: “HELL [caps] Canto
                  31”</figDesc>

            </figure>
         </div>
         <div>

            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="head2">BLAKE'S ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE DIVINE COMEDY</fw>
               <fw type="pageNumRight">57</fw>
            </fw>

            <p>improve an original invention ; nor can an original invention exist without <lb/>
               execution, organized, delineated, and articulated either by God or man. . . . <lb/> I
               have heard people say, 'Give me the ideas ; it is no matter what words you <lb/> put
               them into ;' and others say, 'Give me the design ; it is no matter for the <lb/>
               execution.' . . . Ideas cannot be given but in their minutely appropriate <lb/>
               words, nor can a design be made without its minutely appropriate execution." <lb/>
               Living in a time when technique and imagination are continually perfect <lb/> and
               complete, because they no longer strive to bring fire from heaven, we <lb/> forget
               how imperfect and incomplete they were in even the greatest masters, <lb/> in
               Botticelli, in Orcagna, and in Giotto. The errors in the handiwork of <lb/> exalted
               spirits are as the more fantastical errors in their lives ; as Coleridge's <lb/>
               opium cloud ; as Villiers de l'Isle Adam's candidature for the throne of Greece
               ;<lb/> as Blake's anger against causes and purposes he but half understood ; as the
               <lb/> flickering madness an Eastern scripture would allow in august dreamers ; for
               <lb/> he who half lives in eternity endures a rending of the structures of the mind,
               <lb/> a crucifixion of the intellectual body. </p>

            <p><emph rend="indent7"><ref target="#WYE">W. B. YEATS</ref>. </emph></p>
         </div>
      </body>
   </text>
</TEI>
