Blake seeks to provide the Golden String which can lead us through the labyrinth of our experience or his own poetry.

Friday, March 21, 2025

WITCUTT 8

Earlier posts on READING WITCUTT were posted Dec 2020.

Also  concerning Witcutt Intuitive Introvert .

Jerusalem, Plate 70, (E 224)
"And this the form of mighty Hand sitting on Albions cliffs
Before the face of Albion, a mighty threatning Form.

His bosom wide & shoulders huge overspreading wondrous
Bear Three strong sinewy Necks & Three awful & terrible Heads
Three Brains in contradictory council brooding incessantly.      
Neither daring to put in act its councils, fearing each-other,
Therefore rejecting Ideas as nothing & holding all Wisdom
To consist. in the agreements & disagree[me]nts of Ideas.
Plotting to devour Albions Body of Humanity & Love.

Such Form the aggregate of the Twelve Sons of Albion took; & such
Their appearance when combind: but often by birth-pangs & loud groans
They divide to Twelve: the key-bones & the chest dividing in pain
Disclose a hideous orifice; thence issuing the Giant-brood
Arise as the smoke of the furnace, shaking the rocks from sea to sea.
And there they combine into Three Forms, named Bacon & Newton & Locke,
In the Oak Groves of Albion which overspread all the Earth.

Imputing Sin & Righteousness to Individuals; Rahab
Sat deep within him hid: his Feminine Power unreveal'd
Brooding Abstract Philosophy. to destroy Imagination, the Divine-
-Humanity A Three-fold Wonder: feminine: most beautiful: Three-fold
Each within other. On her white marble & even Neck, her Heart
Inorb'd and bonified: with locks of shadowing modesty, shining
Over her beautiful Female features, soft flourishing in beauty
Beams mild, all love and all perfection, that when the lips
Recieve a kiss from Gods or Men, a threefold kiss returns    
From the pressd loveliness: so her whole immortal form three-fold
Three-fold embrace returns: consuming lives of Gods & Men
In fires of beauty melting them as gold & silver in the furnace
Her Brain enlabyrinths the whole heaven of her bosom & loins
To put in act what her Heart wills; O who can withstand her power
Her name is Vala in Eternity: in Time her name is Rahab

The Starry Heavens all were fled from the mighty limbs of Albion"
Blake: A Psychological Strdy, W. P. Witcutt:
Page 116
"[T]he first thing that stikes and orthodox Christian, or one brought up in the shadow of orthodox Christiaity, as we all are, was blake's rejection of the Moral Law, which seems strangely inconsistent in one who, at least in later life, claimed with vehemence to be a Christian. What did he mean by it?...The answer seems to be that what he complains about is 'abstract good and evil,'  a law applied to each individual without pityor consideration of extenuating circumstances. 'One law for the lion and ox is oppression.' He saw this Law, thinking always in pictures, as in the illustration to Jerusalem -  a great Druid pylon or Menhir with a red sun shining through it amid dark clouds, while three blue-cloaked figures stand conversing underneath, 'imputing sin and righteousness to individuals.'

He seems to have desired what the Jesuits called causistry and the old English law 'equity,' that each act should be judged on its own merits and not according to a rigid abstract code. That is presumably how God judges, but fallible men must have a term of reference, even when the circumstances are taken into account. Blake's thought ran always to extremes.
...
It was only to be expected that Blake would revolt with violence against a system which worshiped the God of Nature and left out the Son altogether. This was Deism...Blake hated it. It kept the part of Christianity which he most disliked - the Moral Law - and omitted the saving personality of Christ and the forgiveness of sins." 
 
Jerusalem, Plate 52, (E 202)
"When Satan first the black bow bent
And the Moral Law from the Gospel rent
  He forgd the Law into a Sword
And spilld the blood of mercys Lord."

     
William Purcell Witcutt timeline

1908 born Anglican
1928 studied law
1930's converted Cathocism 
1930's 7 year seminary education
1949 Return to Anglican faith
1972 Died

TIME MAGAZINE article, JULY 4 1955

To Rome and Return

"The Rev. William Purcell Witcutt's mouth clicked shut like a snap lock when British reporters tried to interview him six years ago on his reasons for quitting the Roman Catholic Church and rejoining the Church of England. This week the lock opened smoothly with U.S. publication of Anglican Witcutt's Return to Reality (Macmillan; $1.65)—a well-written attack upon Roman Catholic doctrine.

In 1928 Witcutt, son of a Staffordshire merchant tailor, was studying law at Birmingham University when the attraction of G.K. Chesterton's anti-industrial theory of "Distributism" led him to Rome. Distributists took one look at the misery of the workingman and concluded that large-scale industry should be abolished in favor of a social-industrial structure more like that of the Middle Ages.

Since the leading Distributists seemed to be Catholics, Witcutt began to study the Roman Catholic system of thought. "It at once attracted me," he writes. "Here was an intellectual scheme moulded and shaped, it seemed, to include every detail. One had only to make an act of faith and one was settled, intellectually, for life. No more questions need be asked."

'Seven-Year Grind.' -  Anglican Witcutt became a Roman Catholic, and resolved to study for the priesthood. He persuaded Catholic authorities to waive their rule requiring converts to spend two years in the church before entering the seminary, and within a month of his reception into the church, plunged into a seven-year seminary grind at Oscott.

"It was," writes Father Witcutt, "a seven years' intensive training in how to think . . . We studied every branch of philosophy and theology. Logic was our master and the syllogism our instrument." He was entranced by the church's scholastic system of theology, "glittering and shapely as a machine." Scholastic theology's two fundamentals, says Witcutt, are the Abstract Idea (the essence of every object is comprehensible only to the mind, which is immaterial, spiritual and immortal) and the Beatific Vision ("the plunge of the soul into the Divine").

'Searching Look.' - Armed with his newfound theology, Father Witcutt was sent to a slum parish in Birmingham. For a while all went well. Then in a lecture on the Reformation .to the Catholic Evidence Guild he bore down too heavily on the corruption of the medieval Catholic clergy. "I was summoned to interview the Vicar-General, who told me, with a searching look, that I was being transferred to 'the farthest outpost of the diocese.' "

As a parish priest in the villages of Staffordshire and Warwickshire, Father Witcutt drew nearer and nearer to the God that seemed to lie just behind the veil of nature and farther and farther away from the Abstract Idea and the Beatific Vision. He found that "The God of Scholasticism was unworshipable. Nor do Roman Catholics worship Him. They cannot. They worship the Sacred Heart, the Virgin, and the Saints . . . To me Roman Catholicism seemed one of two things: either a set of dry philosophical formulae or else a range of plaster-cast statues . . . What I wanted was no vision of the intellect, but resurrection. It was the doctrine of bodily resurrection which held me by an unbreakable bond to the Christian religion, as it had held St. Paul."


“Spiritual Iron Curtain.” - Roman Catholicism, says Father Witcutt, conflicts with philosophy (“It does not allow for any advance in philosophy made since the 13th century”), with physical science (“by insisting upon the now indefensible Aristotelian doctrine” that qualities, such as color, are objective instead of being in our senses) and with history. Back in the Anglican fold, he holds that the Bishop of Rome became pre-eminent in the church only because the Mohammedans “over whelmed the Patriarchs of Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem, isolated him of Constantinople, and left only the Patri arch of Rome in his former authority.”

For the last six years Father Witcutt has been a high-church Anglican curate in London’s run-down suburb of East Ham. The freedom of the Church of England is a relief to him. “More and more the Latin liturgy had become an annoyance to me,” he writes, and “I had grown to detest the spiritual Iron Curtain which divides Roman Catholics from their fellow countrymen … I am sorry to say that the Roman Catholic, and particularly the priest, despises the Church of England. He does not consider its clergy to be true priests, and he despises it for its lack of congregations and its empty pews.”

Of these empty pews optimistic Anglican Witcutt notes that the unchurched English are “not bitter anticlericals and atheists, as they would be in a Continental country. They are members of the Church who are at present asleep, and one day someone’s voice will wake them.”


No comments:

Post a Comment