|
Wikipedia Commons There is No Natural Religion Plate 4 |
To Blake the distinction to be made between the mind's ability to
assimilate information was between sense data and spiritual sensation.
Sense data came from external sources, spiritual sensation came from the
inner man - the Poetic Genius. The senses originate in the Mortal Body.
From his Immortal Spirit comes the awareness of Spiritual Truth.
However Blake realized that Body and Soul were one unit working together
and exchanging the information they discerned.
Our analytic minds, too, divide the information supplied by the senses
and that supplied by internal sources. Psychology recognizes a reasoning
mind and an intuitive mind which can be associated with the two sides
of our brains. Blake might call the left rational side of the brain
Reason. The Right side he might label Soul. In our culture the analytic
reasoning function is thought to originate in the left side of the brain
which frequently dominates. The right side, which is less valued, is
often called intuition, without any association with Soul or Spirit.
When Blake read Berkley' Siris he made comments which show his understanding of the two ways in which the mind is functioning in regard to reason based on sensation, and on vision based on immediate perception.
Annotations to Berkley' Siris, (E 664)
Berkley:
"By experiments of sense we become acquainted with
the lower faculties of the soul; and from them, whether by a
gradual evolution or ascent, we arrive at the highest. These
become subjects for fancy to work upon. Reason considers and
judges of the imaginations. And these acts of reason become new
objects to the understanding."
Blake:
"Knowledge is not by deduction but Immediate by Perception or
Sense at once Christ addresses himself to the Man not to his
Reason Plato did not bring Life & Immortality to Light Jesus
only did this"
Berkley:
"There is according to Plato properly no knowledge,
but only opinion concerning things sensible and perishing, not
because they are naturally abstruse and involved in darkness: but
because their nature and existence is uncertain, ever fleeting
and changing.
Blake:
"Jesus supposes every Thing to be Evident to the Child & to
the Poor & Unlearned Such is the Gospel
The Whole Bible is filld with Imaginations & Visions from
End to End & not with Moral virtues that is the baseness of Plato
& the Greeks & all Warriors The Moral Virtues are continual
Accusers of Sin & promote Eternal Wars & Domineering over others
Berkley:
"Aristotle maketh a threefold distinction of objects
according to the three speculative sciences. Physics he
supposeth to be conversant about such things as have a principle
of motion in themselves, mathematics about things permanent but
not abstracted, and theology about being abstracted and
immoveable, which distinction may be seen in the ninth book of
his metaphysics."
Blake:
"God is not a Mathematical Diagram"
Berkley:
"It is a maxim of the Platonic philosophy, that the
soul of man was originally furnished with native inbred notions,
and stands in need of sensible occasions, not absolutely for
producing them, but only for awakening, rousing or exciting, into
act what was already preexistent, dormant, and latent in the
soul.
Blake:
"The Natural Body is an Obstruction to the Soul or Spiritual
Body
Berkley:
" . . . Whence, according to Themistius, . . . it may
be inferred that all beings are in the soul. For, saith he, the
forms are the beings. By the form every thing is what it is.
And, he adds, it is the soul that imparteth forms to matter, . ."
Blake:
"This is my Opinion but Forms must be apprehended by Sense or
the Eye of Imagination
Man is All Imagination God is Man & exists in us & we in him"
Blake:
"What Jesus came to Remove was the Heathen or Platonic
Philosophy which blinds the Eye of Imagination The Real Man"
The immediacy of Blake's response to the
visions which welled up from his inner discernment of spiritual
realities are revealed in this little poem enclosed in a letter to a
friend.
Letters, (E 708)
Enclosed poem.
"To my dear Friend Mrs Anna Flaxman
This Song to the flower of Flaxmans joy
To the blossom of hope for a sweet decoy
Do all that you can or all that you may
To entice him to Felpham & far away
Away to Sweet Felpham for Heaven is there
The Ladder of Angels descends thro the air
On the Turret its spiral does softly descend
Thro' the village then winds at My Cot it does end
You stand in the village & look up to heaven
The precious stones glitter on flights seventy seven
And My Brother is there & My Friend & Thine
Descend & Ascend with the Bread & the Wine
The Bread of sweet Thought & the Wine of Delight
Feeds the Village of Felpham by day & by night
And at his own door the blessd Hermit does stand
Dispensing Unceasing to all the whole Land
W. BLAKE"
No comments:
Post a Comment