William Blake and the Myth of Secularism
Great things are done when men and mountains meet. This is not done by jostling in the street.
(William Blake)
I read, when in
my twenties, most of William Blake’s writings from cover to cover and spent
many a quiet moment meditating my way through his evocative paintings. Needless
to say, Blake is not the easiest poet and painter to interpret, so I took the
time to read and correspond with some of the leading Blake scholars. Allen
Ginsberg sent me a copy of his booklet, Your
Reason and Blake’s System (1988). Northrop Frye, author of Fearful Symmetry: A Study of William Blake (1947), and I corresponded. I enjoyed many a
letter from Kathleen Raine who wrote Blake
and Antiquity (1963). My interest in Thomas Merton was largely initiated by
the MA he wrote on Blake in 1939 called Nature
and Art in William Blake: An Essay in Interpretation (1939). I was also,
when doing my PHD at McMaster in the 1980s, delighted to attend the many
lectures by E. P. Thompson whose book, Witness
Against the Beast: William Blake and the Moral Law (1993) is a must read
keeper.
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