Mysticism in
English Literature
By
Caroline F.
E. Spurgeon
"Many are the thyrsus-bearers, but few are the
mystics"
Phædo
Chapter I
Introduction
Mysticism is a term so irresponsibly applied in
English that it has become the first duty of those who use it to explain what
they mean by it. The Concise Oxford Dictionary (1911), after
defining a mystic as "one who believes in spiritual apprehension of truths
beyond the understanding," adds, "whence mysticism (n.)
(often contempt)." Whatever may be the precise force of the remark in
brackets, it is unquestionably true that mysticism is often used in a
semi-contemptuous way to denote vaguely any kind of occultism or spiritualism,
or any specially curious or fantastic views about God and the universe.
The word itself was originally taken over by the
Neo-platonists from the Greek mysteries, where the name of μύστης given to the initiate,
probably arose from the fact that he was one who was gaining a knowledge of
divine things about which he must keep his mouth shut (μύω = close lips or eyes). Hence
the association of secrecy or "mystery" which still clings round the
word.
Two facts in connection with mysticism are undeniable
whatever it may be, and whatever part it is destined to play in the development
of thought and of knowledge. In the first place, it is the leading
characteristic of some of the greatest thinkers of the world—of the founders of
the Eastern religions of Plato and Plotinus, of Eckhart and Bruno, of Spinoza,
Goethe, and Hegel. Secondly, no one has ever been a lukewarm, an indifferent,
or an unhappy mystic. If a man has this particular temperament, his mysticism
is the very centre of his being: it is the flame which feeds his whole life;
and he is intensely and supremely happy just so far as he is steeped in it.
Mysticism is, in truth, a temper rather than a
doctrine, an atmosphere rather than a system of philosophy. Various mystical
thinkers have contributed fresh aspects of Truth as they saw her, for they have
caught glimpses of her face at different angles, transfigured by diverse
emotions, so that their testimony, and in some respects their views, are
dissimilar to the point of contradiction. Wordsworth, for instance, gained his
revelation of divinity through Nature, and through Nature alone; whereas to
Blake "Nature was a hindrance," and Imagination the only reality. But
all alike agree in one respect, in one passionate assertion, and this is that
unity underlies diversity. This, their starting-point and their goal, is the
basic fact of mysticism, which, in its widest sense, may be described as an
attitude of mind founded upon an intuitive or experienced conviction of unity,
of oneness, of alikeness in all things. From this source springs all mystical
thought, and the mystic, of whatever age or country, would say in the words of
Krishna—
There is true knowledge. Learn thou it is this:
To see one changeless Life in all the Lives,
And in the Separate, One Inseparable.
The Bhagavad-Gîtâ, Book 18.
This fundamental belief in unity leads naturally to
the further belief that all things about us are but forms or manifestations of
the one divine life, and that these phenomena are fleeting and impermanent,
although the spirit which informs them is immortal and endures. In other words,
it leads to the belief that "the Ideal is the only Real."
Further, if unity lies at the root of things, man must
have some share of the nature of God, for he is a spark of the Divine.
Consequently, man is capable of knowing God through this godlike part of his
own nature, that is, through his soul or spirit. For the mystic believes that
as the intellect is given us to apprehend material things, so the spirit is
given us to apprehend spiritual things, and that to disregard the spirit in
spiritual matters, and to trust to reason is as foolish as if a carpenter,
about to begin a piece of work, were deliberately to reject his keenest and
sharpest tool. The methods of mental and spiritual knowledge are entirely
different. For we know a thing mentally by looking at it from outside, by
comparing it with other things, by analysing and defining it, whereas we can
know a thing spiritually only by becoming it. We must be the
thing itself, and not merely talk about it or look at it. We must be in love if
we are to know what love is; we must be musicians if we are to know what music
is; we must be godlike if we are to know what God is. For, in Porphyry's words:
"Like is known only by like, and the condition of all knowledge is that
the subject should become like to the object." So that to the mystic,
whether he be philosopher, poet, artist, or priest, the aim of life is to
become like God, and thus to attain to union with the Divine. Hence, for him,
life is a continual advance, a ceaseless aspiration; and reality or truth is to
the seeker after it a vista ever expanding and charged with ever deeper
meaning. John Smith, the Cambridge Platonist, has summed up the mystic position
and desire in one brief sentence, when he says, "Such as men themselves
are, such will God Himself seem to them to be." For, as it takes two to
communicate the truth, one to speak and one to hear, so our knowledge of God is
precisely and accurately limited by our capacity to receive Him. "Simple
people," says Eckhart, "conceive that we are to see God as if He
stood on that side and we on this. It is not so: God and I are one in the act
of my perceiving Him."
This sense of unity leads to another belief, though it
is one not always consistently or definitely stated by all mystics. It is
implied by Plato when he says, "All knowledge is recollection." This
is the belief in pre-existence or persistent life, the belief that our souls
are immortal, and no more came into existence when we were born than they will
cease to exist when our bodies disintegrate. The idea is familiar in Wordsworth's Ode
on the Intimations of Immortality.
Finally, the mystic holds these views because he has
lived through an experience which has forced him to this attitude of mind. This
is his distinguishing mark, this is what differentiates him alike from the
theologian, the logician, the rationalist philosopher, and the man of science,
for he bases his belief, not on revelation, logic, reason, or demonstrated
facts, but on feeling, on intuitive inner knowledge.
He has felt, he has seen, and he is therefore
convinced; but his experience does not convince any one else. The mystic is
somewhat in the position of a man who, in a world of blind men, has suddenly
been granted sight, and who, gazing at the sunrise, and overwhelmed by the
glory of it, tries, however falteringly, to convey to his fellows what he sees.
They, naturally, would be sceptical about it, and would be inclined to say that
he is talking foolishly and incoherently. But the simile is not altogether
parallel. There is this difference. The mystic is not alone; all through the
ages we have the testimony of men and women to whom this vision has been
granted, and the record of what they have seen is amazingly similar,
considering the disparity of personality and circumstances. And further, the
world is not peopled with totally blind men. The mystics would never hold the
audience they do hold, were it not that the vast majority of people have in
themselves what William James has called a "mystical germ" which
makes response to their message.
James's description of his own position in this
matter, and his feeling for a "Beyond," is one to which numberless
"unmystical" people would subscribe. He compares it to a tune that is
always singing in the back of his mind, but which he can never identify nor
whistle nor get rid of. "It is," he says, "very vague, and
impossible to describe or put into words.... Especially at times of moral
crisis it comes to me, as the sense of an unknown something backing me up. It
is most indefinite, to be sure, and rather faint. And yet I know that if it
should cease there would be a great hush, a great void in my life."[1]
This sensation, which many people experience vaguely
and intermittently, and especially at times of emotional exaltation, would seem
to be the first glimmerings of that secret power which, with the mystics, is so
finely developed and sustained that it becomes their definite faculty of
vision. We have as yet no recognised name for this faculty, and it has been
variously called "transcendental feeling," "imagination,"
"mystic reason," "cosmic consciousness," "divine
sagacity," "ecstasy," or "vision," all these meaning
the same thing. But although it lacks a common name, we have ample testimony to
its existence, the testimony of the greatest teachers, philosophers, and poets
of the world, who describe to us in strangely similar language—
That serene and
blessed mood
In which ... the breath of this corporeal frame,
And even the motion of our human blood,
Almost suspended, we are laid asleep
In body, and become a living soul:
While with an eye made quiet by the power
Of harmony, and the deep power of joy, We see into the
life of things. Tintern Abbey.
"Harmony" and "Joy," it may be
noted, are the two words used most constantly by those who have experienced
this vision.
The mystic reverses the ordinary methods of reasoning:
he must believe before he can know. As it is put in the Theologia
Germanica, "He who would know before he believeth cometh never to true
knowledge." Just as the sense of touch is not the faculty concerned with
realising the beauty of the sunrise, so the intellect is not the faculty
concerned with spiritual knowledge, and ordinary intellectual methods of proof,
therefore, or of argument, the mystic holds, are powerless and futile before
these questions; for, in the words of Tennyson's Ancient Sage—
Thou canst not prove the Nameless, O my son,
Nor canst thou prove the world thou movest in:
Thou canst not prove that thou art body alone,
Nor canst thou prove that thou art spirit alone,
Nor canst thou prove that thou art both in one:
Thou canst not prove thou art immortal, no,
Nor yet that thou art mortal—nay, my son,
Thou canst not prove that I who speak with thee
Am not thyself in converse with thyself,
For nothing worthy proving can be proven,
Nor yet disproven.
Symbolism is of immense importance in mysticism;
indeed, symbolism and mythology are, as it were, the language of the mystic.
This necessity for symbolism is an integral part of the belief in unity; for
the essence of true symbolism rests on the belief that all things in Nature
have something in common, something in which they are really alike. In order to
be a true symbol, a thing must be partly the same as that which it symbolises.
Thus, human love is symbolic of divine love, because, although working in
another plane, it is governed by similar laws and gives rise to similar
results; or falling leaves are a symbol of human mortality, because they are
examples of the same law which operates through all manifestation of life. Some
of the most illuminating notes ever written on the nature of symbolism are in a
short paper by R. L. Nettleship,[2] where he defines true mysticism as "the
consciousness that everything which we experience, every 'fact,' is an element
and only an element in 'the fact'; i.e. that, in being what it is, it is
significant or symbolic of more." In short, every truth apprehended by
finite intelligence must by its very nature only be the husk of a deeper truth,
and by the aid of symbolism we are often enabled to catch a reflection of a
truth which we are not capable of apprehending in any other way. Nettleship
points out, for instance, that bread can only be itself, can only be food,
by entering into something else, assimilating and being assimilated, and that
the more it loses itself (what it began by being) the more it "finds
itself" (what it is intended to be). If we follow carefully the analysis
Nettleship makes of the action of bread in the physical world, we can see that
to the man of mystic temper it throws more light than do volumes of sermons on
what seems sometimes a hard saying, and what is at the same time the ultimate
mystical counsel, "He that loveth his life shall lose it."
It is worth while, in this connection, to ponder the
constant use Christ makes of nature symbolism, drawing the attention of His
hearers to the analogies in the law we see working around us to the same law
working in the spiritual world. The yearly harvest, the sower and his seed, the
leaven in the loaf, the grain of mustard-seed, the lilies of the field, the
action of fire, worms, moth, rust, bread, wine, and water, the mystery of the
wind, unseen and yet felt—each one of these is shown to contain and exemplify a
great and abiding truth.
This is the attitude, these are the things, which lie
at the heart of mysticism. In the light of this, nothing in the world is
trivial, nothing is unimportant nothing is common or unclean. It is the feeling
that Blake has crystallised in the lines:
To see a world in a grain of sand
And a Heaven in a wild flower,
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour.
The true mystic then, in the full sense of the term,
is one who knows there is unity under diversity at the centre
of all existence, and he knows it by the most perfect of all tests for the
person concerned, because he has felt it. True mysticism—and this cannot be
over-emphasised—is an experience and a life. It is an experimental science,
and, as Patmore has said, it is as incommunicable to those who have not
experienced it as is the odour of a violet to those who have never smelt one.
In its highest consummation it is the supreme adventure of the soul: to use the
matchless words of Plotinus, it is "the flight of the Alone to the
Alone."
As distinguished, therefore, from the mystical thinker
or philosopher, the practical mystic has direct knowledge of a truth which for
him is absolute. He consequently has invariably acted upon this knowledge, as
inevitably as the blind man to whom sight had been granted would make use of
his eyes.
Among English writers and poets the only two who
fulfil this strict definition of a mystic are Wordsworth and Blake. But we are
not here concerned primarily with a study of those great souls who are mystics
in the full and supreme sense of the word. For an examination of their lives
and vision Evelyn Underhill's valuable book should be consulted. Our object is
to examine very briefly the chief English writers—men of letters and
poets—whose inmost principle is rooted in mysticism, or whose work is on the
whole so permeated by mystical thought that their attitude of mind is not fully
to be understood apart from it.
Naturally it is with the poets we find the most
complete and continuous expression of mystical thought and inspiration.
Naturally, because it has ever been the habit of the English race to clothe
their profoundest thought and their highest aspiration in poetic form. We do
not possess a Plato, a Kant, or a Descartes, but we have Shakespeare and
Wordsworth and Browning. And further, as the essence of mysticism is to believe
that everything we see and know is symbolic of something greater, mysticism is
on one side the poetry of life. For poetry, also, consists in finding
resemblances, and universalises the particulars with which it deals. Hence the
utterances of the poets on mystical philosophy are peculiarly valuable. The
philosopher approaches philosophy directly, the poet obliquely; but the
indirect teaching of a poet touches us more profoundly than the direct lesson
of a moral treatise, because the latter appeals principally to our reason,
whereas the poet touches our "transcendental feeling."
So it is that mysticism underlies the thought of most
of our great poets, of nearly all our greatest poets, if we except Chaucer,
Dryden, Pope, and Byron. Shakespeare must be left on one side, first, because
the dramatic form does not lend itself to the expression of mystical feeling,
and secondly, because even in the poems there is little real mysticism, though
there is much of the fashionable Platonism. Shakespeare is metaphysical rather
than mystical, the difference being, roughly, that the metaphysician seeks to
know the beginnings or causes of things, whereas the mystic feels he knows the
end of things, that all nature is leading up to union with the One.
We shall find that mystical thought, and the mystical
attitude, are curiously persistent in English literature, and that although it
seems out of keeping with our "John Bull" character, the English race
has a marked tendency towards mysticism. What we do find lacking in England is
the purely philosophical and speculative spirit of the detached and
unprejudiced seeker after truth. The English mind is anti-speculative; it cares
little for metaphysics; it prefers theology and a given authority. English
mystics have, as a rule, dealt little with the theoretical side of mysticism,
the aspect for instance with which Plotinus largely deals. They have been
mainly practical mystics, such as William Law. Those of the poets who have
consciously had a system and desired to impart it, have done so from the
practical point of view, urging, like Wordsworth, the importance of
contemplation and meditation, or, like Blake, the value of cultivating the
imagination; and in both cases enforcing the necessity of cleansing the inner
life, if we are to become conscious of our divine nature and our great
heritage.
For the sake of clearness, this thought may first be
traced very briefly as it appears chronologically; it will, however, be
considered in detail, not in order of time, but according to the special aspect
of Being through which the writer felt most in touch with the divine life. For
mystics, unlike other thinkers, scientific or philosophical, have little
chronological development, since "mystic truths can neither age nor
die." So much is this the case that passages of Plotinus and Tennyson, of
Boehme and Law, of Eckhart and Browning, may be placed side by side and be scarcely
distinguishable in thought. Yet as the race evolves, certain avenues of
sensation seem to become more widely opened up. This is noticeable with regard
to Nature. Love, Beauty, Wisdom, and Devotion, these have been well-trodden
paths to the One ever since the days of Plato and Plotinus; but, with the great
exception of St Francis of Assisi and his immediate followers, we have to wait
for more modern times before we find the intense feeling of the Divinity in
Nature which we associate with the name of Wordsworth. It is in the emphasis of
this aspect of the mystic vision that English writers are supreme. Henry
Vaughan, Wordsworth, Browning, Richard Jefferies, Francis Thompson, and a host
of other poet-seers have crystallised in immortal words this illuminated vision
of the world.
The thought which has been described as mystical has
its roots in the East, in the great Oriental religions. The mysterious
"secret" taught by the Upanishads is that the soul or spiritual
consciousness is the only source of true knowledge. The Hindu calls the soul
the "seer" or the "knower," and thinks of it as a great eye
in the centre of his being, which, if he concentrates his attention upon it, is
able to look outwards and to gaze upon Reality. The soul is capable of this
because in essence it is one with Brahman, the universal soul. The apparent
separation is an illusion wrought by matter. Hence, to the Hindu, matter is an
obstruction and a deception, and the Eastern mystic despises and rejects and
subdues all that is material, and bends all his faculties on realising his
spiritual consciousness, and dwelling in that.
This type of thought certainly existed to some extent
in both Greece and Egypt before the Christian era. Much of Plato's thought is
mystical in essence, and that which be points out to be the motive force of the
philosophic mind is also the motive force of the mystic, namely, the element of
attraction, and so of love towards the thing which is akin to him. The
illustration of the dog being philosophic because he is angry with a stranger
but welcomes his friend,[3] though at first it may seem, like many of Plato's
illustrations, far-fetched or fanciful, in truth goes to the very root of his
idea. Familiarity, akinness, is the basis of attraction and affection. The
desire of wisdom, or the love of beauty, is therefore nothing but the yearning
of the soul to join itself to what is akin to it. This is the leading
conception of the two great mystical dialogues, the Symposium and the Phædrus.
In the former, Socrates, in the words of the stranger prophetess Diotima,
traces the path along which the soul must travel, and points out the steps of
the ladder to be climbed in order to attain to union with the Divine. From
beauty of form and body we rise to beauty of mind and spirit, and so to the
Beauty of God Himself.
He who under the influence of true love rising upward
from these begins to see that beauty, is not far from the end. And the true
order of going or being led by another to the things of love, is to use the
beauties of earth as steps along which he mounts upwards for the sake of that
other beauty, going from one to two, and from two to all fair forms, and from
fair forms to fair practices, and from fair practices to fair notions, until
from fair notions he arrives at the notion of absolute beauty, and at last
knows what the essence of beauty is. This ... is that life above all others
which man should live, in the contemplation of beauty absolute.[4]
That is a passage whose music re-echoes through many
pages of English literature, especially in the poems of Spenser, Shelley, and
Keats.
Plato may therefore be regarded as the source of
speculative mysticism in Europe, but it is Plotinus, his disciple, the
Neo-platonist, who is the father of European mysticism in its full sense, practical
as well as speculative, and who is also its most profound exponent. Plotinus
(A.D. 204-270), who was an Egyptian by birth, lived and studied under Ammonius
Sakkas in Alexandria at a time when it was the centre of the intellectual
world, seething with speculation and schools, teachers and philosophies of all
kinds, Platonic and Oriental, Egyptian and Christian. Later, from the age of
forty, he taught in Rome, where he was surrounded by many eager adherents. He
drew the form of his thought both from Plato and from Hermetic philosophy (his
conception of Emanation), but its real inspiration was his own experience, for
his biographer Porphyry has recorded that during the six years he lived with
Plotinus the latter attained four times to ecstatic union with "the
One." Plotinus combined, in unusual measure, the intellect of the
metaphysician with the temperament of the great psychic, so that he was able to
analyse with the most precise dialectic, experiences which in most cases
paralyse the tongue and blind the discursive reason. His sixth Ennead, "On
the Good or the One," is one of the great philosophic treatises of the
world, and it sums up in matchless words the whole mystic position and
experience. There are two statements in it which contain the centre of the
writer's thought. "God is not external to any one, but is present in all
things, though they are ignorant that he is so." "God is not in a
certain place, but wherever anything is able to come into contact with him
there he is present" (Enn. vi. 9, §§ 4, 7). It is because of
our ignorance of the indwelling of God that our life is discordant, for it is
clashing with its own inmost principle. We do not know ourselves. If we did, we
would know that the way home to God lies within ourselves. "A soul that
knows itself must know that the proper direction of its energy is not outwards
in a straight line, but round a centre which is within it" (Enn. vi.
9, § 8).
The whole Universe is one vast Organism (Enn. ix.
4, §§ 32, 45), and the Heart of God, the source of all life, is at the centre,
in which all finite things have their being, and to which they must flow back;
for there is in this Organism, so Plotinus conceives, a double circulatory
movement, an eternal out-breathing and in-breathing, the way down and the way
up. The way down is the out-going of the undivided "One" towards
manifestation. From Him there flows out a succession of emanations. The first
of these is the "Nous" or Over-Mind of the Universe, God as thought.
The "Mind" in turn throws out an image, the third Principle in this
Trinity, the Soul of all things. This, like the "Nous," is
immaterial, but it can act on matter. It is the link between man and God, for
it has a lower and a higher side. The lower side desires a
body and so creates it, but it is not wholly incarnate in it, for, as Plotinus
says, "the soul always leaves something of itself above."
From this World Soul proceed the individual souls of
men, and they partake of its nature. Its nature is triple, the animal or
sensual soul, closely bound to the body, the logical reasoning human soul, and
the intellectual soul, which is one with the Divine Mind, from whence it comes
and of which it is an image.
Souls have forgotten then: divine origin because at
first they were so delighted with their liberty and surroundings (like children
let loose from their parents, says Plotinus), that they ran away in a direction
as far as possible from their source. They thus became clogged with the joys
and distractions of this lower life, which can never satisfy them, and they are
ignorant of their own true nature and essence. In order to return home, the
soul has to retrace the path along which she came, and the first step is to get
to know herself, and so to know God. (See Enn. vi. 9, § 7.)
Thus only can she be restored to the central unity of the universal soul. This
first stage on the upward path is the purgative life, which includes all the
civic and social virtues, gained through general purification, self-discipline,
and balance, with, at the same time, a gradual attainment of detachment from
the things of sense, and a desire for the things of the spirit.
The next step is to rise up to mind (Enn. v.
1, § 3) to the world of pure thought, the highest unity possible to a
self-conscious being. This is often called the illuminative life, and it might
be summed up as concentration of all the faculties—will, intellect,
feeling—upon God. And lastly comes the unitive life, which is contemplation,
the intense desire of the soul for union with God, the momentary foretaste of
which has been experienced by many of the mystics. This last stage of the
journey home, the supreme Adventure, the ascension to the One above thought,
this cannot be spoken of or explained in words, for it is a state beyond words,
it is "a mode of vision which is ecstasy." When the soul attains to
this state, the One suddenly appears, "with nothing between,"
"and they are no more two but one; and the soul is no more conscious of
the body or of whether she lives or is a human being or an essence; she knows
only that she has what she desired, that she is where no deception can come,
and that she would not exchange her bliss for the whole of Heaven itself"
(paraphrased from Enn. vi. 7, § 24).
The influence of Plotinus upon later Christian
mysticism was immense, though mainly indirect, through the writings of two of
his spiritual disciples, St Augustine (354-450), and the unknown writer,
probably of the early sixth century, possibly a Syrian monk, who ascribes his
works to Dionysius the Areopagite, the friend of St Paul. The works of
"Dionysius" were translated from Greek into Latin by the great Irish
philosopher and scholar, John Scotus Erigena (Eriugena), and in that form they
widely influenced later mediæval mysticism.
The fusion of Eastern mysticism with Christianity
finally brought about the great change which constitutes the difference between
Eastern and Western mysticism, a change already foreshadowed in Plato, for it
was in part the natural outcome of the Greek delight in material beauty, but
finally consummated by the teachings of the Christian faith. Eastern thought
was pure soul-consciousness, its teaching was to annihilate the flesh, to deny
its reality, to look within, and so to gain enlightenment. Christianity, on the
other hand, was centred in the doctrine of the Incarnation, in the mystery of
God the Father revealing Himself in human form. Hence the human body, human
love and relationships became sanctified, became indeed a means of revelation
of the divine, and the mystic no longer turned his thoughts wholly inwards, but
also outwards and upwards, to the Father who loved him and to the Son who had
died for him. Thus, in the West, mystical thought has ever recognised the deep
symbolism and sacredness of all that is human and natural, of human love, of
the human intellect, and of the natural world. All those things which to the
Eastern thinker are but an obstruction and a veil, to the Western have become
the very means of spiritual ascent[5]. The ultimate goal of the Eastern mystic
is summed up in his assertion, "I am Brahman," whereas the Western
mystic believes that "he who sees the Infinite in all things, sees God."
In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the mystical
tradition was carried on in France by St Bernard (1091-1153), the Abbot of
Clairvaux, and the Scotch or Irish Richard of the Abbey of St Victor at Paris,
and in Italy, among many others, by St Bonaventura (1221-1274), a close student
of Dionysius, and these three form the chief direct influences on our earliest
English mystics.
England shares to the full in the wave of mystical
experience, thought, and teaching which swept over Europe in the fourteenth and
early fifteenth centuries, and at first the mystical literature of England, as
also of France, Germany, Italy, and Sweden, is purely religious or devotional
in type, prose treatises for the most part containing practical instruction for
the inner life, written by hermits, priests, and "anchoresses." In
the fourteenth century we have a group of such writers of great power and
beauty, and in the work of Richard Rolle, Walter Hilton, Julian of Norwich, and
the author of the Cloud of Unknowing, we have a body of writings
dealing with the inner life, and the steps of purification, contemplation, and
ecstatic union which throb with life and devotional fervour.
From the time of Julian of Norwich, who was still
alive in 1413, we find practically no literature of a mystical type until we
come to Spenser's Hymns (1596), and these embody a Platonism
reached largely through the intellect, and not a mystic experience. It would
seem at first sight as if these hymns, or at any rate the two later ones in
honour of Heavenly Love and of Heavenly Beauty, should rank as some of the
finest mystical verse in English. Yet this is not the case. They are saturated
with the spirit of Plato, and they express in musical form the lofty ideas of
the Symposium and the Phædrus: that beauty, more
nearly than any other earthly thing, resembles its heavenly prototype, and that
therefore the sight of it kindles love, which is the excitement and rapture
aroused in the soul by the remembrance of that divine beauty which once it
knew. And Spenser, following Plato, traces the stages of ascent traversed by
the lover of beauty, until he is caught up into union with God Himself. Yet,
notwithstanding their melody and their Platonic doctrine, the note of the real
mystic is wanting in the Hymns, the note of him who writes of these
things because he knows them.
It would take some space to support this view in
detail. Any one desirous of testing it might read the account of transport of
the soul when rapt into union with the One as given by Plotinus (Enn. vi.
9, § 10), and compare it with Spenser's description of a similar experience (An
Hymne of Heavenly Beautie, 11. 253-273). Despite their poetic melody,
Spenser's words sound poor and trivial. Instead of preferring to dwell on the
unutterable ecstasy, contentment, and bliss of the experience, he is far more
anxious to emphasise the fact that "all that pleased earst now seemes to
paine."
The contradictory nature of his belief is also
arresting. In the early part of the Hymne of Heavenly Beautie,
in-speaking of the glory of God which is so dazzling that angels themselves may
not endure His sight, he says, as Plato does,
The meanes, therefore, which unto us is lent
Him to behold, is on his workes to looke,
Which he hath made in beauty excellent.
This is the view of the true mystic, that God may be
seen in all His works, by the eye which is itself purified. Yet, in the last
stanza of this beautiful Hymn, this is how Spenser views the joy of the union
of the soul with its source, when it looks
at last up to that Soveraine
Light,
From whose pure beams al perfect beauty springs,
That kindleth love in every godly spright
Even the love of God; which loathing brings
Of this vile world and these gay-seeming things.
This is not the voice of the mystic. It is the voice
of the Puritan, who is also an artist, who shrinks from earthly beauty because
it attracts him, who fears it, and tries to despise it. In truth, the
dominating feature in Spenser's poetry is a curious blending of Puritanism of
spirit with the Platonic mind.
In the seventeenth century, however, England is
peculiarly rich in writers steeped in mystical thought.
First come the Quakers, headed by George Fox. This
rediscovery and assertion of the mystical element in religion gave rise to a
great deal of writing, much of it very interesting to the student of religious
thought. Among the Journals of the early Quakers, and
especially that of George Fox, there are passages which charm us with their
sincerity, quaintness, and pure flame of enthusiasm, but these works cannot as
a whole be ranked as literature. Then we have the little group of Cambridge
Platonists, Henry More, John Smith, Benjamin Whichcote, and John Norris of
Bemerton. These are all Platonic philosophers, and among their writings, and especially
in those of John Norris, are many passages of mystical thought clothed in noble
prose. Henry More, who is also a poet, is in character a typical mystic,
serene, buoyant, and so spiritually happy that, as he told a friend, he was
sometimes "almost mad with pleasure." His poetical faculty is,
however, entirely subordinated to his philosophy, and the larger portion of his
work consists of passages from the Enneads of Plotinus turned
into rather obscure verse. So that he is not a poet and artist who, working in
the sphere of the imagination, can directly present to us mystical thoughts and
ideas, but rather a mystic philosopher who has versified some of his
discourses. At this time also many of the "metaphysical poets" are
mystical in much of their thought. Chief among these is John Donne, and we may
also include Henry Vaughan, Traherne, Crashaw, and George Herbert.
Bunyan might at first sight appear to have many of the
characteristics of the mystic, for he had certain very intense psychic
experiences which are of the nature of a direct revelation of God to the soul;
and in his vivid religious autobiography, Grace Abounding, he
records sensations which are akin to those felt by Rolle, Julian, and many
others. But although psychically akin, he is in truth widely separated from the
mystics in spirit and temperament and belief. He is a Puritan, overwhelmed with
a sense of sin, the horrors of punishment in hell, and the wrath of an outside
Creator and Judge, and his desire is aimed at escape from this wrath through
"election" and God's grace. But he is a Puritan endowed with a
psychopathic temperament sensitive to the point of disease and gifted with an
abnormally high visualising power. Hence his resemblance to the mystics, which
is a resemblance of psychical temperament and not of spiritual attitude.
In the eighteenth century the names of William Law and
William Blake shine out like stars against a dark firmament of
"rationalism" and unbelief. Their writings form a remarkable contrast
to the prevailing spirit of the time. Law expresses in clear and pointed prose
the main teachings of the German seer Jacob Boehme;[6] whereas Blake sees
visions and has knowledge which he strives to condense into forms of picture
and verse which may be understood of men. The influence of Boehme in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries is very far-reaching. In addition to
completely subjugating the strong intellect of Law, he profoundly influenced
Blake. He also affected Thomas Erskine of Linlathen, and through him, Carlyle,
J. W. Farquhar, F. D. Maurice, and others. Hegel, Schelling, and Schlegel are
alike indebted to him, and through them, through his French disciple St Martin,
and through Coleridge—who was much attracted to him—some of his root-ideas
returned again to England in the nineteenth century, thus preparing the way for
a better understanding of mystical thought. The Swedish seer Emmanuel
Swedenborg (1688-1772) was another strong influence in the later eighteenth and
the nineteenth centuries. Swedenborg in some ways is curiously material, at any
rate in expression, and in one point at least he differs from other mystics.
That is, he does not seem to believe that man has within him a spark of the
divine essence, but rather that he is an organ that reflects the divine life.
He is a recipient of life, but not a part of life itself. God is thought of as
a light or sun outside, from which spiritual heat and light (= love and wisdom)
flow into men. But, apart from this important difference Swedenborg's thought
and teaching are entirely mystical. He believes in the substantial reality of
spiritual things, and that the most essential part of a person's nature, that
which he carries with him into the spiritual world, is his love. He teaches
that heaven is not a place, but a condition, that there is no question of
outside rewards or punishments, and man makes his own heaven or hell; for, as
Patmore pointedly expresses it—
Ice-cold seems heaven's noble glow
To spirits whose vital heat is hell.
He insists that Space and Time belong only to physical
life, and when men pass into the spiritual world that love is the bond of
union, and thought or "state" makes presence, for thought is act. He
holds that instinct is spiritual in origin; and the principle of his science of
correspondences is based on the belief that everything outward and visible
corresponds to some invisible entity which is its inward and spiritual cause.
This is the view echoed by Mrs Browning more than once in Aurora Leigh—
There's
not a flower of spring,
That dies in June, but vaunts itself allied
By issue and symbol, by significance
And correspondence, to that spirit-world
Outside the limits of our space and time,
Whereto we are bound.
In all this and much more, Swedenborg's thought is
mystical, and it has had a quite unsuspected amount of influence in England,
and it is diffused through a good deal of English literature.
Blake knew some at least of Swedenborg's books well;
two of his friends, C. A. Tulk and Flaxman, were devoted Swedenborgians, and he
told Tulk that he had two different states, one in which he liked Swedenborg's
writings, and one in which he disliked them. Unquestionably, they sometimes
irritated him, and then he abused them, but it is only necessary to read his
annotations of his copy of Swedenborg's Wisdom of the Angels (now
in the British Museum) to realise in the first place that he sometimes
misunderstood Swedenborg's position and secondly, that when he did understand
it, he was thoroughly in agreement with it, and that he and the Swedish seer had
much in common. Coleridge admired Swedenborg, he gave a good deal of time to
studying him (see Coleridge's letter to C. A. Tulk, July 17, 1820), and he,
with Boehme, were two of the four "Great Men" unjustly branded, about
whom he often thought of writing a "Vindication" (Coleridge's Notes
on Noble's Appeal, Collected Works, ed. Shedd, 1853 and 1884, vol.
v. p. 526).
Emerson owes much to Swedenborg,[7] and Emerson's
thought had much influence in England. Carlyle also was attracted to him (see
his letter from Chelsea, November 13, 1852); Mrs Browning studied him with
enthusiasm and spent the winter of 1852-3 in meditation on his philosophy (Letters,
vol. ii. p. 141), which bore fruit four years later in Aurora Leigh.
Coventry Patmore is, however, the English writer most
saturated with Swedenborg's thought, and his Angel in the House embodies
the main features of Swedenborg's peculiar views expressed in Conjugial
Love, on sex and marriage and their significance. It is not too much to say
that Swedenborg influenced and coloured the whole trend of Patmore's thought,
and that he was to him what Boehme was to Law, the match which set alight his
mystical flame. He says Swedenborg's Heaven and Hell "abounds
with perception of the truth to a degree unparalleled perhaps in uninspired
writing," and he asserts that he never tires of reading him, "he is
unfathomably profound and yet simple."[8]
Whatever may be the source or reason, it is clear that
at the end of the eighteenth century we begin to find a mystical tinge of thought
in several thinkers and writers, such as Burke, Coleridge, and Thomas Erskine
of Linlathen. This increases in the early nineteenth century, strengthened by
the influence, direct and indirect, of Boehme, Swedenborg, and the German
transcendental philosophers and this mystical spirit is very marked in Carlyle,
and, as we shall see, in most of the greatest nineteenth-century poets.
In addition to those writers which are here dealt with
in detail, there is much of the mystic spirit in others of the same period, to
name a few only, George Meredith, "Fiona Macleod," Christina
Rossetti, and Mrs Browning; while to-day writers like "A. E.," W. B.
Yeats, and Evelyn Underhill are carrying on the mystic tradition.
Chapter II
Love and Beauty Mystics
In studying the mysticism of the English writers, and
more especially of the poets, one is at once struck by the diversity of
approach leading to unity of end.
"There are," says Plotinus, "different
roads by which this end [apprehension of the Infinite] may be reached. The love
of beauty, which exalts the poet; that devotion to the One and that ascent of
science which makes the ambition of the philosopher; and that love and those
prayers by which some devout and ardent soul tends in its moral purity towards
perfection. These are the great highways conducting to that height above the
actual and the particular, where we stand in the immediate presence of the
Infinite, who shines out as from the deeps of the soul."—Letter to
Flaccus.
We have grouped together our English writers who are
mystical in thought, according to the five main pathways by which they have
seen the Vision: Love, Beauty, Nature, Wisdom, or Devotion. Even within these
groups, the method of approach, the interpretation or application of the Idea,
often differs very greatly. For instance, Shelley and Browning may both be
called love-mystics; that is, they look upon love as the solution of the
mystery of life, as the link between God and man. To Shelley this was a
glorious intuition, which reached him through his imagination, whereas the life
of man as he saw it roused in him little but mad indignation, wild revolt, and
passionate protest. To Browning this was knowledge—knowledge borne in upon him
just because of human life as he saw it, which to him was a clear proof of the
great destiny of the race. He would have agreed with Patmore that "you can
see the disc of Divinity quite clearly through the smoked glass of humanity,
but no otherwise." He found "harmony in immortal souls, spite of the
muddy vesture of decay."
The three great English poets who are also
fundamentally mystical in thought are Browning, Wordsworth, and Blake. Their
philosophy or mystical belief, one in essence, though so differently expressed,
lies at the root, as it is also the flower, of their life-work. In others, as
in Shelley, Keats, and Rossetti, although it is the inspiring force of their
poetry, it is not a flame, burning steadily and evenly, but rather a light
flashing out intermittently into brilliant and dazzling radiance. Hence the man
himself is not so permeated by it; and hence results the unsatisfied desire,
the almost painful yearning, the recurring disappointment and disillusionment,
which we do not find in Browning, Wordsworth, and Blake.
In our first group we have four poets of markedly
different temperaments—Shelley intensely spiritual; Rossetti with a strong
tinge of sensuousness, of "earthiness" in his nature; Browning, the
keenly intellectual man of the world, and Patmore a curious mixture of
materialist and mystic; yet to all four love is the secret of life, the one
thing worth giving and possessing.
Shelley believed in a Soul of the Universe, a Spirit
in which all things live and move and have their being; which, as one feels in
the Prometheus, is unnamable, inconceivable even to man, for
"the deep truth is imageless." His most passionate desire was not, as
was Browning's, for an increased and ennobled individuality, but for the
mystical fusion of his own personality with this Spirit, this object of his
worship and adoration. To Shelley, death itself was but the rending of a veil
which would admit us to the full vision of the ideal, which alone is true life.
The sense of unity in all things is most strongly felt in Adonais,
where Shelley's maturest thought and philosophy are to be found; and indeed the
mystical fervour in this poem, especially towards the end, is greater than
anywhere else in his writings. The Hymn to Intellectual Beauty is
in some ways Shelley's clearest and most obvious expression of his devotion to
the Spirit of Ideal Beauty, its reality to him, and his vow of dedication to
its service. But the Prometheus is the most deeply mystical of
his poems; indeed, as Mrs Shelley says, "it requires a mind as subtle and
penetrating as Shelley's own to understand the mystic meanings scattered
throughout the poem."
Shelley, like Blake, regarded the human imagination as
a divine creative force; Prometheus stands for the human imagination, or the
genius of the world; and it is his union with Asia, the divine Idea, the Spirit
of Beauty and of Love, from which a new universe is born. It is this union,
which consummates the aspirations of humanity, that Shelley celebrates in the
marvellous love-song of Prometheus. As befitted a disciple of Godwin, he
believed in the divine potentiality of man, convinced that all good is to be
found within man's own being, and that his progress depends on his own will.
It
is our will
That thus enchains us to permitted ill—
We might be otherwise—we might be all
We dream of happy, high, majestical.
Where is the love, beauty, and truth we seek
But in our mind?
Julian and Maddalo.
In the allegorical introduction to the Revolt
of Islam, which is an interesting example of Shelley's mystical mythology,
we have an insight into the poet's view of the good power in the world. It is
not an almighty creator standing outside mankind, but a power which suffers and
rebels and evolves, and is, in fact, incarnate in humanity, so that it is
unrecognised by men, and indeed confounded with evil:—
And the Great Spirit of Good did creep among
The nations of mankind, and every tongue
Cursed and blasphemed him as he passed, for none
Knew good from evil.
There is no doubt that to Shelley the form assumed by
the divine in man was love. Mrs Shelley, in her note to Rosalind and
Helen, says that, "in his eyes it was the essence of our being, and
all woe and pain arose from the war made against it by selfishness or
insensibility, or mistake"; and Shelley himself says, "the great
secret of morals is love; or a going out of our own nature, and an
identification of ourselves with the beautiful which exists in thought, action
or person, not our own."
Shelley was always searching for love; and, although
he knew well, through his study of Plato, the difference between earthly and
spiritual love, that the one is but the lowest step on the ladder which leads
to the other, yet in actual practice he confounded the two. He knew that he did
so; and only a month before his death, he summed up in a sentence the tragedy
of his life. He writes to Mr Gisborne about the Epipsychidion,
saying that he cannot look at it now, for—
"the person whom it celebrates was a cloud
instead of a Juno," and continues, "If you are curious, however, to
hear what I am and have been, it will tell you something thereof. It is an
idealized history of my life and feelings. I think one is always in love with
something or other; the error—and I confess it is not easy for spirits cased in
flesh and blood to avoid it—consists in seeking in a mortal image the likeness
of what is, perhaps, eternal."
No poet has a more distinct philosophy of life than
Browning. Indeed he has as much a right to a place among the philosophers, as
Plato has to one among the poets. Browning is a seer, and pre-eminently a
mystic; and it is especially interesting as in the case of Plato and St Paul,
to encounter this latter quality as a dominating characteristic of the mind of
so keen and logical a dialectician. We see at once that the main position of
Browning's belief is identical with what we have found to be the characteristic
of mysticism—unity under diversity at the centre of all existence. The same
essence, the one life, expresses itself through every diversity of form.
He dwells on this again and again:—
God
is seen
In the star, in the stone, in the flesh, in the soul
and the clod.
And through all these forms there is growth upwards.
Indeed, it is only upon this supposition that the poet can account for
many a thrill
Of kinship, I confess to, with the powers
Called Nature: animate, inanimate
In parts or in the whole, there's something there
Man-like that somehow meets the man in me.
Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau.
The poet sees that in each higher stage we benefit by
the garnered experience of the past; and so man grows and expands and becomes
capable of feeling for and with everything that lives. At the same time the
higher is not degraded by having worked in and through the lower, for he
distinguishes between the continuous persistent life, and the temporary
coverings it makes use of on its upward way;
From first to last of lodging, I was I,
And not at all the place that harboured me.
Humanity then, in Browning's view, is not a collection
of individuals, separate and often antagonistic, but one whole.
When I say "you" 'tis the common soul,
The collective I mean: the race of Man
That receives life in parts to live in a whole
And grow here according to God's clear plan.
Old Pictures in Florence.
This sense of unity is shown in many ways: for
instance, in Browning's protest against the one-sidedness of nineteenth-century
scientific thought, the sharp distinction or gulf set up between science and
religion. This sharp cleavage, to the mystic, is impossible. He knows, however
irreconcilable the two may appear, that they are but different aspects of the
same thing. This is one of the ways in which Browning anticipates the most
advanced thought of the present day.
In Paracelsus he emphasises the fact
that the exertion of power in the intelligence, or the acquisition of
knowledge, is useless without the inspiration of love, just as love is waste
without power. Paracelsus sums up the matter when he says to Aprile—
I too have sought to KNOW as thou to LOVE
Excluding love as thou refusedst knowledge....
We
must never part ...
Till thou the lover, know; and I, the knower,
Love—until both are saved.
Arising logically out of this belief in unity, there
follows, as with all mystics, the belief in the potential divinity of man,
which permeates all Browning's thought, and is continually insisted on in such
poems as Rabbi ben Ezra, A Death in the Desert, and The
Ring and the Book. He takes for granted the fundamental position of the
mystic, that the object of life is to know God; and according to the poet, in
knowing love we learn to know God. Hence it follows that love is the meaning of
life, and that he who finds it not
loses what he lived for
And eternally must lose it.
Christina.
For life with all it yields of joy and woe
And hope and fear ...
Is just our chance o' the prize of learning love.
A Death in the Desert.
This is Browning's central teaching, the key-note of
his work and philosophy. The importance of love in life is to Browning supreme,
because he holds it to be the meeting-point between God and man. Love is the
sublimest conception possible to man; and a life inspired by it is the highest
conceivable form of goodness.
In this exaltation of love, as in several other
points, Browning much resembles the German mystic, Meister Eckhart. To compare
the two writers in detail would be an interesting task; it is only possible
here to suggest points of resemblance. The following passage from Eckhart suggests
several directions in which Browning's thought is peculiarly mystical:—
Intelligence is the youngest faculty in man.... The
soul in itself is a simple work; what God works in the simple light of the soul
is more beautiful and more delightful than all the other works which He works
in all creatures. But foolish people take evil for good and good for evil. But
to him who rightly understands, the one work which God works in the soul is
better and nobler and higher than all the world. Through that light comes
grace. Grace never comes in the intelligence or in the will. If it could come
in the intelligence or in the will, the intelligence and the will would have to
transcend themselves. On this a master says: There is something secret about
it; and thereby he means the spark of the soul, which alone can apprehend God.
The true union between God and the soul takes place in the little spark, which
is called the spirit of the soul.[9]
The essential unity of God and man is expressed more
than once by Browning in Eckhart's image: as when he speaks of God as Him
Who never is dishonoured in the spark
He gave us from his fire of fires.
He is at one with Eckhart, and with all mystics, in
his appeal from the intellect to that which is beyond intellect; in his
assertion of the supremacy of feeling, intuition, over knowledge. Browning
never wearies of dwelling on the relativity of physical knowledge, and its
inadequacy to satisfy man. This is perhaps best brought out in one of the last
things he wrote, the "Reverie" in Asolando; but it is
dwelt on in nearly all his later and more reflective poems. His maxim was—
Wholly distrust thy knowledge, then, and trust
As wholly love allied to ignorance!
There lies thy truth and safety. ...
Consider
well!
Were knowledge all thy faculty, then God
Must be ignored: love gains him by first leap.
A Pillar at Sebzevar.
Another point of resemblance with Eckhart is suggested
by his words: "That foolish people take evil for good, and good for
evil." Browning's theory of evil is part of the working-out of his
principle of what may be called the coincidence of extreme opposites. This is,
of course, part of his main belief in unity, but it is an interesting
development of it. This theory is marked all through his writings; and,
although philosophers have dealt with it, he is perhaps the one poet who faces
the problem, and expresses himself on the point with entire conviction. His
view is that good and evil are purely relative terms (see The
Bean-stripe), and that one cannot exist without the other. It is evil which
alone makes possible some of the divinest qualities in man—compassion, pity,
forgiveness patience. We have seen that Shelley shares this view, "for
none knew good from evil"; and Blake expresses himself very strongly about
it, and complains that Plato "knew nothing but the virtues and vices, the
good and evil.... There is nothing in all that.... Everything is good in God's
eyes." Mysticism is always a reconcilement of opposites; and this, as we
have seen in connection with science and religion, knowledge and love, is a
dominant note of Browning's philosophy. He brings it out most startlingly
perhaps in The Statue and the Bust, where he shows that in his very
capacity for vice, a man proves his capacity for virtue, and that a failure of
energy in the one implies a corresponding failure of energy in the other.
At the same time, clear knowledge that evil is
illusion would defeat its own end and paralyse all moral effort, for evil only
exists for the development of good in us.
Type needs antitype:
As night needs day, as shine needs shade, so good
Needs evil: how were pity understood
Unless by pain?
This is one reason why Browning never shrank from the
evil in the world, why indeed he expended so much of his mind and art on the
analysis and dissection of every kind of evil, laying bare for us the working
of the mind of the criminal, the hypocrite, the weakling, and the cynic;
because he held that—
Only by looking low, ere looking high
Comes penetration of the mystery.
There are other ways in which Browning's thought is
especially mystical, as, for instance, his belief in pre-existence, and his theory
of knowledge, for he, like Plato, believes in the light within the soul, and
holds that—
To
know
Rather consists in opening out a way
Whence the imprisoned splendour may escape,
Than in effecting entry for a light
Supposed to be without.
Paracelsus, Act I.
But the one thought which is ever constant with him,
and is peculiarly helpful to the practical man, is his recognition of the value
of limitation in all our energies, and the stress he lays on the fact that only
by virtue of this limitation can we grow. We should be paralysed else. It is
Goethe's doctrine of Entbehrung, and it is vividly portrayed in the
epistle of Karshish. Paracelsus learns it, and makes it clear to Festus at the
end.
The natural result of Browning's theory of evil, and
his sense of the value of limitation, is that he should welcome for man the
experience of doubt, difficulty, temptation, pain; and this we find is the
case.
Life is probation and the earth no goal
But starting point of man...
To try man's foot, if it will creep or climb
'Mid obstacles in seeming, points that prove
Advantage for who vaults from low to high
And makes the stumbling-block a stepping-stone.
The Ring and the Book: The Pope, 1436-7, 410-13.
It is this trust in unending progress, based on the
consciousness of present failure, which is peculiarly inspiriting in Browning's
thought, and it is essentially mystical. Instead of shrinking from pain, the
mystic prays for it, for, properly met, it means growth.
Was the trial sore?
Temptation sharp? Thank God a second time!
Why comes temptation but for man to meet
And master and make crouch beneath his foot,
And so be pedestaled in triumph?
The Ring and the Book: The Pope, 1182-02.
Rossetti's mysticism is perhaps a more salient feature
in his art than is the case with Browning, and the lines of it, and its place
in his work, have been well described by Mr Theodore Watts-Dutton.[10] We can
only here indicate wherein it lies, and how it differs from and falls short of
the mysticism of Shelley and Browning. Rossetti, unlike Browning, is not the
least metaphysical; he is not devoured by philosophical curiosity; he has no
desire to solve the riddle of the universe. All his life he was dominated and
fascinated by beauty, one form of which in especial so appealed to him as at
times almost to overpower him—the beauty of the face of woman.[11] But this
beauty is not an end in itself; it is not the desire of possession that so
stirs him, but rather an absolute thirst for the knowledge of the mystery which
he feels is hiding beneath and beyond it. Here lies his mysticism. It is this
haunting passion which is the greatest thing in Rossetti, which inspires all
that is best in him as artist, the belief that beauty is but the expression or
symbol of something far greater and higher, and that it has kinship with
immortal things. For beauty, which, as Plato has told us, is of all the divine
ideas at once most manifest and most lovable to man, is for Rossetti the actual
and visible symbol of love, which is at once the mystery and solution of the secret
of life.[12] Rossetti's mystical passion is perhaps most perfectly expressed in
his little early prose romance, Hand and Soul. It is purer and more
austere than much of his poetry, and breathes an amazing force of spiritual
vision. One wonders, after reading it, that the writer himself did not attain
to a loftier and more spiritual development of life and art; and one cannot
help feeling the reason was that he did not sufficiently heed the warning of
Plotinus, not to let ourselves become entangled in sensuous beauty, which will
engulf us as in a swamp.
Coventry Patmore was so entirely a mystic that it
seems to be the first and the last and the only thing to say about him. His
central conviction is the unity of all things, and hence their mutual interpretation
and symbolic force. There is only one kind of knowledge which counts with him,
and that is direct apprehension or perception, the knowledge a man has of Love,
by being in love, not by reading about its symptoms. The "touch" of
God is not a figure of speech.
"Touch," says Aquinas, "applies to
spiritual things as well as to material things.... The fulness of intelligence
is the obliteration of intelligence. God is then our honey, and we, as St
Augustine says, are His; and who wants to understand honey or requires
the rationale of a kiss?" (Rod, Root, and Flower,
xx.)
Once given the essential idea, to be grasped by the
intuitive faculty alone, the world is full of analogies, of natural revelations
which help to support and illustrate great truths. Patmore was, however, caught
and enthralled by one aspect of unity, by one great analogy, almost to the
exclusion of all others. This is that in human love, but above all in wedded
love, we have a symbol (that is an expression of a similar force in different
material) of the love between God and the soul. What Patmore meant was that in
the relationship and attitude of wedded lovers we hold the key to the mystery
at the heart of life, and that we have in it a "real apprehension"
(which is quite different from real comprehension[13]) of the relationship and
attitude of humanity to God. His first wife's love revealed to him this, which
is the basic fact of all his thought and work.
The relationship of the soul to Christ as His
betrothed wife is the key to the feeling with which prayer and love
and honour should be offered to Him ... She showed me what
that relationship involves of heavenly submission and spotless passionate
loyalty.[14]
He believed that sex is a relationship at the base of
all things natural and divine;
Nature, with endless being rife,
Parts each thing into "him" and
"her"
And, in the arithmetic of life,
The smallest unit is a pair.[15]
This division into two and reconciliation into one,
this clash of forces resulting in life, is, as Patmore points out in words
curiously reminiscent of those of Boehme, at the root of all existence. All
real apprehension of God, he says, is dependent upon the realisation of his
triple Personality in one Being.
Nature goes on giving echoes of the same living
triplicity in animal, plant, and mineral, every stone and material atom owing
its being to the synthesis or "embrace" of the two opposed forces of
expansion and contraction. Nothing whatever exists in a single entity but in
virtue of its being thesis, antithesis, and synthesis and in humanity and
natural life this takes the form of sex, the masculine, the feminine, and the
neuter, or third, forgotten sex spoken of by Plato, which is not the absence of
the life of sex, but its fulfilment and power, as the electric fire is the
fulfilment and power of positive and negative in their "embrace."
The essay from which this passage is taken, The
Bow set in the Cloud, together with The Precursor, give in full
detail an exposition of this belief of Patmore's, which was for him "the
burning heart of the Universe."
Female and male God made the man;
His image is the whole, not half;
And in our love we dimly scan
The love which is between Himself.[16]
God he conceived of as the great masculine positive
force, the soul as the feminine or receptive force, and the meeting of these
two, the "mystic rapture" of the marriage of Divinity and Humanity,
as the source of all life and joy.
This profound and very difficult theme is treated by
Patmore in a manner at once austere and passionate in the exquisite little
preludes to the Angel in the House, and more especially in the
odes, which stand alone in nineteenth-century poetry for poignancy of feeling
and depth of spiritual passion. They are the highest expression of "erotic
mysticism"[17] in English; a marvellous combination of flaming ardour and
sensuousness of description with purity and austerity of tone. This latter
effect is gained largely by the bare and irregular metre, which has a curiously
compelling beauty of rhythm and dignity of cadence.
The book into which Patmore put the fullness of his
convictions, the Sponsa Dei, which he burnt because he feared it
revealed too much to a world not ready for it, was says Mr Gosse, who had read
it in manuscript, "a transcendental treatise on Divine desire seen through
the veil of human desire." We can guess fairly accurately its tenor and
spirit if we read the prose essay Dieu et ma Dame and the
wonderful ode Sponsa Dei, which, happily, the poet did not destroy.
It may be noted that the other human affections and
relationships also have for Patmore a deep symbolic value, and two of his
finest odes are written, the one in symbolism of mother love, the other in that
of father and son.[18]
We learn by human love, so be points out, to realise
the possibility of contact between the finite and Infinite, for divinity can
only be revealed by voluntarily submitting to limitations. It is "the
mystic craving of the great to become the love-captive of the small, while the
small has a corresponding thirst for the enthralment of the great."[19]
And this process of intercourse between God and man is
symbolised in the Incarnation, which is not a single event in time, but the
culmination of an eternal process. It is the central fact of a man's
experience, "for it is going on perceptibly in himself"; and in like
manner "the Trinity becomes the only and self-evident explanation of
mysteries which are daily wrought in his own complex nature."[20] In this
way is it that to Patmore religion is not a question of blameless life or the
holding of certain beliefs, but it is "an experimental science" to be
lived and to be felt, and the clues to the experiments are to be found in natural
human processes and experiences interpreted in the light of the great dogmas of
the Christian faith.
For Keats, the avenue to truth and reality took the
form of Beauty. The idea, underlying most deeply and consistently the whole of
his poetry, is that of the unity of life; and closely allied with this is the
belief in progress, through ever-changing, ever-ascending stages. Sleep
and Poetry, Endymion, and Hyperion represent very well
three stages in the poet's thought and art. In Sleep and Poetry Keats
depicts the growth even in an individual life, and describes the three stages
of thought, or attitudes towards life, through which the poet must pass. They
are not quite parallel to the three stages of the mystical ladder marked out by
Wordsworth in the main body of his poetry, because they do not go quite so far,
but they are almost exactly analogous to the three stages of mind he describes
in Tintern Abbey. The first is mere animal pleasure and delight in
living—
A pigeon tumbling in clear summer air;
A laughing school-boy without grief or care
Hiding the springy branches of an elm.
Then follows simple unreflective enjoyment of Nature.
The next stage is sympathy with human life, with human grief and joy, which
brings a sense of the mystery of the world, a longing to pierce it and arrive
at its meaning, symbolised in the figure of the charioteer.
Towards the end of Keats's life this feeling was
growing stronger; and it is much dwelt upon in the Revision of Hyperion.
There he plainly states that the merely artistic life, the life of the dreamer,
is selfish; and that the only way to gain real insight is through contact and
sympathy with human suffering and sorrow; and in the lost Woodhouse transcript
of the Revision, rediscovered in 1904, there are some lines in
which this point is still further emphasised. The full realisation of this
third stage was not granted to Keats during his short life; he had but gleams
of it. The only passage where he describes the ecstasy of vision is in Endymion (bk.
i., 1. 774 ff.), and this resembles in essentials all the other reports of this
experience given by mystics. When the mind is ready, anything may lead us to
it—music, imagination, love, friendship.
Feel we these things?—that moment have we stept
Into a sort of oneness, and our state
Is like a floating spirit's.
Keats felt this passage was inspired, and in a letter
to Taylor in January 1818 he says, "When I wrote it, it was a regular
stepping of the Imagination towards a truth."
In Endymion, the underlying idea is the
unity of the various elements of the individual soul; the love of woman is
shown to be the same as the love of beauty; and that in its turn is identical
with the love of the principle of beauty in all things. Keats was always very
sensitive to the mysterious effects of moonlight, and so for him the moon
became a symbol for the great abstract principle of beauty, which, during the
whole of his poetic life, he worshipped intellectually and spiritually.
"The mighty abstract Idea I have of Beauty in all things stifles the more
divided and minute domestic happiness," he writes to his brother George;
and the last two well-known lines of the Ode on a Grecian Urn fairly
sum up his philosophy—
Beauty is truth, truth Beauty, that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.
So that the moon represents to Keats the eternal idea,
the one essence in all. This is how he writes of it, in what is an entirely
mystical passage in Endymion—
... As I grew in years, still didst thou blend
With all my ardours: thou wast the deep glen;
Thou wast the mountain-top, the sage's pen,
The poet's harp, the voice of friends, the sun;
Thou wast the river, thou wast glory won;
Thou wast my clarion's blast, thou wast my steed,
My goblet full of wine, my topmost deed:
Thou wast the charm of women, lovely Moon!
In his fragment of Hyperion, Keats shadows
forth the unity of all existence, and gives magnificent utterance to the belief
that change is not decay, but the law of growth and progress. Oceanus, in his
speech to the overthrown Titans, sums up the whole meaning as far as it has
gone, in verse which is unsurpassed in English—
We fall by course of Nature's law, not force
Of thunder, or of Jove ...
... on our heels a fresh perfection treads,
A power more strong in beauty, born of us
And fated to excel us, as we pass
In glory that old Darkness ...
... for 'tis the eternal law
That first in beauty should be first in might.
This is true mysticism, the mysticism Keats shares
with Burke and Carlyle, the passionate belief in continuity of essence through
ever-changing forms.
Chapter III
Nature Mystics
Vaughan and Wordsworth stand pre-eminent among our
English poets in being almost exclusively occupied with one theme, the mystical
interpretation of nature. Both poets are of a meditative, brooding cast of
mind; but whereas Wordsworth arrives at his philosophy entirely through
personal experience and sensation, Vaughan is more of a mystical philosopher,
deeply read in Plato and the mediæval alchemists. The constant comparison of
natural with spiritual processes is, on the whole, the most marked feature of
Vaughan's poetry. If man will but attend, he seems to say to us, everything
will discourse to him of the spirit. He broods on the silk-worm's change into
the butterfly (Resurrection and Immortality); he ponders over the mystery
of the continuity of life as seen in the plant, dying down and entirely
disappearing in winter, and shooting up anew in the spring (The Hidden
Flower); or, while wandering by his beloved river Usk, he meditates near
the deep pool of a waterfall on its mystical significance as it seems to linger
beneath the banks and then to shoot onward in swifter course, and he sees in it
an image of life beyond the grave. The seed growing secretly in the earth
suggests to him the growth of the soul in the darkness of physical matter; and
in Affliction he points out that all nature is governed by a
law of periodicity and contrast, night and day, sunshine and shower; and as the
beauty of colour can only exist by contrast, so are pain, sickness, and trouble
needful for the development of man. These poems are sufficient to illustrate
the temper of Vaughan's mind, his keen, reverent observation of nature in all
her moods, and his intense interest in the minutest happenings, because they
are all manifestations of the one mighty law.
Vaughan appears to have had a more definite belief in
pre-existence than Wordsworth, for he refers to it more than once; and The
Retreate, which is probably the best known of all his poems and must have
furnished some suggestion for the Immortality Ode, is based upon
it. Vaughan has occasionally an almost perfect felicity of mystical expression,
a power he shares with Donne, Keats, Rossetti, and Wordsworth. His ideas then
produce their effect through the medium of art, directly on the feelings. The
poem called Quickness is perhaps the best example of this
peculiar quality, which cannot be analysed but must simply be felt; or The
World, with its magnificent symbol in the opening lines:—
I saw Eternity the other night,
Like a great Ring of pure and endless
light,
All calm, as it was bright;
And round beneath it, Time, in hours, days, years,
Driv'n by the spheres,
Like a vast shadow mov'd.[21]
Mysticism is the most salient feature of Wordsworth's
poetry, for he was one who saw, whose inward eye was focussed to visions scarce
dreamt of by men. It is because of the strangeness and unfamiliarity of his
vision that he is a difficult poet to understand, and the key to the
understanding of him is a mystic one. People talk of the difficulty of
Browning, but he is easy reading compared with a great deal of Wordsworth. It
is just the apparent simplicity of Wordsworth's thought which is so misleading.
A statement about him of the following kind would be fairly generally accepted
as the truth. Wordsworth was a simple-minded poet with a passion for nature, he
found great joy and consolation in the contemplation of the beauty of hills and
dales and clouds and flowers, and urged others to find this too; he lived, and
recommended others to live a quiet retired unexciting kind of life, and he
preached a doctrine of simplicity and austerity. Now, except that Wordsworth
had a passion for Nature, there is not a single true statement here. Wordsworth
was not only a poet, he was also a seer, a mystic and a practical psychologist
with an amazingly subtle mind, and an unusual capacity for feeling; he lived a
life of excitement and passion, and he preached a doctrine of magnificence and
glory. It was not the beauty of Nature which brought him joy and peace, but
the life in Nature. He himself had caught a vision of that
life, he knew it and felt it, and it transformed the whole of existence for
him. He believed that every man could attain this vision which he so fully
possessed, and his whole life's work took the form of a minute and careful
analysis of the processes of feeling in his own nature, which he left as a
guide for those who would tread the same path. It would be correct to say that
the whole of his poetry is a series of notes and investigations devoted to the
practical and detailed explanation of how he considered this state of vision
might be reached. He disdained no experience—however trivial, apparently—the
working of the mind of a peasant child or an idiot boy, the effect produced on
his own emotions by a flower, a glowworm, a bird's note, a girl's song; he
passed by nothing which might help to throw light on this problem. The
experience which Wordsworth was so anxious others should share was the
following. He found that when his mind was freed from pre-occupation with
disturbing objects, petty cares, "little enmities and low desires,"
that he could then reach a condition of equilibrium, which he describes as a
"wise passiveness," or a "happy stillness of the mind." He
believed this condition could be deliberately induced by a kind of relaxation
of the will, and by a stilling of the busy intellect and striving desires. It
is a purifying process, an emptying out of all that is worrying,
self-assertive, and self-seeking. If we can habitually train ourselves and
attune our minds to this condition, we may at any moment come across something
which will arouse our emotions, and it is then, when our emotions—thus
purified—are excited to the point of passion, that our vision becomes
sufficiently clear to enable us to gain actual experience of the "central
peace subsisting for ever at the heart of endless agitation." Once seen,
this vision changes for us the whole of life; it reveals unity in what to our
every-day sight appears to be diversity, harmony where ordinarily we hear but
discord, and joy, overmastering joy, instead of sorrow.
It is a kind of illumination, whereby in a lightning
flash we see that the world is quite different from what it ordinarily appears
to be, and when it is over—for the experience is but momentary—it is impossible
to describe the vision in precise terms, but the effect of it is such as to
inspire and guide the whole subsequent life of the seer. Wordsworth several
times depicts this "bliss ineffable" when "all his thought were
steeped in feeling." The well-known passage in Tintern Abbey already
quoted (p. 7) is one of the finest analysis of it left us by any of the seers,
and it closely resembles the accounts given by Plotinus and Boehme of similar
experiences.
To Wordsworth this vision came through Nature, and for
this reason. He believed that all we see round us is alive, beating with the
same life which pulsates in us. It is, he says,—
my faith that every flower
Enjoys the air it breathes.
and that if we will but listen and look, we will hear
and see and feel this central life. This is the pith of the message we find
repeated again and again in various forms throughout Wordsworth's poetry, and
perhaps best summed up at the end of the fourth book of the Excursion,
a book which should be closely studied by any one who would explore the secret
of the poet's outlook upon life. He tells us in the Prelude (Book
iii.) that even in boyhood it was by this feeling he "mounted to community
with highest truth"—
To every natural form, rock, fruits, or flower,
Even the loose stones that cover the highway,
I gave a moral life: I saw them feel,
Or linked them to some feeling: the great mass
Lay bedded in a quickening soul, and all
That I beheld respired with inward meaning.
Wordsworth, in short, was haunted by the belief that
the secret of the universe is written clearly all round us, could we but train
and purify our mind and emotions so as to behold it. He believed that we are in
something the same attitude towards Nature as an illiterate untrained person
might be in the presence of a book containing the philosophy of Hegel. To the
educated trained thinker, who by long and arduous discipline has developed his
mental powers, that book contains the revelation of the thought of a great
mind; whereas to the uneducated person it is merely a bundle of paper with
words printed on it. He can handle it, touch it, see it, he can read the words,
he can even understand many of them separately, but the essence of the book and
its meaning remains closed to him until he can effect some alteration in
himself which will enable him to understand it.
Wordsworth's claim is that he had discovered by his
own experience a way to effect the necessary alteration in ourselves which will
enable us to catch glimpses of the truths expressing themselves all round us.
It is a great claim, but he would seem to have justified it.
It is interesting that the steps in the ladder of
perfection, as described by Wordsworth, are precisely analogous to the
threefold path or "way" of the religious and philosophic mystic, an
ethical system or rule of life, of which, very probably, Wordsworth had never
heard.
The mystic vision was not attained by him, any more
than by others, without deliberate renunciation. He lays great stress upon
this; and yet it is a point in his teaching sometimes overlooked. He insists
repeatedly upon the fact that before any one can taste of these joys of the
spirit, he must be purified, disciplined, self-controlled. He leaves us a full
account of his purgative stage. Although he started life with a naturally pure
and austere temperament, yet he had deliberately to crush out certain strong
passions to which he was liable, as well as all personal ambition, all love of
power, all desire for fame or money; and to confine himself to the
contemplation of such objects as—
excite
No morbid passions, no disquietude,
No vengeance and no hatred.
In the Recluse he records how he
deliberately fought, and bent to other uses, a certain wild passionate delight
he felt in danger, a struggle or victory over a foe, in short, some of the
primitive instincts of a strong, healthy animal, feelings which few would
regard as reprehensible. These natural instincts, this force and energy, good
in themselves, Wordsworth did not crush, but deliberately turned into a higher
channel.
At the end of the Prelude he makes
his confession of the sins he did not commit.
Never did I, in quest of right and wrong,
Tamper with conscience from a private aim;
Nor was in any public hope the dupe
Of selfish passions; nor did ever yield
Wilfully to mean cares or low pursuits.
Such a confession, or rather boast, in the mouth of
almost any other man would sound hypocritical or self-complacent; but with
Wordsworth, we feel it is the bare truth told us for our help and guidance, as
being the necessary and preliminary step. It is a high standard which is held
up before us, even in this first stage, for it includes, not merely the
avoidance of all obvious sins against man and society, but a tuning-up, a
transmuting of the whole nature to high and noble endeavour. Wordsworth found
his reward, in a settled state of calm serenity, "consummate
happiness," "wide-spreading, steady, calm, contemplative," and,
as he tells us in the fourth book of the Prelude, on one evening
during that summer vacation,
Gently did my soul
Put off her veil, and, self-transmuted, stood
Naked, as in the presence of her God.
When the mind and soul have been prepared, the next
step is concentration, aspiration. Then it is borne in upon the poet that in
the infinite and in the eternal alone can we find rest, can we find ourselves;
and towards this infinitude we must strive with unflagging ardour;
Our destiny, our being's heart and home,
Is with infinitude, and only there.
Prelude, Book vi. 604.
The result of this aspiration towards the infinite is
a quickening of consciousness, upon which follows the attainment of the third
or unitive stage, the moment when man can "breathe in worlds to which the
heaven of heavens is but a veil," and perceive "the forms whose
kingdom is where time and place are not." Such minds—
need not extraordinary
calls
To rouse them; in a world of life they live,
By sensible impressions not enthralled,
... the highest bliss
That flesh can know is theirs—the
consciousness
Of Whom they are.
Prelude, Book xiv. 105, 113,
Wordsworth possessed in a peculiar degree a mystic
sense of infinity, of the boundless, of the opening-out of the world of our
normal finite experience into the transcendental; and he had a rare power of
putting this into words. It was a feeling which, as he tells us in the Prelude (Book
xiii.), he had from earliest childhood, when the disappearing line of the
public highway—
Was like an invitation into space
Boundless, or guide into eternity,
a feeling which, applied to man, gives that
inspiriting certitude of boundless growth, when the soul has—
... an obscure sense
Of possible sublimity, whereto
With growing faculties she doth aspire.
It is at this point, and on this subject, that
Wordsworth's poetical and ethical imagination are most nearly fused. This
fusion is far from constant with him; and the result is that there are tracts
of his writings where the sentiments are excellent, the philosophy
illuminating, but the poetry is not great: it does not awaken the
"transcendental feeling."[22] The moments when this condition is most
fully attained by Wordsworth occur when, by sheer force of poetic imagination
combined with spiritual insight, in some mysterious and indescribable way, he
flashes upon us a sensation of boundless infinity. Herein consists the peculiar
magic of such a poem as Stepping Westward; and there is a touch of
the same feeling in the Solitary Reaper.
It is hardly necessary to dwell on other mystical
elements in Wordsworth, such as his belief in the one law governing all things,
"from creeping plant to sovereign man," and the hint of belief in
pre-existence in the Ode on Immortality. His attitude towards life
as a whole is to be found in a few lines in the "after-thought" to
the Duddon sonnets.
The Form remains, the Function never dies;
While we, the brave, the mighty and the wise,
We Men, who in our morn of youth defied
The elements, must vanish:—be it so!
Enough, if something from our hands have power
To live, and act, and serve the future hour;
And if, as toward the silent tomb we go,
Through love, through hope, and faith's transcendent
dower,
We feel that we are greater than we know.
Richard Jefferies is closely akin to Wordsworth in his
overpowering consciousness of the life in nature. This consciousness is the
strongest force in him, so that at times he is almost submerged by it, and he
loses the sense of outward things. In this condition of trance the sense of
time vanishes, there is, he asserts, no such thing, no past or future, only
now, which is eternity. In The Story of my Heart, a rhapsody of
mystic experience and aspiration he describes in detail several such moments of
exaltation or trance. He seems to be peculiarly sensitive to sunshine. As the
moon typifies to Keats the eternal essence in all things, so to Jefferies the
sun seems to be the physical expression or symbol of the central Force of the
world, and it is through gazing on sunlight that he most often enters into the
trance state.
Standing, one summer's morning, in a recess on London
Bridge, he looks out on the sunshine "burning on steadfast,"
"lighting the great heaven; gleaming on my finger-nail."
"I was intensely conscious of it," he
writes, "I felt it; I felt the presence of the immense powers of the
universe; I felt out into the depths of the ether. So intensely conscious of
the sun, the sky, the limitless space, I felt too in the midst of eternity
then, in the midst of the supernatural, among the immortal, and the greatness
of the material realised the spirit. By these I saw my soul; by these I knew
the supernatural to be more intensely real than the sun. I touched the
supernatural, the immortal, there that moment."[23]
When he reaches this state, outer things drop
away,[24] and he seems to become lost, and absorbed into the being of the
universe. He partakes, momentarily, of a larger, fuller life, he drinks in
vitality through nature. The least blade of grass, he says, or the greatest
oak, "seemed like exterior nerves and veins for the conveyance of feeling
to me. Sometimes a very ecstasy of exquisite enjoyment of the entire visible
universe filled me."[25]
This great central Life Force, which Jefferies, like
Wordsworth, seemed at moments to touch, he, in marked contrast to other
mystics, refuses to call God. For, he says, what we understand by deity is the
purest form of mind, and he sees no mind in nature. It is a force without a
mind, "more subtle than electricity, but absolutely devoid of
consciousness and with no more feeling than the force which lifts the
tides."[26] Yet this cannot content him, for later he declares there must
be an existence higher than deity, towards which he aspires and presses with
the whole force of his being. "Give me," he cries, "to live the
deepest soul-life now and always with this 'Highest Soul.'"[27]
This thrilling consciousness of spiritual life felt
through nature, coupled with passionate aspiration to be absorbed in that
larger life, are the two main features of the mysticism of Richard Jefferies.
His books, and especially The Story of my
Heart, contain, together with the most exquisite nature description, a rich
and vivid record of sensation, feeling, and aspiration. But it is a feeling which,
though vivifying, can only be expressed in general terms, and it carries with
it no vision and no philosophy. It is almost entirely emotional, and it is as
an emotional record that it is of value, for Jefferies' intellectual
reflections are, for the most part, curiously contradictory and unconvincing.
The certainty and rapture of this experience of
spiritual emotion is all the more amazing when we remember that the record of
it was written in agony, when he was wrecked with mortal illness and his nerves
were shattered with pain. For with him, as later with Francis Thompson,
physical pain and material trouble seemed to serve only to direct him towards
and to enhance the glory of the spiritual vision.
Chapter IV
Philosophical Mystics
The mystical sense may be called philosophical in all
those writers who present their convictions in a philosophic form calculated to
appeal to the intellect as well as to the emotions. These writers, as a rule,
though not always, are themselves markedly intellectual, and their primary
concern therefore is with truth or wisdom. Thus Donne, William Law, Burke,
Coleridge, and Carlyle are all predominantly intellectual, while Traherne,
Emily Brontë, and Tennyson clothe their thoughts to some extent in the language
of philosophy.
The dominating characteristic of Donne is
intellectuality; and this may partly account for the lack in him of some
essentialty mystical qualities, more especially reverence, and that ascension
of thought so characteristic of Plato and Browning. These shortcomings are very
well illustrated in that extraordinary poem, The, Progress of the Soul.
The idea is a mystical one, derived from Pythagorean philosophy, and has great
possibilities, which Donne entirely fails to utilise; for, instead of following
the soul upwards on its way, he depicts it as merely jumping about from body to
body, and we are conscious of an entire lack of any lift or grandeur of
thought. This poem helps us to understand how it was that Donne, though so
richly endowed with intellectual gifts, yet failed to reach the highest rank as
a poet. He was brilliant in particulars, but lacked the epic qualities of
breadth, unity, and proportion, characteristics destined to be the distinctive
marks of the school of which he is looked upon as the founder.
Apart from this somewhat important defect, Donne's
attitude of mind is essentially mystical. This is especially marked in his
feeling about the body and natural law, in his treatment of love, and in his
conception of woman. The mystic's postulate—if we could know ourselves, we
should know all—is often on Donne's lips, as for instance in that curious poem
written in memory of Elizabeth Drury, on the second anniversary of her death.
It is perhaps best expressed in the following verse:
But we know our selves least; Mere outward shews
Our mindes so store,
That our soules, no more than our eyes disclose
But forme and colour. Onely he who knowes
Himselfe, knowes more.
Ode: Of our Sense of Sinne.
One of the marked characteristics of Donne's poetry is
his continual comparison of mental and spiritual with, physical processes. This
sense of analogy prevailing throughout nature is with him very strong. The
mystery of continual flux and change particularly attracts him, as it did the
Buddhists[28] and the early Greek thinkers, and Nettleship's remarks about the
nature of bread and unselfishness are akin to the following comparison:—
Dost
thou love
Beauty? (And beauty worthy'st is to move)
Poor cousened consener, that she,
and that thou,
Which did begin to love, are neither now;
Next day repaires (but ill) last dayes decay.
Nor are, (although the river keepe the name)
Yesterdaies waters, and to-daies the same.
Of the Progresse of the Soule. The second Anniversarie, 389-96.
Donne believes firmly in man's potential greatness,
and the power within his own soul:
Seeke wee then our selves in our selves; for as
Men force the Sunne with much more force to passe.
By gathering his beames with a chrystall glasse;
So wee, If wee into our selves will turne,
Blowing our sparkes of virtue, may out-burne
The straw, which doth about our hearts sojourne.
Letter to Mr Roland Woodward.
And although, in the Progress of the Soul,
he failed to give expression to it, yet his belief in progress is unquenchable.
He fully shares the mystic's view that "man, to get towards Him that's
Infinite, must first be great" (Letter to the Countess of Salisbury).
In his treatment of love, Donne's mystical attitude is
most clearly seen. He holds the Platonic conception, that love concerns the soul
only, and is independent of the body, or bodily presence; and he is the poet,
who, at his best, expresses this idea in the most dignified and refined way.
The reader feels not only that Donne believes it, but that he has in some
measure experienced it; whereas with his imitators it degenerated into little
more than a fashionable "conceit." The Undertaking expresses
the discovery he has made of this higher and deeper kind of love; and in
the Ecstasy he describes the union of the souls of two lovers
in language which proves his familiarity with the description of ecstasy given
by Plotinus (Enn. vi. 9, § 11). The great value of this spiritual
love is that it is unaffected by time and space, a belief which is nowhere more
exquisitely expressed than in the refrain of his little song, Soul's
Joy.[29]
O give no way to griefe,
But let beliefe
Of mutuall love,
This wonder to the vulgar prove
Our Bodyes, not wee move.
In one of his verse letters to the Countess of
Huntingdon[30] he explains how true love cannot be desire:
'Tis love, but with such fatall weaknesse made,
That it destroyes it selfe with its owne shade.
He goes still further in the poem entitled Negative
Love, where he says that love is such a passion as can only be defined by
negatives, for it is above apprehension, and his language here is closely akin
to the description of the One or the Good given by Plotinus in the sixth
Ennead.
Thomas Traherne is a mystical writer of singular charm
and originality. The manuscripts of his poems and his prose Meditations,
a kind of spiritual autobiography and notebook, were only discovered and
printed quite recently, and they form a valuable addition to the mystical
literature of the seventeenth century.
He has affinities with Vaughan, Herbert, and Sir
Thomas Browne, with Blake and with Wordsworth. He is deeply sensitive to the
beauty of the natural world, and he insists on the necessity for rejoicing in
this beauty if we are really to live. By love alone is God to be approached and
known, he says, but this love must not be finite. "He must be loved in all
with an unlimited love, even in all His doings, in all His friends, in all His
creatures." In a prose passage of sustained beauty Traherne thus describes
the attitude towards earth which is needful before we can enter heaven.
You never enjoy the world aright, till the Sea itself
floweth in your veins, till you are clothed with the heavens, and crowned with
the stars:.... Till you can sing and rejoice and delight in God, as misers do
in gold, and Kings in sceptres, you never enjoy the world.
Till your spirit filleth the whole world, and the
stars are your jewels;.... till you love men so as to desire their happiness,
with a thirst equal to the zeal of your own: till you delight in God for being
good to all: you never enjoy the world.... The world is a mirror of infinite
beauty, yet no man sees it. It is a Temple of Majesty, yet no man regards it.
It is a region of Light and Peace, did not men disquiet it. It is the Paradise
of God.... It is, the place of Angels and the Gate of Heaven.[31]
He is for ever reiterating, in company with all the
mystics, that
'Tis not the object, but the light
That maketh Heaven: 'tis a purer sight.
He shares Wordsworth's rapture in the life of nature,
and Browning's interest in his fellow-men; he has Shelley's belief in the inner
meaning of love, and much of Keats's worship of beauty, and he expresses this
in an original and lyrical prose of quite peculiar and haunting beauty. He has
embodied his main ideas, with a good deal of repetition both in prose and
verse, but it is invariably the prose version, probably written first, which is
the most arresting and vigorous.
His Meditations well repay careful
study; they are full of wisdom and of an imaginative philosophy, expressed in
pithy and telling form, which continually reminds the reader of Blake's Proverbs
of Hell.
To have no principles or to live beside them, is
equally miserable.
Philosophers are not those that speak but do great
things.
All men see the same objects, but do not equally
understand them.
Souls to souls are like apples, one being rotten rots
another.
This kind of saying abounds on every page. Some of his
more sustained philosophic passages are also noteworthy; such, for instance, is
his comparison of the powers of the soul to the rays of the sun, which carry
light in them unexpressed until they meet an object (Meditations, second
century, No. 78). But Traherne's most interesting contribution to the
psychology of mysticism is his account of his childhood and the "vision
splendid" that he brought with him. Even more to him than to Vaughan or
Wordsworth,
The earth, and every common sight
... did seem
Apparelled in celestial light,
and his description of his feelings and spiritual
insight are both astonishing and convincing. A number of his poems are devoted
to this topic (The Salutation, Wonder, Eden, Innocence, The Rapture, The
Approach, and others), but it is the prose account which must be given.
All appeared now, and strange at first, inexpressibly
rare and delightful and beautiful. I was a little stranger, which at my
entrance into the world was saluted and surrounded with innumerable joys....
The corn was orient and immortal wheat, which never should be reaped, nor was
ever sown. I thought it had stood from everlasting to everlasting. The dust and
stones of the street were as precious as gold: the gates were at first the end
of the world. The green trees when I saw them first ... transported and
ravished me, their sweetness and unusual beauty made my heart to leap, and
almost mad with ecstasy, they were such strange and wonderful things. The Men!
O what venerable and reverend creatures did the aged seem! Immortal Cherubims!
And young men glittering and sparkling Angels, and maids strange seraphic
pieces of life and beauty! Boys and girls tumbling in the street, and playing,
were moving jewels. I knew not that they were born or should die; but all
things abided eternally as they were in their proper places.... The city seemed
to stand in Eden, or to be built in Heaven.[32]
It is necessary to quote at some length, because it is
the way in which Traherne expresses his experiences or reflections which is the
moving and original thing about him. This last passage seems to anticipate
something of the magic of Keats in the Ode to a Nightingale or
the Grecian Urn, the sense of continuity, and of eternity expressed
in time. Traherne's account of the gradual dimming of this early radiance, and
his enforced change of values is equally unusual. Only with great difficulty
did his elders persuade him "that the tinselled ware upon a hobby-horse
was a fine thing" and that a purse of gold was of any value, but by
degrees when he found that all men prized things he did not dream of, and never
mentioned those he cared for, then his "thoughts were blotted out; and at
last all the celestial great and stable treasures, to which I was born, as
wholly forgotten, if as they had never been."
But he remembered enough of those early glories to
realise that if he would regain happiness, he must "become, as it were, a
little child again," get free of "the burden and cumber of devised
wants," and recapture the value and the glory of the common things of
life.
He was so resolutely bent on this that when he had
left college and come into the country and was free, he lived upon £10 a year,
fed on bread and water, and, like George Fox, wore a leather suit. Thus
released from all worldly cares, he says, through God's blessing, "I live
a free and kingly life as if the world were turned again into Eden, or much
more, as it is at this day."
In Emily Brontë we have an unusual type of mystic.
Indeed she is one of the most strange and baffling figures in our literature.
We know in truth very little about her, but that little is quite unlike what we
know about any one else. It is now beginning to be realised that she was a
greater and more original genius than her famous sister, and that strong as
were Charlotte's passion and imagination, the passion and imagination of Emily
were still stronger. She had, so far as we can tell, peculiarly little actual
experience of life, her material interests were bounded by her family, the old
servant Tabby, the dogs, and the moors. For the greater part of her thirty
years of life she did the work of a servant in the little parsonage house on
the edge of the graveyard. She can have read little of philosophy or
metaphysics, and probably had never heard of the mystics; she was brought up in
a narrow, crude, and harshly material creed; yet her own inner experience, her
touch with the secret of life, enabled her to write the remarkable series of
poems the peculiar and haunting quality of which has as yet scarcely been
recognised. They are strong and free and certain, hampered by no dogma,
weighted by no explanation, but containing—in the simplest language—the record
of the experience and the vision of a soul. Emily Brontë lived remote,
unapproachable, self-sufficing and entirely detached, yet consumed with a
fierce, unquenchable love of life and of nature, of the life which withheld
from her all the gifts most prized of men, love, friendship, experience,
recognition, fame; and of the nature which she knew only on a circumscribed
space of the wild Yorkshire moors.
In her poems her mysticism is seen principally in two
ways: in her unerring apprehension of values, of the illusory quality of
material things, even of the nature she so loved, together with the certain
vision of the one Reality behind all forms. This, and her description of
ecstasy, of the all-sufficing joy of the inner life of one who has tasted this
experience, mark her out as being among those who have seen, and who know.
In The Prisoner, the speaker, a woman, is "confined in triple
walls," yet in spite of bolts and bars and dungeon gloom she holds within
herself an inextinguishable joy and unmeasured freedom brought to her every
night by a "messenger."
He comes with western winds, with evening's wandering
airs,
With that clear dusk of heaven that brings the
thickest stars.
Winds take a pensive tone, and stars a tender fire,
And visions rise, and change, that kill me with
desire.
But, first, a hush of peace—a soundless calm descends;
The struggle of distress, and fierce impatience ends;
Mute music soothes my breast—unuttered harmony,
That I could never dream, till Earth was lost to me.
Then dawns the Invisible; the Unseen its truth
reveals;
My outward sense is gone, my inward essence feels:
Its wings are almost free—its home, its harbour found,
Measuring the gulf, it stoops and dares the final
bound.
Oh! dreadful is the check—intense the agony—
When the ear begins to hear, and the eye begins to
see;
When the pulse begins to throb, the brain to think
again;
The soul to feel the flesh, and the flesh to feel the
chain.
This is the description—always unmistakable—of the
supreme mystic experience, the joy of the outward flight, the pain of the
return, and it could only have been written by one who in some measure had
knowledge of it. This, together with the exquisite little poem The
Visionary, which describes a similar experience, and The
Philosopher, stand apart as expressions of spiritual vision, and are among
the most perfect mystic poems in English.
Her realisation of the meaning of common things, her
knowledge that they hold the secret of the universe, and her crystallisation of
this in verse, place her with Blake and Wordsworth.
What have those lonely mountains worth revealing? More
glory and more grief than I can tell: The earth that wakes one human heart to
feeling Can centre both the worlds of Heaven and Hell.
And finally, the sense of continuous life—one central,
all-sustaining Life—of the oneness of God and man, has never been more nobly
expressed than in what is her best-known poem, the last lines she ever wrote:—
O God within my breast,
Almighty, ever-present Deity!
Life—that in me has rest,
As I—undying Life—have power in Thee!
With wide-embracing love
Thy spirit animates eternal years,
Pervades and broods above,
Changes, sustains, dissolves, creates, and rears.
Though earth and man were gone,
And suns and universes ceased to be,
And Thou wert left alone,
Every existence would exist in Thee.
Tennyson differs widely from the other poets whom we
are considering in this connection. He was not born with the mystical
temperament, but, on the contrary, he had a long and bitter struggle with his
own doubts and questionings before he wrested from them peace. There is nothing
of mystic calm or strength in the lines—
Oh, yet we trust that somehow good
Will be the final goal of ill.
He has no mystic rapture in Nature like Wordsworth,
I found Him not in world or sun
Or eagle's wing, or insect's eye;
no mystic interpretation of life as had Browning, no
yearning for union with the spirit of love and beauty as had Shelley.
Tennyson's mysticism came, as it were, rather in spite of himself, and is based
on one thing only—experience. He states his position quite clearly in In
Memoriam, cxxiv. As is well known, he had from time to time a certain
peculiar experience, which he describes fully both in prose and verse, a touch
at intervals throughout his life of "ecstasy," and it was on this he
based his deepest belief. He has left several prose accounts of this mental state,
which often came to him through repeating his own name silently,
till all at once, as it wore, out of the intensity of
the consciousness of individuality, the individuality itself seemed to resolve
and fade away into boundless being, and this not a confused state, but the
clearest of the clearest, the surest of the surest, utterly beyond words, where
death was an almost laughable impossibility, the loss of personality (if so it
were) seeming no extinction, but the only true life[33]
It is a somewhat similar experience which is described
in In Memoriam, xcv.
And all at once it seem'd at last
The living soul was flash'd on mine,
And mine in this was wound, and whirl'd
About empyreal heights of thought,
And came on that which is, and caught
The deep pulsations of the world.
And again in the conclusion of the Holy Grail—
Let visions of the night or of the day
Come, as they will; and many a time they come,
Until this earth he walks on seems not earth,
This light that strikes his eyeball is not light,
This air that strikes his forehead is not air
But vision—yea, his very hand and foot—
In moments when he feels he cannot die,
And knows himself no vision to himself,
Nor the high God a A vision, nor that One
Who rose again.
"These three lines," said Tennyson, speaking
of the last three quoted, "are the (spiritually) central lines in the
Idylls." They are also the central lines in his own philosophy, for it was
the experience of this "vision" that inspired all his deepest
convictions with regard to the unity of all things, the reality of the unseen,
and the persistence of life.
The belief in the impotence of intellectual knowledge
is very closely connected, it is indeed based, upon these "gleams" of
ecstasy. The prologue to In Memoriam (written when the poem
was completed) seems to sum up his faith after many years of struggle and
doubt; but it is in the most philosophical as well as one of the latest, of his
poems, The Ancient Sage, that we find this attitude most fully
expressed. Tennyson wrote of it: "The whole poem is very personal. The
passages about 'Faith' and 'the Passion of the Past' were more especially my
own personal feelings." Through the mouth of the Sage, the poet declares
in impassioned words the position of the mystic, and points out the impotence
of sense-knowledge in dealing with that which is beyond either the senses or
the reason:
For Knowledge is the swallow on the lake
That sees and stirs the surface-shadow there
But never yet hath dipt into the abysm.
Tennyson, like Wordsworth, emphasises the truth that
the only way in which man can gain real knowledge and hear the
"Nameless" is by diving or sinking into the centre of his own being.
There is a great deal of Eastern philosophy and mysticism in the Ancient
Sage, as, for instance, the feeling of the unity of all existence to the
point of merging the personality into the universal.
But that one ripple on the boundless deep
Feels that the deep is boundless, and itself
For ever changing form, but evermore
One with the boundless motion of the deep.
We know that Tennyson had been studying the philosophy
of Lâo-Tsze about this time; yet, though this is, as it were, grafted on to the
poet's mind, still we may take it as being his genuine and deepest conviction.
The nearest approach to a definite statement of it to be found in his poems is
in the few stanzas called The Higher Pantheism, which he sent to be
read at the first meeting of the Metaphysical Society in 1869.
Speak to Him thou for He hears, and Spirit with Spirit
can meet—
Closer is He than breathing, and nearer than hands and
feet.
And the ear of man cannot hear, and the eye of man
cannot see;
But if we could see and hear, this Vision—were it not
He?
In William Law, Burke, Coleridge, and Carlyle, we have
a succession of great English prose-writers whose work and thought is permeated
by a mystical philosophy. Of these four, Law is, during his later life, by far
the most consistently and predominantly mystical.
As has been indicated, there were many strains of
influence which in the seventeenth century tended to foster mystical thought in
England. The group of Cambridge Platonists, to which Henry More belonged, gave
new expression to the great Neo-platonic ideas, but in addition to this a
strong vein of mysticism had been kept alive in Amsterdam, where the exiled
Separatists had gone in 1593. They flourished there and waxed strong, and sent
back to England during the next century a continual stream of opinion and
literature. To this source can be traced the ideas which inspired alike the
Quakers, the Seekers, the Behmenists, the Familists, and numberless other sects
who all embodied a reaction against forms and ceremonies, which, in ceasing to
be understood, had become lifeless. These sects were, up to a certain point,
mystical in thought, for they all believed in the "inner light," in
the immediate revelation of God within the soul as the all-important
experience.
The persecutions of the Quakers under Charles II.
tended to withdraw them from active philanthropy, and to throw them more in the
direction of a personal and contemplative religion. It was then that the
writings of Madame Bourignon, Madame Guyon, and Fénelon became popular, and
were much read among a certain section of thinkers, while the influence of the
teachings of Jacob Boehme, whose works had been translated into English between
the years 1644 and 1692, can be traced, in diverse ways. They impressed
themselves on the thought of the founders of the Society of Friends, they
produced a distinct "Behmenist" sect, and it would seem that the idea
of the three laws of motion first reached Newton through his eager study of
Boehme. But all this has nothing directly to do with literature, and would not
concern us here were it not that in the eighteenth century William Law came
into touch with many of these mystical thinkers, and that he has embodied in
some of the finest prose in our language a portion of the "inspired
cobbler's" vision of the universe.
Law's character is one of considerable interest.
Typically English, and in intellect typically of the eighteenth century,
logical, sane, practical, he is not, at first sight, the man one would expect
to find in sympathy with the mystics. Sincerity is the keynote of his whole
nature, sincerity of thought, of belief, of speech, and of life. Sincerity
implies courage, and Law was a brave man, never shirking the logical outcome of
his convictions, from the day when he ruined his prospects at Cambridge, to the
later years when he suffered his really considerable reputation to be eclipsed
by his espousal of an uncomprehended and unpopular mysticism. He had a keen
rather than a profound intellect, and his thought is lightened by brilliant
flashes of wit or of grim satire. We can tell, however, from his letters and
his later writings, that underneath a severe and slightly stiff exterior, were
hidden emotion, enthusiasm, and great tenderness of feeling.
By middle life Law was well known as a most able and
brilliant writer on most of the burning theological questions of the day, as
well as the author of one of the best loved and most widely read practical and
ethical treatises in the language, A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy
Life. These earlier writings are by far the best known of his works, and it
is with the Serious Call that his name will always be
associated.
Until middle age he showed no marked mystical
tendency, although we know that from the time he was an undergraduate he was a
"diligent reader" of mystical books, and that he had studied, among
others, Dionysius the Areopagite, Ruysbroek, Tauler, Suso, and the seventeenth
century Quietists, Fénelon, Madame Guyon, and Antoinette Bourignon.
When, however, he was about forty-six (c. 1733), he
came across the writings of the seer who set his whole nature aglow with
spiritual fervour, so that when he first read his works they put him into
"a perfect sweat." Jacob Boehme—or Behmen, as he has usually been
called in England—(1575-1624), the illiterate and untrained peasant shoemaker
of Görlitz, is one of the most amazing phenomena in the history of mysticism, a
history which does not lack wonders. His work has so much influenced later
mystical thought and philosophy that a little space must be devoted to him here.
He lived outwardly the quiet, hard-working life of a simple German peasant, but
inwardly—like his fellow-seer Blake—he lived in a glory of illumination, which
by flashes revealed to him the mysteries and splendours he tries in broken and
faltering words to record. He saw with the eye of his mind into the heart of
things, and he wrote down as much of it as he could express.
The older mystics—eastern and western alike—had laid
stress on unity as seen in the nature of God and all things. No one more fully
believed in ultimate unity than did Boehme, but he lays peculiar stress on the
duality, or more accurately, the trinity in unity; and the central point of his
philosophy is the fundamental postulate that all manifestation necessitates
opposition. He asserted the uniformity of law throughout all existence,
physical and spiritual, and this law, which applies all through nature, divine
and human alike, is that nothing can reveal itself without resistance, good can
only be known through evil, and weakness through strength, just as light is
only visible when reflected by a dark body.
Thus when God, the Triune Principle, or Will under
three aspects, desires to become manifest, He divides the Will into two, the
"yes" and the "no," and so founds an eternal contrast to
Himself out of His own hidden Nature, in order to enter into struggle with it,
and finally to discipline and assimilate it. The object of all manifested
nature is the transforming of the will which says "No" into the will
which says "Yes," and this is brought about by seven organising
spirits or forms. The first three of these bring nature out of the dark element
to the point where contact with the light is possible. Boehme calls them
harshness, attraction, and anguish, which in modern terms are contraction,
expansion, and rotation. The first two are in deadly antagonism, and being
forced into collision, form an endless whirl of movement. These two forces with
their resultant effect are to be found all through manifested nature, within
man and without, and are called by different names: good, evil and life, God,
the devil and the world, homogeneity, heterogeneity, strain, or the three laws
of motion, centripetal and centrifugal force, resulting in rotation. They are
the outcome of the "nature" or "no" will, and are the basis
of all manifestation. They are the "power" of God, apart from the
"love," hence their conflict is terrible. When spirit and nature
approach and meet, from the shock a new form is liberated, lightning or fire,
which is the fourth moment or essence. With the lightning ends the development
of the negative triad, and the evolution of the three higher forms then begins;
Boehme calls them light or love, sound and substance; they are of the spirit,
and in them contraction, expansion, and rotation are repeated in a new sense.
The first three forms give the stuff or strength of being, the last three
manifest the quality of being good or bad, and evolution can proceed in either
direction.
The practical and ethical result of this living unity
of nature is the side which most attracted Law, and it is one which is as
simple to state as it is difficult to apply. Boehme's philosophy is one which
can only be apprehended by living it. Will, or desire, is the radical force in
man as it is in nature and in the Godhead, and until that is turned towards the
light, any purely historical or intellectual knowledge of these things is as
useless as if hydrogen were to expect to become water by study of the qualities
of oxygen, whereas what is needed is the actual union of the elements.
The two most important of Law's mystical treatises
are An Appeal to all that Doubt, 1740, and The Way to
Divine Knowledge, 1752. The first of these should be read by any one
desirous of knowing Law's later thought, for it is a clear and fine exposition
of his attitude with regard more especially to the nature of man, the unity of
all nature, and the quality of fire or desire. The later book is really an
account of the main principles of Boehme, with a warning as to the right way to
apply them, and it was written as an introduction to the new edition of
Boehme's works which Law contemplated publishing.
The following is the aspect of Boehme's teaching which
Law most consistently emphasises.
Man was made out of the Breath of God; his soul is a
spark of the Deity. It therefore cannot die, for it "has the Unbeginning,
Unending Life of God in it." Man has fallen from his high estate through
ignorance and inexperience, through seeking separation, taking the part for the
whole, desiring the knowledge of good and evil as separate things. The
assertion of self is thus the root of all evil; for as soon as the will of man
"turns to itself, and would, as it were, have a Sound of its own, it
breaks off from the divine harmony, and falls into the misery of its own
discord." For it is the state of our will that makes the state of our
life. Hence, by the "fall," man's standpoint has been dislocated from
centre to circumference, and he lives in a false imagination. Every quality is
equally good, for there is nothing evil in God from whom all comes; but evil
appears to be through separation. Thus strength and desire in the divine nature
are necessary and magnificent qualities, but when, as in the creature, they are
separated from love, they appear as evil.[34] The analogy of the fruit is, in
this connection a favourite one with both Law and Boehme. When a fruit is
unripe (i.e. incomplete) it is sour, bitter, astringent, unwholesome; but when
it has been longer exposed to the sun and air it becomes sweet, luscious, and
good to eat. Yet it is the same fruit, and the astringent qualities are not
lost or destroyed, but transmuted and enriched, and are thus the main cause of
its goodness.[35] The only way to pass from this condition of
"bitterness" to ripeness, from this false imagination to the true
one, is the way of death. We must die to what we are before we can be born
anew; we must die to the things of this world to which we cling, and for which
we desire and hope, and we must turn towards God. This should be the daily,
hourly exercise of the mind, until the whole turn and bent of our spirit
"points as constantly to God as the needle touched with the loadstone does
to the north."[36] To be alive in God, before you are dead to your own
nature, is "a thing as impossible in itself, as for a grain of wheat to be
alive before it dies."
The root of all, then, is the will or desire. This
realisation of the momentous quality of the will is the secret of every
religious mystic, the hunger of the soul, as Law calls it, is the first
necessity, and all else will follow.[37] It is the seed of everything that can
grow in us; "it is the only workman in nature, and everything is its
work;" it is the true magic power. And this will or desire is always
active; every man's life is a continual state of prayer, and if we are not
praying for the things of God, we are praying for something else.[38]
For prayer is but the desire of the soul. Our imaginations and desires are,
therefore, the greatest realities we have, and we should look closely to what
they are.[39]
It is essential to the understanding of Law, as of
Boehme, to remember his belief in the reality and actuality of the oneness of
nature and of law.[40] Nature is God's great Book of Revelation, for it is
nothing else but God's own outward manifestation of what He inwardly is, and
can do.... The mysteries of religion, therefore, are no higher, nor deeper than
the mysteries of nature.[41] God Himself is subject to this law. There is no
question of God's mercy or of His wrath,[42] for it is an eternal principle
that we can only receive what we are capable of receiving; and to ask why one
person gains no help from the mercy and goodness of God while another does gain
help is "like asking why the refreshing dew of heaven does not do that to
the flint which it does to the vegetable plant."[43]
Self-denial, or mortification of the flesh is not a
thing imposed upon us by the mere will of God: considered in themselves they
have nothing of goodness or holiness, but they have their ground and reason in
the nature of the thing, and are as "absolutely necessary to make way for
the new birth, as the death of the husk and gross part of the grain is
necessary to make way for its vegetable life."[44]
These views are clear enough, but the more mystical
ones, such as those which Law and Boehme held, for instance, about fire, can
only be understood in the light of this living unity throughout nature,
humanity, and divinity.
"Everything in temporal Nature," says Law,
"is descended out of that which is eternal, and stands as a palpable,
visible Outbirth of it: ... Fire and Light and Air in this World are not only a
true Resemblance of the Holy Trinity in Unity, but are the Trinity itself in
its most outward, lowest kind of Existence or Manifestation.... Fire compacted,
created, separated from Light and Air, is the Elemental Fire of this World:
Fire uncreated, uncompacted, unseparated from Light and Air, is the heavenly
Fire of Eternity: Fire kindled in any material Thing is only Fire breaking out
of its created, compacted state; it is nothing else but the awakening the
Spiritual Properties of that Thing, which being thus stirred up, strive to get
rid of that material Creation under which they are imprisoned ... and were not
these spiritual Properties imprisoned in Matter, no material Thing could be
made to burn.... Fire is not, cannot be a material Thing, it only makes itself
visible and sensible by the Destruction of Matter."[45] "If you ask
what Fire is in its first true and unbeginning State, not yet entered into any
Creature, It is the Power and Strength, the Glory and Majesty of eternal
Nature.... If you ask what Fire is in its own spiritual Nature, it is merely
a Desire, and has no other Nature than that of a working
Desire, which is continually its own Kindler." [46]
All life is a kindled fire in a variety of states, and
every dead, insensitive thing is only dead because its fire is quenched or
compressed, as in the case of a flint, which is in a state of death
"because its fire is bound, compacted, shut up and imprisoned," but a
steel struck against it, shows that every particle of the flint consists of
this compacted fire.
But even as, throughout all nature, a state of death
is an imprisoned fire, so throughout all nature is there only one way of
kindling life. You might as well write the word "flame" on the
outside of a flint and expect it to emit sparks as to imagine that any
speculations of your reason will kindle divine life in your soul.
No; Would you have Fire from a Flint; its House of
Death must be shaken, and its Chains of Darkness broken off by the Strokes of a
Steel upon it. This must of all Necessity be done to your Soul, its imprisoned
Fire must be awakened by the sharp Strokes of Steel, or no true Light of Life
can arise in it.[2]
All life, whether physical or spiritual, means a death
to some previous condition, and must be generated in pain. 6 1: An
Appeal, Works, vol. vi. pp. 166. 2 Ibid., p, 82.
If this mystical view of Fire be clear, it will be
easy enough to follow what Law says about Light and Darkness, or Air, Water,
and Earth, interpreting them all in the same way as "eternal Things become
gross, finite, measurable, divisible, and transitory."[47]
The Spirit of Prayer is of all Law's works the one most steeped in
mystic ardour, and it possesses a charm, a melody of rhythm, and an imaginative
quality rarely to be found in his earlier work. It should be read by those who
would see Law under a little known aspect, and who do not realise that we have
an English mystic who expresses, with a strength and beauty which Plotinus
himself has rarely surpassed, the longing of the soul for union with the
Divine.
Burke, Coleridge, and Carlyle are three very different
writers who are alike in the mystical foundations of their belief, and who,
through their writings, for over a hundred years in England carry on the
mystical attitude and diffuse much mystical thought.
Burke, the greatest and most philosophic of English
statesmen, was so largely because of his mystic spirit and imagination. Much of
the greatness of his political pamphlets and speeches and of their enduring
value is owing to the fact that his arguments are based on a sense of oneness
and continuity, of oneness in the social organism and of continuity in the
spirit which animates it. He believes in a life in the Universe, in a divine
order, mysterious and inscrutable in origins and in ends, of which man and
society are a part.
This society is linked together in mutual service from
the lowest to the highest. "Society is indeed a contract," he says in
a memorable passage,
It is a partnership in all science; a partnership in
all art; a partnership in every virtue, and in all perfection. As the ends of
such a partnership cannot be obtained in many generations, it becomes a
partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are
living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born. Each contract of each
particular state is but a clause in the great primæval contract of eternal society,
linking the lower with the higher natures, connecting the visible and invisible
world, according to a fixed compact sanctioned by the inviolable oath which
holds all physical and all moral natures, each in their appointed place.
These are strange words for an English statesman to
address to the English public in the year 1790; the thought they embody seems
more in keeping with its surroundings when we hear it thundered out anew forty
years later by the raw Scotch preacher-philosopher in the chapter he calls
"Organic Filaments" in his odd but strangely stirring mystical
rhapsody, Sartor Resartus.
It is on this belief of oneness, this
interrelationship and interdependence that all Burke's deepest practical wisdom
is based. It is on this he makes his appeal for high principle and noble
example to the great families with hereditary trusts and fortunes, who, he
says, he looks on as the great oaks that shade a country and perpetuate their
benefits from generation to generation.
This imaginative belief in the reality of a central
spiritual life is always accompanied, whether definitely expressed or not, with
a belief in the value of particulars, of the individual, as opposed to general
statements and abstract philosophy. The mystic, who believes in an inward moulding
spirit, necessarily believes that all reforms must come from within, and that,
as Burke points out in the Present Discontents, good government
depends not upon laws but upon individuals. Blake, in a characteristic phrase,
says: "He who would do good to another must do it in minute particulars;
general good is the plea of the hypocrite, flatterer, and scoundrel." This
sums up the essence of the social philosophy of these three thinkers, as seen
by Burke's insistence on the value of concrete details in Coleridge's use of
them in his Lay Sermon, and in Carlyle's belief in the importance of the single
individual life in history.
It is easy to see that Coleridge's attitude of mind
and the main lines of his philosophy were mystical. From early years, as we
know from Lamb, he was steeped in the writings of the Neo-platonists and these,
together with Boehme, in whom he was much interested, and Schelling,
strengthened a type of belief already natural to him.
In spite of his devotion to the doctrines of Hartley,
it is clear from his poetry and letters, that Coleridge very early had doubts
concerning the adequacy of the intellect as an instrument for arriving at
truth, and that at the same time the conviction was slowly gaining ground with
him that an act of the will is necessary in order to bring man into contact
with reality. Coleridge believed in a Spirit of the universe with which man
could come into contact, both directly by desire, and also mediately through
the forms and images of nature, and in the Religious Musings (1794)
we get very early a statement of this mystical belief.
There is one Mind, one omnipresent Mind
Omnific. His most holy name is Love.
From Him—
... we roam unconscious, or with hearts
Unfeeling of our universal Sire,
and the greatest thing we can achieve, "our
noon-tide majesty," is—
to
know ourselves
Parts and proportions of one wonderous whole!
The way to attain this knowledge is not by a process
of reasoning, but by a definite act of will, when the "drowséd soul"
begins to feel dim recollections of its nobler nature, and so gradually becomes
attracted and absorbed to perfect love—
and
centered there
God only to behold, and know, and feel,
Till by exclusive consciousness of God
All self-annihilated it shall make
God its Identity: God all in all!
This sense of "oneness," with the desire to
reach out to it, was very strong with Coleridge in these earlier years, and he
writes to Thelwall in 1797, "The universe itself, what but an immense heap
of little things?... My mind feels as if it ached to behold and know
something great, something one and indivisible."
He is ever conscious of the symbolic quality of all things by which we are
visibly surrounded,
all that meets the bodily sense I deem
Symbolical, one mighty alphabet
For infant minds.[48]
To pierce through the outer covering, and realise the
truth which they embody, it is necessary to feel as well as to see, and it is
the loss of this power of feeling which Coleridge deplores in those bitterly
sad lines in the Dejection Ode when he gazes "with how blank
an eye" at the starry heavens, and cries,
I see, not feel, how beautiful they are!
It is in this Ode that we find the most complete
description in English verse of that particular state of depression and
stagnation which often follows on great exaltation, and to which the religious
mystics have given the name of the "dark night of the soul." This is
an experience, not common to all mystics, but very marked in some, who, like St
John of the Cross and Madame Guyon, are intensely devotional and ecstatic. It
seems to be a well-defined condition of listlessness, apathy, and dryness,
as they call it, not a state of active pain, but of terrible inertia,
weariness, and incapacity for feeling; "a wan and heartless mood,"
says Coleridge,
A grief without a pang, void, dark, and drear,
A stifled, drowsy, unimpassioned grief,
Which finds no natural outlet, no relief,
In word, or sigh, or tear.
Coleridge's distrust of the intellect as sole guide,
and his belief in some kind of intuitional act being necessary to the apprehension
of reality, which he felt as early as 1794, was strengthened by his study of
the German transcendental philosophers, and in March 1801 he writes, "My
opinion is that deep thinking is attainable only by a man of deep feeling; and
that all truth is a species of Revelation."
Coleridge, following Kant, gave the somewhat
misleading name of "reason" (as opposed to "understanding")
to the intuitive power by which man apprehends God directly, and, in his view,
imagination is the faculty, which in the light of this intuitive reason
interprets and unifies the symbols of the natural world. Hence its value, for
it alone gives man the key
Of that eternal language, which thy God
Utters, who from eternity doth teach
Himself in all, and all things in himself.[49]
Carlyle's mysticism is the essence of his being, it
flames through his amazing medley of writings, it guides his studies and his
choice of subjects, it unifies and explains his visions, his thought, and his
doctrines. His is a mystical attitude and belief of a perfectly simple and
broad kind, including no abstruse subtleties of metaphysical speculation, as
with Coleridge, but based on one or two deeply rooted convictions. This
position seems to have been reached by him partly through intellectual conflict
which found relief and satisfaction in the view of life taken by Goethe,
Fichte, and other German "transcendental" thinkers; but partly also
through a definite psychical experience which befell him in Edinburgh when he
was twenty-six, and which from that day changed for him the whole of his
outlook on life. He speaks of it himself as "a Spiritual New-birth, or
Baphometic Fire-baptism." It came to him after a period of great
wretchedness, of torture with doubt and despair, and—what is significant—"during
three weeks of total sleeplessness." These are conditions which would be
likely to reduce his body to the state of weakness and sensitiveness which
seems often antecedent to psychic experience. He has given an account of the
incident in Sartor (Book ii. chap, vii.), when, he says,
"there rushed like a stream of fire over my whole soul; and I shook base
Fear away from me for ever. I was strong, of unknown strength; a spirit, almost
a god." The revelation seems to have been of the nature of a certainty and
assertion of his own inherent divinity, his "native God-created
majesty," freedom and potential greatness. This brought with it a
characteristic defiance of untoward outer circumstances which gave him strength
and resolution. "Perhaps," he says, "I directly thereupon began
to be a man."
Carlyle believes that the world and everything in it
is the expression of one great indivisible Force; that nothing is separate,
nothing is dead or lost, but that all "is borne forward on the bottomless
shoreless flood of Action, and lives through perpetual metamorphoses."
Everything in the world is an embodiment of this great Force, this "Divine
Idea," hence everything is important and charged with meaning.
"Rightly viewed no meanest object is insignificant; all objects are as
windows, through which the philosophic eye looks into Infinitude
itself."[50]
The universe is thus the "living visible garment
of God," and "matter exists only spiritually," "to
represent some Idea, and body it forth." We, each of us,
are therefore one expression of this central spirit, the only abiding Reality;
and so, in turn, everything we know and see is but an envelope or clothing
encasing something more vital which is invisible within. Just as books are the
most miraculous things men can make, because a book "is the purest embodiment
a Thought of man can have," so great men are the highest embodiment of
Divine Thought visible to us here. Great men are, as it were, separate phrases,
"inspired texts" of the great book of revelation, perpetually
interpreting and unfolding in various ways the Godlike to man (Hero as Man
of Letters, and Sartor, Book ii. chap. viii.).
From this ground-belief spring all Carlyle's views and
aims. Hence his gospel of hero-worship, for the "hero" is the
greatest embodied "Idea" a man can know, he is a "living light
fountain," he is "a man sent hither to make the divine mystery more
impressively known to us." Hence it is clear that the first condition of
the great man is that he should be sincere, that he should believe.
"The merit of originality is not novelty: it is sincerity. The believing
man is the original man." It is equally necessary that his admirers should
be sincere, they too must believe, and not only, as Coleridge puts it,
"believe that they believe." No more immoral act can be done by a
human creature, says Carlyle, than to pretend to believe and worship when he
does not.
Hence also springs Carlyle's doctrine of work. If man
is but the material embodiment of a spiritual Idea or Force, then his clear
duty is to express that Force within him to the utmost of his power. It is what
he is here for, and only so can he bring help and light to his fellow-men.[51]
And Carlyle, with Browning, believes that it is not the actual deeds
accomplished that matter, no man may judge of these, for "man is the
spirit he worked in; not what he did, but what he became."
Chapter V
Devotional and Religious
Mystics
All mystics are devotional and all are religious in
the truest sense of the terms. Yet it seems legitimate to group under this
special heading those writers whose views are expressed largely in the language
of the Christian religion, as is the case with our earliest mystics, with
Crashaw and Francis Thompson and it applies in some measure to Blake. But
beyond this, it seems, in more general terms, to apply specially to those who
are so conscious of God that they seem to live in His presence, and who are
chiefly concerned with approaching Him, not by way of Love, Beauty, Wisdom, or
Nature, but directly, through purgation and adoration.
This description, it is obvious, though it fits fairly
well the other writers here included, by no means suffices for Blake. For he
possessed in addition a philosophy, a system, and a profound scheme of the
universe revealed to him in vision. But within what category could Blake be
imprisoned? He outsoars them all and includes them all. We can only say that
the dominant impression he leaves with us that is of his vivid, intimate
consciousness of the Divine presence and his attitude of devotion.
We have seen that the earliest mystical thought came
into this country by way of the writings of "Dionysius" and of the
Victorines (Hugh and Richard of St Victor), and it is this type of thought and
belief cast into the mould of the Catholic Church that we find mainly in the
little group of early English mystics, whose writings date from the middle of
the thirteenth to the beginning of the fifteenth century.[52]
These early Catholic mystics are interesting from a
psychological point of view, and they are often subtle exponents of the deepest
mystical truths and teachings, and in some cases this is combined with great
literary power and beauty.
One of the earliest examples of this thought in
English literature is the tender and charming lyric by Thomas de Hales, written
probably before 1240. Here is perhaps the first expression in our poetry of
passionate yearning of the soul towards Christ as her true lover, and of the
joy of mystic union with Him. A maid of Christ, says the poet, has begged him
to "wurche a luve ron" (make a love-song), which he does; and points
out to her that this world's love is false and fickle, and that worldly lovers
shall pass away like a wind's blast.
Hwer is Paris and Heleyne
That weren so bright and feyre on bleo:
Amadas, Tristram and Dideyne
Yseudé and allé theo:
Ector with his scharpé meyne
And Cesar riche of wor[l]des feo?
Heo beoth iglyden ut of the reyne,
So the schef is of the cleo.
As the corn from the hill-side, Paris and Helen and
all bright lovers have passed away, and it is as if they had never lived.
But, maid, if you want a lover, he continues, I can
direct you to one, the fairest, truest, and richest in the whole world. Henry,
King of England, is his vassal, and to thee, maid, this lover sends a message
and desires to know thee.
Mayde to the he send his sonde
And wilneth for to beo the cuth.
And so the poem goes on to express in simple terms of
earthly love, the passionate delight and joy and peace of the soul in attaining
to union with her God, in whose dwelling is perfect bliss and safety.
This poem is a delicate example of what is called
"erotic mysticism," that is the love and attraction of the soul for
God, and of God for the soul, expressed in the terms of the love between man
and woman. It is a type of expression characteristic of the great mystics of
the Catholic Church, especially in the Middle Ages,[53] and we find a good deal
of it in our earliest mystical writers. One of the most charming examples of it
other than this lyric, is the chapter "Of Love" in the Ancren
Riwle, or Rule for Anchoresses, written probably early in the thirteenth
century. An account is there given, quite unsurpassed for delicate beauty, of
the wooing of the soul by God.[54] On the whole, however, this type of
mysticism is rare in England, and we scarcely meet it again after these early
writers until we come to the poems of Crashaw. The finest expression of it is
the Song of Solomon, and it is easy to see that such a form of symbolism is
specially liable to degradation, and is open to grave dangers, which it has not
always escaped. Yet, in no other terms known to man is it possible so fully to
express the sense of insatiable craving and desire as well as the rapture of
intimate communion felt by the mystic towards his God, as in the language of
that great passion which, in its purest form, is the best thing known to man
and his highest glory. "I saw Him, and sought Him, I had Him and I wanted
Him." Could any words more completely express the infinity of love's
desire, ever unsatisfied even in possession, than does this love-cry from the
heart of Julian the anchoress of Norwich?
The intensity and freshness of religious feeling of a
mystical type in England in the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries
are often not realised, partly owing to the fact that much of the religious
writing of this time is still in manuscript. The country was full of devotees
who had taken religious vows, which they fulfilled either in the many
monasteries and convents, or often in single cells, as "hermit" or
"anchoress." Here they lived a life devoted to contemplation and
prayer, and to the spiritual assistance of those who sought them out.
The hermits, of whom there were a large number, were
apparently free to move from one neighbourhood to another, but the woman
recluse, or "anchoress," seldom or never left the walls of her cell,
a little house of two or three rooms built generally against the church wall,
so that one of her windows could open into the church, and another, veiled by a
curtain, looked on to the outer world, where she held converse with and gave
counsel to those who came to see her. Sometimes a little group of recluses
lived together, like those three sisters of Dorsetshire for whom the Ancren
Riwle was written, a treatise which gives us so many homely details of
this type of life.
Richard Rolle (c. 1300-1349), of Hampole,
near Doncaster, and the Lady Julian, a Benedictine nun of Norwich (1342-c.1413),
are the two most interesting examples of the mediæval recluse in England. Both
seem to have had a singular charm of character and a purity of mystical
devotion which has impressed itself on their writings. Richard Rolle, who entered
upon a hermit's life at nineteen on leaving Oxford, had great influence both
through his life and work on the whole group of fourteenth-century religious
writers, and so on the thought of mediæval England. His contemporaries thought
him mad, they jeered at him and abused him, but he went quietly on his way,
preaching and writing. Love forced him to write; love, he said, gave him wisdom
and subtlety, and he preached a religion of love. Indeed the whole of his work
is a symphony of feeling, a song of Love, and forms a curious reaction against
the exaltation of reason and logic in scholasticism. He wrote a large number of
treatises and poems, both in Latin and English, lyrical songs and alliterative
homilies, burning spiritual rhapsodies and sound practical sermons, all of
which were widely known and read. Certain points about Rolle are of special
interest and distinguish him from other mystics and seers. One is that for him
the culminating mystical experience took the form of melody, rhythm, harmony.
He is the most musical of mystics, and where others "see" or
"feel" Reality, he "hears" it. Hence his description of his
soul's adventures is peculiarly beautiful, he thinks in images and symbols of
music, and in his writings we find some of the most exquisite passages in the
whole literature of mysticism, veritable songs of spiritual joy. In the Fire
of Love, perhaps the finest of his more mystical works, he traces in detail
his journey along the upward path. This is very individual, and it differs in
some important respects from other similar records. He passed through the stage
of "purgation," of struggle between the flesh and spirit, of
penitence and aspiration, through "illumination," until he reached,
after nearly three years, the third stage of contemplation of God through
love.[55]
In this condition, after about a year, "the door
of heaven yet biding open," he experienced the three phases to which he
gives the names of "calor, canor, dulcor," heat, song, and sweetness.
"Heat soothly I call when the mind truly is kindled in Love Everlasting,
and the heart on the same manner to burn not hopingly, but verily is
felt."[56]
This "burning" seems to have been for him a
real physical sensation, a bodily condition induced by the adventure of the
spirit. This is not unusual in mystical states, and possibly the cryptic notes
made by Pascal record a similar experience.[57] He continued in this warmth for
nine months, when suddenly he felt and heard the "canor," the
"spiritual music," the "invisible melody" of heaven. Here
is his description of his change from "burning love" to the state of
"songful love."
Whilst ... I sat in chapel, in the night, before
supper, as I my psalms sung, as it were the sound of readers or rather singers
about me I beheld. Whilst also, praying to heaven, with all desire I took heed,
suddenly, in what manner I wot not, in me the sound of song I felt; and
likeliest heavenly melody I took, with me dwelling in mind. Forsooth my thought
continually to mirth of song was changed: and as it were the same that loving I
had thought, and in prayers and psalms had said, the same in sound I showed,
and so forth with [began] to sing that [which] before I had said, and from
plenitude of inward sweetness I burst forth, privily indeed, alone before my
Maker.[58]
The sweetness of this inward spiritual song is beyond
any sound that may be heard with bodily ears, even lovers can only catch
snatches of it. "Worldly lovers soothly words or ditties of our song may
know, for the words they read: but the tone and sweetness of that song they may
not learn."[59] The final stage of "sweetness" seems really to
include the other two, it is their completion and fruition. The first two, says
Rolle, are gained by devotion, and out of them springs the third.[60] Rolle's
description of it, of the all-pervading holy joy, rhythm, and melody, when the
soul, "now become as it were a living pipe," is caught up into the
music of the spheres, "and in the sight of God ... joying
sounds,"[61] deserves to be placed beside what is perhaps the most
magnificent passage in all mystical literature, where Plotinus tells us of the
choral dance of the soul about her God.[62]
Enough has been said to show that Rolle is a
remarkable individual, and one of the most poetic of the English religious
mystical writers, and it is regrettable that some of his other works are not
more easily accessible. Unfortunately, the poem with which his name is
generally associated, The Pricke of Conscience, is entirely unlike
all his other work, both in form and matter. It is a long, prosaic and entirely
unmystical homily in riming couplets, of a very ordinary mediæval type,
stirring men's minds to the horrors of sin by dwelling on the pains of
purgatory and hell. It would seem almost certain, on internal evidence, that
the same hand cannot have written it and the Fire of Love, and
recent investigation appears to make it clear that Rolle's part in it, if any,
was merely of the nature of compilation or translation of some other work,
possibly by Grosseteste.[63]
Of the life of the Lady Julian we know very little,
except that she was almost certainly a Benedictine nun, and that she lived for
many years in an anchoress's cell close to the old church of St Julian at
Conisford, near Norwich. But her character and charm are fully revealed in the
little book she has left of Revelations of Divine Love, which
contains a careful account of a definite psychological experience through which
she passed on the 8th day of May 1373, when she was thirty years of age. She
adds to this record of fact certain commentaries and explanations which, she
says, have been taught her gradually in the course of the subsequent twenty
years. This experience, which lasted altogether between five and six hours, was
preceded by a seven days' sickness most vividly described, ending in a
semi-rigidity of the body as if it were already half dead, and it took the form
of sixteen "Shewings" or "Visions." These, she says,
reached her in three ways, "by bodily sight, by word formed in mine
understanding" (verbal messages which took form in her mind), "and by
spiritual sight." But of this last, she adds, "I may never fully tell
it."[64] It is impossible here to do justice to this little book, for it
is one of the most important documents in the history of mysticism. There is no
mention in it of any preliminary "purgative" stage, nor of any
ultimate experience of ecstasy; it is simply—if one may so put it—a narrative
of certain intimate talks with God, once granted, when, during a few hours of
the writer's life, He explained various difficulties and made clear to her
certain truths. The impression left of the nearness of God to the soul was so
vivid and sustaining, that it is not possible to read the record of it, even
now, across six hundred years, without feeling strangely stirred by the
writer's certainty and joy.
Her vision is of Love: Love is its meaning, and it was
shown her for Love; she sees that God is Love and that God and man are one.
"God is nearer to us than our own soul, for man is God, and God is in
all." If we could only know ourselves, our trouble would be cleared away,
but it is easier to come to the knowing of God than to know our own soul.[65]
"Our passing life here that we have in our sense-soul knoweth not what our
Self is," and the cause of our disease is that we rest in little things
which can never satisfy us, for "our Soul may never have rest in things
that are beneath itself." She actually saw God enfolding all things.
"For as the body is clad in the cloth, and the flesh in the skin, and the
bones in the flesh, and the heart in the whole, so are we, soul and body, clad
in the Goodness of God, and enclosed." She further had sight of all things
that are made, and her description of this "Shewing" is so beautiful
and characteristic that it must be given in her own words.
"In this same time our Lord shewed me a spiritual
sight of His homely loving.... He shewed me a little thing, the quantity of an
hazel-nut, in the palm of my hand; and it was as round as a ball. I looked
thereupon with the eye of my understanding, and thought: What may this
be? And it was answered generally thus: It is all that is made.
I marvelled how it might last, for methought it might suddenly have fallen to
naught for little[ness]. And I was answered in my understanding: It
lasteth, and ever shall [last] for that God loveth it. And so All-thing
hath the Being by the love of God." Later, she adds, "Well I wot that
heaven and earth, and all that is made is great and large, fair and good; but
the cause why it shewed so little to my sight was for that I saw it in the
presence of Him that is the Maker of all things: for to a soul that seeth the
Maker of all, all that is made seemeth full little." "In this Little
Thing," she continues, "I saw three properties. The first is that God
made it, the second is that God loveth it, the third, that God keepeth it. But
what is to me verily the Maker, the Keeper, and the Lover—I cannot tell; for
till I am Substantially oned to Him, I may never have full rest nor very bliss:
that is to say, till I be so fastened to Him, that there is right nought that
is made betwixt my God and me" (Revelations, pp. 10, 18).
Julian's vision with regard to sin is of special
interest. The problem of evil has never been stated in terser or more dramatic
form.
After this I saw God in a Point, that is to say, in
mine understanding which sight I saw that He is in all things. I beheld and
considered, seeing and knowing in sight, with a soft dread, and thought: What
is sin? (Ibid, p. 26).
Here is the age-old difficulty. God, so the mystic
sees, is "in the Mid-point of all thing," and yet, as Julian says, it
is "dertain He doeth no sin." The solution given to her is that
"sin is no deed," it "hath no part of being," and it can
only be known by the pain it is cause of. Sin is a negation, a failure, an
emptiness of love, but pain is something it is a purification.
Sin brings with it pain, "to me was shewed no harder hell than sin";
but we must go through the pain in order to learn, without it we could never
have the bliss. As a wave draws back from the shore, in order to return again
with fuller force; so sin, the lack of love, is permitted for a time, in order
that an opening be made for an inrush of the Divine Love, fuller and more
complete than would otherwise be possible. It is in some such way as this,
dimly shadowed, that it was shown to Julian that sin and pain are necessary
parts of the scheme of God. Hence God does not blame us for sin, for it brings
its own blame or punishment with it, nay more, "sin shall be no shame to
man, but worship," a bold saying, which none but a mystic would dare
utter. When God seeth our sin, she says, and our despair in pain, "His
love excuseth us, and of His great courtesy He doeth away all our blame, and
beholdeth us with ruth and pity as children innocent and unloathful."
It would be pleasant to say more of Julian, but
perhaps her own words have sufficed to show that here we are dealing with one
of the great mystics of the world. Childlike and yet rashly bold, deeply
spiritual, yet intensely human, "a simple creature, unlettered," yet
presenting solutions of problems which have racked humanity, she inherits the
true paradoxical nature of the mystic, to which is added a beauty and delicacy
of thought and expression all her own.
There were many other mystical works written about
this time in England. Of these the best known and the finest is The
Scale, or Ladder, of Perfection, by Walter Hylton, the Augustinian, and
head of a house of canons at Thurgarton, near Newark, who died in 1396. This is
a practical and scientific treatise of great beauty on the spiritual life.[66]
An interesting group of writings are the five little treatises, almost
certainly by one author (c. 1350-1400), to be found in Harleian
674, and other MSS. Their names are The Cloud of Unknowing, The Epistle
of Prayer, The Epistle of Discretion, The Treatise of Discerning Spirits,
and The Epistle of Privy Counsel. We find here for the first time
in English the influence and spirit of Dionysius, and it is probably to the
same unknown writer we owe the first (very free) translation of the Mystical
Theology of Dionysius, Deonise Hid Divinite, which is
bound up with these other manuscripts.
These little tracts are written by a practical mystic,
one who was able to describe with peculiar accuracy and vividness the physical
and psychological sensations accompanying mystical initiation. The
Cloud of Unknowing is an application in simple English of the
Dionysian teaching of concentration joined to the practice of contemplation
taught by Richard of St Victor, and it describes very clearly the preliminary
struggles and bewilderment of the soul. The Epistle of Privy Counsel (still
in MS.) is the most advanced in mystical teaching: the writer in it tries to
explain very intimately the nature of "onehede with God," and to give
instruction in simple and yet deeply subtle terms as to the means for attaining
this.
There is a mystical strain in other writings of this
time, the most notable from the point of view of literature being in the
fourteenth-century alliterative poem of Piers the Plowman.[67] This
is mystical throughout in tone, more especially in the idea of the journey of
the soul in search of Truth, only to find, after many dangers and disciplines
and adventures, that—
If grace graunte the to go in this wise,
Thow shalt see in thi-selve Treuthe sitte in thine
herte
In a cheyne of charyte as thow a childe were.[68]
Moreover, the vision of Dowel, Dobet, and Dobest,
bears a definite analogy to the three stages of the mystic's path, as will be
seen if the description of the qualities of these three are examined, as they
are given in B., Passus viii. 11. 78-102.
Crashaw, George Herbert, and Christopher Harvey all
alike sound the personal note in their religious poems. All three writers
describe the love of the soul for God in the terms of passionate human love:
Crashaw with an ardour which has never been surpassed, Herbert with a homely
intimacy quite peculiar to him, and Christopher Harvey with a point and
epigrammatic setting which serve only to enhance the deep feeling of the
thought.
In many a lyric of flaming passion Crashaw expresses
his love-longing for his God, and he describes in terms only matched by his
spiritual descendant, Francis Thompson, the desire of God to win the human
soul.
Let not my Lord, the mighty lover
Of soules, disdain that I discover
The hidden art
Of his high stratagem to win your heart,
It was his heavnly art
Kindly to crosse you
In your mistaken love,
That, at the next remove
Thence he might tosse you
And strike your troubled heart
Home to
himself.[69]
The main feature of Herbert's poetry is the religious
love lyric, the cry of the individual soul to God. This is the mystical quality
in his verse, which is quieter and far less musical than Crashaw's, but which
possesses at times a tender fragrance and freshness, as in the little
poem Love.
Christopher Harvey, the friend of Izaak Walton and the
admirer of Herbert, has in his poems some lines which breathe almost as
rapturous a passion of spiritual love as anything in Crashaw. Such is his
epigram on the Insatiableness of the Heart.
The whole round world is not enough to fill
The heart's three corners; but it craveth still.
Onely the Trinity, that made it, can
Suffice the vast-triangled heart of man.[70]
Or again, in a later epigram in the same poem (The
School of the Heart), he puts the main teaching of Plotinus and of all
mystics into four pregnant lines—
My busie stirring heart, that seekes the best,
Can find no place on earth wherein to rest;
For God alone, the Author of its blisse,
Its only rest, its onely center is.
But it is Crashaw who, of these three, shares in
fullest measure the passion of the great Catholic mystics, and more especially
of St Teresa, whom he seems almost to have worshipped. His hymn to her
"name and honor" is one of the great English poems; it burns with
spiritual flame, it soars with noble desire. Near the beginning of it, Crashaw
has, in six simple lines, pictured the essential mystic attitude of action, not
necessarily or consciously accompanied by either a philosophy or a theology. He
is speaking of Teresa's childish attempt to run away and become a martyr among
the Moors.
She never undertook to know
What death with love should have to doe;
Nor has she e're yet understood
Why to shew love, she should shed blood
Yet though she cannot tell you why,
She can LOVE, and she can DY.
Spiritual love has never been more rapturously sung
than in this marvellous hymn. Little wonder that it haunted Coleridge's memory,
and that its deep emotion and rich melody stimulated his poet's ear and
imagination to write Christabel.[71] Crashaw's influence also on
Patmore, more especially on the Sponsa Dei, as well as later on Francis
Thompson, is unmistakable.
William Blake is one of the great mystics of the
world; and he is by far the greatest and most profound who has spoken in
English. Like Henry More and Wordsworth, he lived in a world of glory, of
spirit and of vision, which, for him, was the only real world. At the age of
four he saw God looking in at the window, and from that time until he welcomed
the approach of death by singing songs of joy which made the rafters ring, he
lived in an atmosphere of divine illumination. The material facts of his career
were simple and uneventful. He was an engraver by profession, poet and painter
by choice, mystic and seer by nature. From the outer point of view his life was
a failure. He was always crippled by poverty, almost wholly unappreciated in
the world of art and letters of his day, consistently misunderstood even by his
best friends, and pronounced mad by those who most admired his work. Yet, like
all true mystics, he was radiantly happy and serene; rich in the midst of
poverty. For he lived and worked in a world, and amongst a company, little
known of ordinary men:—
With a blue sky spread over with wings,
And a mild Sun that mounts & sings;
With trees & fields full of Fairy elves,
And little devils who fight for themselves—
With Angels planted in Hawthorn bowers,
And God Himself in the passing hours.[72]
It is not surprising that he said, in speaking of
Lawrence and other popular artists who sometimes patronisingly visited him,
"They pity me, but 'tis they are the just objects of pity, I possess my
visions and peace. They have bartered their birthright for a mess of
pottage." The strength of his illumination at times intoxicated him with
joy, as he writes to Hayley (October 23, 1804) after a recurrence of vision
which had lapsed for some years, "Dear Sir, excuse my enthusiasm or rather
madness, for I am really drunk with intellectual vision whenever I take a
pencil or graver into my hand." This is the "divine madness" of
which Plato speaks, the "inebriation of Reality," the ecstasy which
makes the poet "drunk with life."[73]
In common with other mystics, with Boehme, St Teresa,
and Madame Guyon, Blake claimed that much of his work was written under direct
inspiration, that it was an automatic composition, which, whatever its source,
did not come from the writer's normal consciousness. In speaking of the
prophetic book Milton, he says—
I have written this poem from immediate dictation,
twelve or sometimes twenty or thirty lines at a time, without pre-meditation
and even against my will. The time it has taken in writing was thus rendered
non-existent, and an immense poem exists which seems to be the labour of a long
life, all produced without labour or study.
Whatever may be their source, all Blake's writings are
deeply mystical in thought, and symbolic in expression, and this is true of the
(apparently) simple little Songs of Innocence, no less than of the
great, and only partially intelligible, prophetic books. To deal at all
adequately with these works, with the thought and teaching they contain, and
the method of clothing it, would necessitate a volume, if not a small library,
devoted to that purpose. It is possible, however, to indicate certain
fundamental beliefs and assertions which lie at the base of Blake's thought and
of his very unusual attitude towards life, and which, once grasped, make clear
a large part of his work. It must be remembered that these assertions were for
him not matters of belief, but of passionate knowledge—he was as sure of them
as of his own existence.
Blake founds his great myth on his perception of unity
at the heart of things expressing itself in endless diversity. "God is in
the lowest effects as [in] the highest causes. He is become a worm that he may
nourish the weak.... Everything on earth is the word of God, and in its essence
is God."[74]
In the Everlasting Gospel, Blake
emphasises, with more than his usual amount of paradox, the inherent divinity
of man. God, speaking to Christ as the highest type of humanity, says—
If thou humblest thyself, thou humblest me.
Thou also dwellst in Eternity.
Thou art a man: God is no more:
Thy own humanity learn to adore,
For that is my Spirit of Life.[75]
Similarly the union of man with God is the whole gist
of that apparently most chaotic of the prophetic books, Jerusalem.
The proof of the divinity of man, it would seem, lies
in the fact that he desires God, for he cannot desire what he has not seen.
This view is summed up in the eight sentences which form the little book (about
2 inches long by 1½ inches broad) in the British Museum, Of Natural
Religion. Here are four of them.
Man's perceptions are not bounded by organs of
perception, he perceives more than sense (tho' ever so acute) can discover.
None could have other than natural or organic thoughts
if he had none but organic perceptions.
Man's desires are limited by his perceptions, none can
desire what he has not perceiv'd.
The desires and perceptions of man untaught by
anything but organs of sense, must be limited to objects of sense.
The solution of the difficulty is given in large
script on the last of the tiny pages of the volume:
Therefore God becomes as we are, that we may be as he
is.
According to Blake, the universe as we know it, is the
result of the fall of the one life from unity into division. This fall has come
about through man seeking separation, and taking the part for the whole. (See
Jacob Boehme's view, pp. 94, 95 above, which is identical with that of Blake.)
"Nature," therefore, or the present form of mental existence, is the
result of a contraction of consciousness or "selfhood," a tendency
for everything to shrink and contract about its own centre. This condition or
"state" Blake personifies as "Urizen" (=Reason) a great
dramatic figure who stalks through the prophetic books, proclaiming himself
"God from Eternity to Eternity," taking up now one characteristic and
now another, but ever of the nature of materialism, opaqueness, contraction. In
the case of man, the result of this contraction is to close him up into
separate "selfhoods," so that the inlets of communication with the
universal spirit have become gradually stopped up; until now, for most men,
only the five senses (one of the least of the many possible channels of
communication) are available for the uses of the natural world. Blake usually
refers to this occurrence as the "flood ": that is, the rush of
general belief in the five senses that overwhelmed or submerged the knowledge
of all other channels of wisdom, except such arts as were saved, which are
symbolised under the names of Noah (=Imagination) and his sons. He gives a fine
account of this in Europe (p. 8), beginning—
Plac'd in the order of the stars, when the five senses
whelm'd
In deluge o'er the earth-born man, then turn'd the
fluxile eyes
Into two stationary orbs, concentrating all things.
The ever-varying spiral ascents to the heavens of
heavens
Were bended downward, and the nostrils' golden gates
shut,
Turn'd outward, barr'd, and petrify'd against the
infinite.
The only way out of this self-made prison is through
the Human Imagination, which is thus the Saviour of the world. By
"Imagination" Blake would seem to mean all that we include under
sympathy, insight, idealism, and vision, as opposed to self-centredness,
logical argument, materialism and concrete, scientific fact. For him,
Imagination is the one great reality, in it alone he sees a human faculty that
touches both nature and spirit, thus uniting them in one. The language of
Imagination is Art, for it speaks through symbols so that men shut up in their
selfhoods are thus ever reminded that nature herself is a symbol. When this is
once fully realised, we are freed from the delusion imposed upon us from
without by the seemingly fixed reality of external things. If we consider all
material things as symbols, their suggestiveness, and consequently their
reality, is continually expanding. "I rest not from my great task,"
he cries—
To open the eternal worlds, to open the immortal eyes
Of man inwards into the worlds of thought, into
eternity,
Ever expanding in the bosom of God, the human
imagination.
In Blake's view the qualities most sorely needed by men
are not restraint and discipline, obedience or a sense of duty, but love and
understanding. "Men are admitted into heaven, not because they have curbed
and governed their passions, or have no passions, but because they have
cultivated their understandings." To understand is three parts of love,
and it is only through Imagination that we can understand. It
is the lack of imagination that is at the root of all the cruelties and all the
selfishness in the world. Until we can feel for all that lives, Blake says in
effect, until we can respond to the joys and sorrows of others as quickly as to
our own, our imagination is dull and incomplete:
Each outcry of the hunted Hare
A fibre from the Brain does tear
A Skylark wounded in the wing
A Cherubim does cease to sing.
Auguries of Innocence.
When we feel like this, we will go forth to help, not
because we are prompted by duty or religion or reason, but because the cry of
the weak and ignorant so wrings our heart that we cannot leave it unanswered.
Cultivate love and understanding then, and all else will follow. Energy,
desire, intellect; dangerous and deadly forces in the selfish and impure,
become in the pure in heart the greatest forces for good. What mattered to
Blake, and the only thing that mattered, was the purity of his soul, the
direction of his will or desire, as Law and Boehme would have put it. Once a
man's desire is in the right direction, the more he gratifies it the better;
Abstinence sows sand all over
The ruddy limbs & flaming hair,
But Desire Gratified
Plants fruits of life & beauty
there.[76]
Only an extraordinarily pure nature or a singularly
abandoned one could confidently proclaim such a dangerous doctrine. But in
Blake's creed, as Swinburne has said, "the one thing unclean is the belief
in uncleanness."
It is easy to see that this faculty which Blake calls
"Imagination" entails of itself naturally and inevitably the
Christian doctrine of self-sacrifice. It is in Milton that
Blake most fully develops his great dogma of the eternity of sacrifice.
"One must die for another through all eternity"; only thus can the
bonds of "selfhood" be broken. Milton, just before his renunciation,
cries—
I will go down to self-annihilation and eternal death
Lest the Last Judgment come and find me unannihilate,
And I be seiz'd and giv'n into the hands of my own
Selfhood.
For, according to Blake, personal love or selfishness
is the one sin which defies redemption. This whole passage in Milton (Book
i., pp. 12, 13) well repays study, for one feels it to be alive with meaning,
holding symbol within symbol. Blake's symbolism, and his fourfold view of
nature and of man, is a fascinating if sometimes a despairing study. Blake has
explained very carefully the way in which the visionary faculty worked in him:—
What to others a trifle appears
Fills me full of smiles or tears;
For double the vision my Eyes do see,
And a double vision is always with me.
With my inward Eye, 'tis an old Man grey,
With my outward, a Thistle across my way.
Now I a fourfold vision see,
And a fourfold vision is given to me;
'Tis fourfold in my supreme delight,
And threefold in soft Beulah's night,
And twofold Always. May God us keep
From Single vision & Newton's sleep![77]
He says twofold always, for everything was of value to
Blake as a symbol, as a medium for expressing a still greater thing behind it.
It was in this way that he looked at the human body, physical beauty, splendour
of colour, insects, animate, states, and emotions, male and female, contraction
and expansion, division and reunion, heaven and hell.
When his imagination was at its strongest, his vision
was fourfold, corresponding to the fourfold division of the Divine Nature,
Father, Son, Spirit, and the fourth Principle, which may be described as the
Imagination of God, without which manifestation would not be possible.[78]
These principles, when condensed and limited so as to be seen by us, may take
the form of Reason, Emotion, Energy and Sensation, or, to give them Boehme's
names, Contraction, Expansion, Rotation, and Vegetative life. These, in turn,
are associated with the four states of humanity or "atmospheres," the
four elements, the four points of the compass, the four senses (taste and touch
counting as one), and so on. Blake seemed, as it were, to hold his vision in his
mind in solution, and to be able to condense it into gaseous, liquid, or solid
elements at whatever point he willed. Thus we feel that the prophetic books
contain meaning within meaning, bearing interpretation from many points of
view; and to arrive at their full value, we should need to be able—as Blake
was—to apprehend all simultaneously,[79] instead of being forced laboriously to
trace them out one by one in succession. It is this very faculty of
"fourfold vision" which gives to these books their ever-changing atmosphere
of suggestion, elusive and magical as the clouds and colours in a sunset sky,
which escape our grasp in the very effort to study them. Hence, for the
majority even of imaginative people, who possess at the utmost "double
vision," they are difficult and often wearisome to read. They are so,
because the inner, living, vibrating ray or thread of connection which evokes
these forms and beings in Blake's imagination, is to the ordinary man invisible
and unfelt; so that the quick leap of the seer's mind from figure to figure,
and from picture to picture, seems irrational and obscure.
To this difficulty on the side of the reader, there
must in fairness be added certain undeniable limitations on the part of the
seer. These are principally owing to lack of training, and possibly to lack of
patience, sometimes also it would seem to defective vision. So that his symbols
are at times no longer true and living, but artificial and confused.
Blake has visions, though clouded and imperfect, of
the clashing of systems, the birth and death of universes, the origin and
meaning of good and evil, the function and secret correspondences of spirits,
of states, of emotions, of passions, and of senses, as well as of all forms in
earth and sky and sea. This, and much more, he attempts to clothe in concrete
forms or symbols, and if he fails at times to be explicit, it is conceivable
that the fault may lie as much with our density as with his obscurity. Indeed,
when we speak of Blake's obscurity, we are uncomfortably reminded of Crabb
Robinson's naive remark when recording Blake's admiration for
Wordsworth's Immortality Ode: "The parts ... which Blake most
enjoyed were the most obscure—at all events, those which I least like and
comprehend."
Blake's view of good and evil is the characteristically
mystical one, in his case much emphasised. The really profound mystical thinker
has no fear of evil, for he cannot exclude it from the one divine origin, else
the world would be no longer a unity but a duality. This difficulty of "good"
and "evil," the crux of all philosophy, has been approached by
mystical thinkers in various ways (such as that evil is illusion, which seems
to be Browning's view), but the boldest of them, and notably Blake and Boehme,
have attacked the problem directly, and carrying mystical thought to its
logical conclusion, have unhesitatingly asserted that God is the origin of Good
and Evil alike, that God and the devil, in short, are but two sides of the same
Force. We have seen how this is worked out by Boehme, and that the central
point of his philosophy is that all manifestation necessitates opposition. In
like manner, Blake's statement, "Without Contraries is no
progression," is, in truth, the keynote to all his vision and mythology.
Attraction and Repulsion, Benson and Energy, Love and
Hate, are necessary to Human existence.
From these contraries spring what the religious call
Good and Evil.
Good is the passive that obeys Reason. Evil is the
active springing from Energy. Good is Heaven. Evil is Hell.
With these startling remarks Blake opens what is the
most intelligible and concise of all the prophetic books, The Marriage
of Heaven and Hell. Swinburne calls it the greatest of Blake's books, and
ranks it as about the greatest work "produced by the eighteenth century in
the line of high poetry and spiritual speculation." We may think
Swinburne's praise excessive, but at any rate it is well worth reading (Essay
on Blake, 1906 edn., pp. 226-252). Certainly, if one work had to be
selected as representative of Blake, as containing his most characteristic
doctrines clothed in striking form, this is the book to be chosen. Place a copy
of The Marriage of Heaven and Hell in the hands of any
would-be Blake student (an original or facsimile copy, needless to say,
containing Blake's exquisite designs, else the book is shorn of half its force
and beauty); let him ponder it closely, and he will either be repelled and
shocked, in which case he had better read no more Blake, or he will be
strangely stirred and thrilled, he will be touched with a spark of the fire
from Blake's spirit which quickens its words as the leaping tongues of flame
illuminate its pages. The kernel of the book, and indeed of all Blake's
message, is contained in the following statements on p. 4, headed "The Voice
of the Devil."
All Bibles or sacred codes have been the causes of the
following Errors:—
1. That man has two real existing principles, viz. a
Body and a Soul.
2. That Energy, called Evil, is alone from the Body;
and that reason, called Good, is alone from the Soul.
3. That God will torment Man in Eternity for following
his Energies.
But the following Contraries to these are True:—
1. Man has no Body distinct from his Soul, for that
called Body is a portion of Soul discerned by the five Senses, the chief inlets
of Soul in this age.
2. Energy is the only life and is from the Body, and
Reason is the bound or outward circumference of Energy.
3. Energy is Eternal Delight.
Blake goes on to write down some of the Proverbs which
he collected while walking among the fires of hell. These "Proverbs of
Hell" fill four pages of the book, and they are among the most wonderful
things Blake has written. Finished in expression, often little jewels of pure
poetry, they are afire with thought and meaning, and inexhaustible in suggestion.
Taken all together they express in epigrammatic form every important doctrine
of Blake's. Some of them, to be fully understood, must be read in the light of
his other work. Thus, "The road of excess leads to the palace of
wisdom," or, "If the fool would persist in his folly he would become
wise," are expressions of the idea constantly recurrent with Blake that
evil must be embodied or experienced before it can be rejected.[80] But the
greater number of them are quite clear and present no difficulty, as for
instance the following:—
A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees.
He whose face gives no light shall never become a
star.
No bird soars too high, if he soars with his own
wings.
What is now proved was once only imagined.
As the air to a bird or the sea to a fish, so is
contempt to the contemptible.
Exuberance is Beauty.
Everything possible to be believed is an image of
truth.
There are two tendencies of Blake's mind, both
mystical—that is, rooted in unity—the understanding of which helps, on the one
hand, to clear much in his writing that seems strange and difficult; and, on
the other, reveals a deep meaning in remarks apparently simple to the point of
silliness. These are his view of the solidarity of mental and spiritual as
compared with physical things, and his habit of concentrating a universal truth
into some one small fact.
For Blake, mental and spiritual things are the only
real things. Thought is more real than action, and spiritual attitude is more
real than thought. It is the most real thing about us, and it is the only thing
that is of any importance. The difference between Blake's attitude and that of
the ordinary practical man of the world is summed up in his characteristic
pencil comment in his copy of Bacon's Essays on the remark,
"Good thoughts are little better than good dreams," in the Essay on
Virtue. Blake writes beside this, "Thought is act."
This view is well exemplified in the Job illustrations, where Blake makes quite
clear his view of the worthlessness, spiritually, of Job's gift to the beggar
of part of his last meal, because of the consciously meritorious attitude of
Job's mind.[81]
If this attitude be remembered it explains a good many
of the most startling and revolutionary views of Blake. For instance, in the
poems called "Holy Thursday" in the Songs of Innocence and
Experience, he paints first of all with infinite grace and tenderness the
picture of the orphan charity children going to church, as it would appear to
the ordinary onlooker.
The hum of multitudes was there but multitudes of
lambs, Thousands of little boys & girls raising their innocent hands.
Beneath them sit the aged men, wise guardians of the
poor; Then cherish pity, lest you drive an angel from your door.
But in short, scathing words and significant change of
metre he reverses the picture to show his view of it, when, in the companion
song of "Experience," he asks—
Is this a holy thing to see
In a rich and fruitful land,
Babes reduc'd to misery,
Fed with cold and usurous hand?
It is owing to a false idea that we can bear to see
this so-called "charity" at all, for we—
reduce the man to want a gift, and then give with
pomp.
The real evil is that we can suffer the need of the
crust of bread to exist. This is a view which is gradually beginning to be
realised to-day.
Blake is peculiarly daring and original in his use of
the mystical method of crystallising a great truth in an apparently trivial
fact. We have seen some of these truths in the Proverbs, and the Auguries
of Innocence is nothing else but a series of such facts, a storehouse
of deepest wisdom. Some of these have the simplicity of nursery rhymes, they
combine the direct freshness of the language of the child with the profound
truth of the inspired seer.
If the Sun & Moon should Doubt
They'd immediately Go Out.
It would scarcely be possible to sum up more
completely than does this artless couplet the faith—not only of Blake—but of
every mystic. Simple, ardent, and living, their faith is in truth their life,
and the veriest shadow of doubt would be to them a condition of death. They are
the only people in the world who are the "possessors of certainty."
They have seen, they have felt: what need they of further proof? Logic,
philosophy, theology, all alike are but empty sounds and barren forms to those
who know.
To Francis Thompson the presence of the Divine in all
things is the one overwhelming fact. As a result of this sense, the consciousness
that everything is closely related, closely linked together, is ever present in
his poetry. It is the vision of this truth, he believes, which will be the
revelation of a new heaven and a new earth.
When to the new eyes of thee
All things by immortal power,
Near or far,
Hiddenly
To each other linkèd are,
That thou canst not stir a flower
Without troubling of a star.
The Mistress of Vision.
His "Divine intoxication," his certainty of
the presence of God, is the more remarkable when it is realised through what
depths of want and degradation and suffering Thompson passed, and what his life
was for many years. His father, a north-country doctor, wished him to follow
the profession of medicine, but the son could not bear it, and so he ran away
from home with—for sole wealth—a Blake in one pocket and an Aeschylus in the
other. In his struggle for life in London, fragile in body and sensitive in
soul, he sank lower and lower, from selling boots to errand-boy, and finally
for five years living as a vagabond without home or shelter, picking up a few
pence by day, selling matches or fetching cabs, and sleeping under the archways
of Covent Garden Market at night. At last, in the very depth of his misery, he
was sought out and rescued by the editor of the paper to whom he had sent Health
and Holiness and some of his poems. This saved him, his work brought
him good friends, and he was enabled to write his wonderful poetry. These
terrible experiences, which would have quenched the faith of the ordinary man
and led him to despair, with the poet mystic sought expression in those six
triumphant verses found among his papers when he died,[82] verses charged with
mystic passion, which assert the solid reality of spiritual things, and tell us
that to the outcast and the wanderer every place was holy ground, Charing Cross
was the gate of heaven, and that he beheld—
Christ walking on the water Not of Gennesareth, but
Thames!
Through all that he writes there breathes the spirit
of mystic devotion and aspiration, but the following characteristics and
beliefs may be specially noted.
(1) His reverence of childhood. He sees in the child
something of the divinity which Vaughan and Wordsworth saw, and his poems to
children, such as Daisy and The Poppy, have a
special quality of passionate worship all their own.
(2) His attitude towards the beauty of woman. This is
entirely mystical, and is akin to the view of Plato and of Donne. He shares
their belief that love is but the power to catch sight of the beauty of the
soul, which shines through and actually moulds the beauty of face and body.
How should I gauge what beauty is her dole,
Who cannot see her countenance for her soul,
As birds see not the casement for the sky?
And, as 'tis check they prove its presence by,
I know not of her body till I find
My flight debarred the heaven of her mind.
Her Portrait.
(3) His attraction towards the continual change and
renewal of nature, not only of the movement of life to death, but of death to
life. He broods over the changing cycles of the year, winter and spring, decay
and re-birth, and he sees in them a profound and far-reaching symbolism. This
is magnificently expressed in the Ode to the Setting Sun, where he
paints a picture, unmatched in English verse, of the sun sinking to rest amid
the splendours gathered round him in his fall. The poem is charged with mystic
symbolism, the main thought of which is that human life, ending apparently in
death, is but the prelude of preparation for a more glorious day of spiritual
re-birth.
For birth hath in itself the germ of death,
But death hath in itself the germ of birth.
It is the falling acorn buds the tree,
The falling rain that bears the greenery,
The fern-plants moulder when the ferns arise.
For there is nothing lives but something dies,
And there is nothing dies but something lives.
But Francis Thompson's most entirely mystical
utterance is the famous Ode—The Hound of Heaven—where he pictures with a
terrible vividness and in phrase of haunting music the old mystic idea of the
Love chase.[83] It is the idea expressed by Plotinus when he says, "God
... is present with all things, though they are ignorant that He is so. For
they fly from Him, or rather from themselves. They are unable, therefore, to
apprehend that from which they fly" (Ennead, vi. § 7). We see the
spirit of man fleeing in terror "down the nights and down the days"
before the persistent footsteps of his "tremendous Lover," until,
beaten and exhausted, he finds himself at the end of the chase face to face with
God, and he realises there is for him no escape and no hiding-place save in the
arms of God Himself.
The voices of the English poets and writers form but
one note in a mighty chorus of witnesses whose testimony it is impossible for
any thoughtful person to ignore. Undoubtedly, in the case of some mystics,
there has been great disturbance both of the psychic and physical nature, but
on this account to disqualify the statements of Plotinus, St Augustine,
Eckhart, Catherine of Siena, Catherine of Genoa, Blake, and Wordsworth, would
seem analogous to Macaulay's view that "perhaps no person can be a poet,
or can even enjoy poetry without a certain unsoundness of mind." Our
opinion about this must depend on what we mean by "soundness of
mind." To some it may appear possible that the mystics and poets are as
sound as their critics. In any case, the unprejudiced person to-day would seem
driven to the conclusion that these people, who are, many of them,
exceptionally great, intellectually and morally, are telling us of a genuine experience
which has transformed life for them. What, then, is the meaning of this
experience? What explanation can we give of this puzzling and persistent factor
in human life and history? These are not easy questions to answer, and only a
bare hint of lines of solution dare be offered.
It is of interest to note that the last word in
science and philosophy tends to reinforce and even to explain the position of
the mystic. The latest of European philosophers, M. Bergson, builds up on a
mystical basis the whole of his method of thought, that is, on his perception
of the simple fact that true duration, the real time-flow, is known to us by a
state of feeling which he calls intuition, and not by an intellectual act.
He says something like this. We find as a matter of
practice that certain problems when presented to the intellect are difficult
and even impossible to solve, whereas when presented to our experience of life,
their solution is so obvious that they cease to be problems. Thus, the unaided
intellect might be puzzled to say how sounds can grow more alike by continuing
to grow more different. Yet a child can answer the question by sounding an
octave on the piano. But this solution is reached by having sensible knowledge
of the reality and not by logical argument. Bergson's view, therefore, is that
the intellect has been evolved for practical purposes, to deal in a certain way
with material things by cutting up into little bits what is an undivided flow
of movement, and by looking at these little bits side by side. This, though
necessary for practical life, is utterly misleading when we assume that the
"points" thus singled out by the intellect represent the
"thickness" of reality. Reality is fluidity, and we cannot dip up its
substance with the intellect which deals with surfaces, even as we cannot dip
up water with a net, however finely meshed. Reality is movement, and movement
is the one thing we are unable intellectually to realise.
In order to grasp reality we must use the faculty of
contact or immediate feeling, or, as Bergson calls it, intuition. Intuition is
a different order of knowledge, it is moulded on the very form of life, and it
enables us to enter into life, to be one with it, to live it. It is "a
direction of movement: and, although capable of infinite development, is
simplicity itself." This is the mystic art, which in its early stages is a
direction of movement, an alteration of the quality and intensity of the self.
So Bergson, making use of and applying the whole range of modern psychology and
biology, tells us that we must develop intuition as a philosophical instrument
if we are to gain any knowledge of things in themselves; and he is thus
re-echoing in modern terms what was long ago stated by Plotinus when he said—
Knowledge has three degrees—opinion, science,
illumination. The means or instrument of the first is sense, of the second
dialectic, of the third intuition. To the last I subordinate reason. It is
absolute knowledge founded on the identity of the mind knowing with the object
known. (Letter to Flaccus.)
We have discovered that sense knowledge, however
acute, has to be corrected by the intellect, which tells us that the sun does
not go round the earth, although it appears to our observation to do this. So
possibly, in turn, the intellect, however acute, may have to be corrected by
intuition, and the impotence of brain knowledge in dealing with the problem of
life is leading slowly to the perception that to know in its
true sense is not an intellectual process at all.
Further, in Bergson's theory of the nature of mind,
and in his theory of rhythm, he seems to indicate the lines of a technical
explanation of some part of the mystic experience.[84] The soul, or the total
psychic and mental life of man, he says, is far greater than the little bit of
consciousness of which we are normally aware, and the brain acts as a sheath or
screen, which allows only a point of this mental life to touch reality. The
brain or the cerebral life is therefore to the whole mental life as the point
of a knife is to the knife itself. It limits the field of vision, it cuts in
one direction only, it puts blinkers on the mind, forcing it to concentrate on
a limited range of facts. It is conceivable that what happens with the mystics
is that their mental blinkers become slightly shifted, and they are thus able
to respond to another aspect or order of reality. So that they are swept by
emotions and invaded by harmonies from which the average man is screened. Life
having for them somewhat changed in direction, the brain is forced to learn new
movements, to cut along fresh channels, and thus to receive sensations which do
not directly minister to the needs of physical life. "Our knowledge of
things," says Bergson, "derives its form from our bodily functions
and lower needs. By unmaking that which these needs have made, we may restore
to Intuition its original purity, and so recover contact with the Real."
It is possibly this very unmaking and remaking, this readjustment which we see
at work in the lives of the great mystics, and which naturally causes great
psychic and even physical disturbances.
Bergson's theory of rhythm is peculiarly illuminating
in this connection. The intellect, he says, is like a cinematograph. Moving at
a certain pace, it takes certain views, snapshots of the continuous flux of
reality, of which it is itself a moving part. The special views that it picks
out and registers, depend entirely upon the relation between its movement and
the rhythm or movement of other aspects of the flux. It is obvious that there
are a variety of rhythms or tensions of duration. For example, in what is the
fraction of a second of our own duration, hundreds of millions of vibrations,
which it would need thousands of our years to count, are taking place
successively in matter, and giving us the sensation of light. It is therefore
clear that there is a great difference between the rhythm of our own duration
and the incredibly rapid rhythms of physical matter. If an alteration took
place in our rhythm, these same physical movements would make us conscious—not
of light—but of some other thing quite unknown.
"Would not the whole of history," asks
Bergson, "be contained in a very short time for a consciousness at a
higher degree of tension than our own?" A momentary quickening of rhythm
might thus account for the sensation of timelessness, of the
"participation in Eternity" so often described by the mystic as a
part of the Vision of God.
Again, Bergson points out that there is nothing but
movement; that the idea of rest is an illusion, produced when
we and the thing we are looking at are moving at the same speed, as when two
railway trains run side by side in the same direction. Here, once more, may not
the mystic sensation of "stillness," of being at one with the central
Life, be owing to some change having taken place in the spiritual rhythm of the
seer, approximating it to that of the Reality which he is thus enabled to
perceive, so that the fretful movement of the individual mind becomes merged in
the wider flow of the whole, and both seem to be at rest?
Thus, the most recent philosophy throws light on the
most ancient mystic teaching, and both point to the conclusion that our normal
waking consciousness is but one special type of many other forms of
consciousness, by which we are surrounded, but from which we are, most of us,
physically and psychically screened. We know that the consciousness of the
individual self was a late development in the race; it is at least possible
that the attainment of the consciousness that this individual self forms part
of a larger Whole, may prove to be yet another step forward in the evolution of
the human spirit. If this be so, the mystics would appear to be those who,
living with an intensity greater than their fellows, are thus enabled to catch
the first gleams of the realisation of a greater self. In any case, it would
seem certain, judging from their testimony, that it is possible, by applying a
certain stimulus, to gain knowledge of another order of consciousness of a rare
and vivifying quality. Those who have attained to this knowledge all record
that it must be felt to be understood, but that, so far as words are of use, it
is ever of the nature of a reconciliation; of discord blending into harmony, of
difference merging into unity.
Bibliography
NOTE.—The literature on mysticism is growing very
large, and the following is only a small selection from the general works on
it. In the case of individual writers, references are given only where there
might be difficulty about editions. Thus no references are given to the works
of Burke, Carlyle, Wordsworth, Shelley, Tennyson, Browning, etc.
General
Underhill, Evelyn. Mysticism, Methuen,
1911. (See the valuable Bibliography of mystical works, pp. 563-585.) The
Mystic Way, Dent, 1913.
Jones, Rufus M. Studies in Mystical Religion,
Macmillan, 1909.
James, William. The Varieties of Religious
Experience, Longmans Green, 1905.
Inge, W. R. Christian Mysticism, Methuen,
1899. Studies of English Mystics, Murray, 1905. Light, Life
and Love. Selections from the German mystics. With Introduction.
Methuen, 1904.
Hügel, Baron F. von. The Mystical Element in
Religion, 2 vols.. Dent, 1909.
Delacroix, H. Études d'Histoiré et de Psychologie du Mysticisme,
Paris, 1908.
Récéjac, E. Essai sur les fondements de la Connaissance Mystique,
Paris, 1897 (translated by S. C. Upton, London, 1899).
Gregory, Eleanor C. A Little Book of Heavenly
Wisdom. Selections from some English prose mystics, with Introduction.
Methuen, 1902.
Foreign Influences
Plato (c. 427-347 B.C.). Opera,
ed. J. Burnet, 5 vols. (Bibliotheca Scriptorum Classicorum Oxoniensis),
1899-1907.
Plato (Eng. trans.) The Dialogues,
translated by B. Jowett, 5 vols., Oxford, 3rd ed., 1892.
Plotinus (A.D. 204-270). Plotini Ennéades,
præsmisso Porphyrii de vita Plotini deque ordine librorum ejus libello,
edidit R. Volkmann, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1883-84. (Eng. trans.) There is no
complete English translation of the Enneads, only Select
Works, translated by T. Taylor, 1817; re-issued, George Bell, 1895. (French
trans.) Les Ennéades de Plotin, translated by M.-N. Bouillet, 3
vols., Paris, 1857-61. (This is complete and very good, but out of print.) The
best critical account of Plotinus is in The Evolution of Theology in
the Greek Philosophers, by Edward Caird, 2 vols., Maclehose, 1904.
Dionysius the Areopagite. Works,
translated Parker, 1897.
Jacob Boehme (1575-1624). Works (incomplete),
4 vols., 1764-81. Reprint of complete works in progress, ed. C. J. Barker,
published J. Watkins. (See Bibliography to chap. xii. of Cambridge
History of English Literature, vol. ix.)
Emmanuel Swedenborg (1688-1772). Works,
published by the Swedenborg Society, London. Selections, A Compendium
of the Theological Writings, ed. Warren, 1901.
English Writers
Thomas de Hales (fl. 1250). A Luve Ron,
(printed in) Morris's Old English Miscellany (E.E.T.S.), 1872.
Richard Rolle (1290?-1349). Richard Rolle and
his Followers, ed. Horstmann, 2 vols., Sonnenschein, 1895-6. The
Fire of Love, and the Mending of Life, ed. R. Harvey (E.E.T.S.), 1896.
Anonymous (c. 1350-1400). The
Cloud of Unknowing, ed. Evelyn Underhill, J. Watkins, 1912.
All printed, with other early English mystical
treatises, in The Cell of Self-Knowledge, ed. E. G. Gardner, Chatto
& Windus, 1910. The Epistle of Prayer, The Epistle of
Discretion, The Treatise of Discerning Spirits
Anonymous. The Epistle of Privy Counsel,
in MS., British Museum, Harleian, 674 and 2473.
(William Langland, or other authors.? c. 1362-1399). The
Vision of William Concerning Piers the Plowman, ed. Skeat, 2 vols., Oxford,
1886. Jusserand, J. J. Piers Plowman: a Contribution to the History of
English Mysticism. Translated from the French by M. E. R., 1894.
Walter Hylton (d. 1396). The Scale of
Perfection, ed. Guy, 1869; ed. Dalgairns, 1870. The Song of Angels,
printed by Gardner, in The Cell of Self-Knowledge, 1910.
Julian of Norwich (1342-1413?). Revelations of
Divine Love, ed. Warrack, Methuen, 1912.
Richard Crashaw (1613? 1649). Poems, ed.
A. R. Waller, Cambridge 1904.
John Donne (1573-1631). Poetical Works,
ed. Grierson, 2 vols., Oxford, 1912.
George Herbert (1593-1633). Poems, ed. Grosart, 1891; Oxford edition, 1907.
Christopher Harvey (1597-1663). Poems, ed.
Grosart, 1874.
Henry More (1614-1687). Complete Poems,
ed. Grosart, 1878. Life, by R. Ward, 1710, reprinted Theosophical
Society, ed. Howard, 1911.
Henry Vaughan (1622-1695). Poems, ed.
Chambers, 2 vols., 1896.
Thomas Traherne (c. 1636-1674). Poetical
Works, ed. Dobell, 1903. Centuries of Meditations, ed. Dobell,
1908. Poems of Felicity, ed. Bell, Oxford, 1910.
William Law (1686-1761). Works, 9 vols.,
1753-76, reprinted privately by G. Moreton, 1892-3. The Liberal and
Mystical Writings of William Law, ed. W Scott Palmer, 1908. (See
Bibliography to chap xii. of Cambridge History of English Literature,
vol. ix., 1912.)
William Blake (1757-1827). Works, ed.
Ellis and Yeats, 3 vols., Quaritch, 1893.
William Blake. Poetical Works (including
Prophetic Books), ed, Ellis, 2 vols., Chatto and Windus, 1906. Poetical
Works (exclusive of Prophetic Books), ed. Sampson, Oxford, 1905. (The
best text of the poems.) Life, Gilchrist, 2 vols., Macmillan,
1880. William Blake, by A. C. Swinburne, Chatto and Windus (new
ed.), 1906. William Blake, Mysticisme et Poésie, par P. Berger, Paris, 1907.
S. T. Coleridge (1772-1834). Complete Poetical Works, ed. E. H. Coleridge, 2 vols., Oxford, 1912. Biographia
Literaria, ed. J. Shawcross, 2 vols., Oxford, 1907.
Emily Brontë (1818-1848). Complete Poems,
ed. Shorter, Hodder and Stoughton, 1910. The Three Brontës, by May
Sinclair, Hutchinson, 1912.
Coventry Patmore (1823-1896). Poems, G.
Bell, 1906. The Rod, the Root, and the Flower, 1895. Memoirs
and Correspondence of C. Patmore, by B. Champneys, 1900.
Richard Jefferies (1848-1887). The Story of my
Heart, 1883, (reprinted) Longmans, 1907.
Francis Thompson (1859-1907). New Poems,
Burns and Oates, 1897. Selected Poems, 1908. Sister Songs,
1908.
Footnotes
1. "The Religious Philosophy of William
James," by J. B. Pratt, Hibbert Journal, Oct. 1911, p. 232.
2. On "Spirit," in Philosophical
Remains of R. L. Nettleship, ed. A. C. Bradley, 1901, pp. 23-32.
3. Republic, ii. 376.
4. Symposium, 211, 212.
5. This distinction between East and West holds good
on the whole, although on the one side we find the heretical Brahmin followers
of Bhakti, and Ramananda and his great disciple, Kabir, who taught
that man was the supreme manifestation of God; and on the other, occasional
lapses into Quietism and repudiation of the body. See The Mystic, Way,
by E. Underhill, pp 22-28.
6. For an account of Boehme's philosophy, see pp.
91-93 below.
7. See his essay on him in Representative Men.
8. Memoirs and Correspondence of C. Palmore,
by B. Champneys, 1901, vol. ii. pp. 84, 85.
9. Selections from the German Mystics, ed.
Inge (Methuen, 1904), p. 4.
10. See his article on Rossetti in the Nineteenth
Century for March 1883.
11. House of Life, Sonnet xvii.
12. House of Life, Sonnets i., xxvii.,
lxxvii.
13. See Religio Poetæ, p. 1.
14. Memoirs, ed. Champneys, i. 146.
15. The Angel in the House. Bk. ii.
prelude ii.
16. The Angel in the House, canto viii.
prelude iv.
17. See pp. 113, 114 below.
18. The Child's Purchase and The
Toys, poems, I vol., 1906, pp. 287, 354.
19. Seligio Poetæ, 1893, p. 163.
20. Religio Poetæ, 1893, p. 44.
21. The "Ring" of Eternity is a familiar
mystical symbol which Vaughan doubtless knew in other writers; for instance as
used by Suso or Ruysbroeck. See Mysticism, by E. Underhill, p. 489
and note.
22. See the illuminating description of this
essentially mystic feeling given by J. Stewart in The Myths of Pinto,
Introduction, pp. 39 et seq.
23. The Story of my Heart, pp. 87, 88.
24. Ibid., p. 76.
25. The Story of my Heart, p. 199.
26. Ibid., p. 71.
27. Ibid., p. 74.
28. See Compendium of Philosophy, a
mediæval digest of the Abhidhamma, translated by S. Z. Aung and Mrs Rhys
Davids, 1910, 152 f.
29. We cannot agree with Prof Grierson, who, in his
fine recent edition of the poet (Donne's Poems, Oxford, 1912, vol ii.,
pp. cxxxv.-vi.), holds that the style and tone of this song point to Donne not
being the author. For these very qualities it would seem indubitably to be his.
30. Surely also by Donne, but see Grierson, vol. ii.,
pp. cxxxviii-ix.
31. Centuries of Meditations, ed. Dobell,
1908, pp. 20, 21.
32. Centuries of Meditations, pp. 156-58.
33. Life of Tennyson, by his son, 1905, p.
268; see also pp 818, 880.
34. This is the idea, essentially mystical, and
originating with Boehme, which is worked out in the suggestive little
book, The Mystery of Pain, by James Hinton.
35. An Appeal, Work's, vol. vi. pp. 27,
28.
36. The Spirit of Prayer, Works,
vol. vii. pp. 23, 24.
37. Cf. St Augustine, "To will
God entirely is to have Him" (City of God, Book xi. chap, iv.), or
Ruysbroek's answer to the priests from Paris who came to consult him on the
state of their souls: "You are as you desire to be."
38. See The Spirit of Prayer, Works,
vol. vii. pp. 150, 151.
39. An Appeal, Works, vol. vi. p. 169.
40. Ibid., pp. 19, 20.
41. Ibid., pp. 69, 80.
42. The Spirit of Prayer, Works,
vol. vii. pp. 23, 27.
43. The Way to Divine Knowledge, Works,
vol. vii. p. 60.
44. The Spirit of Prayer, Works,
vol. vii. p. 68. See also ibid., pp. 91, 92
45. An Appeal, Works, vol. vi. pp. 132,
133.
46. Ibid., p. 82.
47. An Appeal, Works, vol. vi. p. 115.
48. The Destiny of Nations, II. 16-18.
49. Frost at Midnight, 11. 60-62.
50. Sartor Resartus, Book i. chap. xi.
51. See Sartor, Book iii. chap. iv.
52. The mystical desire for close contact with God is
expressed in English as early as before 1170, in Godric's song to the Virgin.
53. See Mysticism, by E. Underhill, pp.
162-166.
54. The Ancren Riwle, ed. J. Morton,
Camden Society, 1853, pp. 397-403.
55. Fire of Love, Bk. 1. cap xvi. p. 36.
56. Ibid., Bk. i. cap. xv. p. 33.
57. See Mysticism, by E. Underhill, pp.
228, 229.
58. Fire of Love, Bk. i. cap. xvi. p. 36.
59. Ibid., Bk. ii. cap. iii. and xii.
60. Fire of Love, Bk. i. cap. xv.
61. Ibid., Bk. ii. cap. vii.
62. Enneads, vi. §§ 8, 9.
63. See The Authorship of the Prick of
Conscience, by H. E. Allen, Radcliffe College Monographs, No. 15, Ginn and
Co., 1910.
64. Revelations, ed. Warrack, pp. 21, 178.
All the quotations which follow are taken from this edition of the Revelations.
65. Revelations, p. 135. It Is interesting
to compare the words of other mystics upon this point; as for instance Richard
of St Victor in Benjamin Minor, cap. 75, or Walter Hylton in The
Scale of Perfection. Note the emphasis laid upon it by Wordsworth, who
indicates self-knowledge as the mark of those who have attained the
"unitive" stage; see p. 66 above.
66. Dr. Inge gives an excellent detailed account of it
in Studies of English Mystics, 1906, pp. 80-123.
67. See Piers Plowman, by J. J. Jusserand,
1894
68. B., Passus v., 614-616.
69. Poems, ed. Waller, 1904, p. 283.
70. Poems, ed. Grosart, 1874, p. 134.
71. See Additional Table Talk of S. T. O.,
ed. T. Ashe, 1884, p. 322.
72. Poems, ed. Sampson, p. 305.
73. See Mysticism, by E. Underhill, pp.
282-286, and specially the passage from the Fioreth of St
Francis of Assisi, chap, xlviii., quoted on p. 285.
74. Notes to Lavater.
75. From version γ2 in Poetical Works, ed.
John Sampson, 1905, p. 253.
76. Poems, ed. Sampson, p. 173.
77. Poems, ed Sampson, pp. 305-6, 309-10.
Blake is here praying that we may be preserved from the condition of mind which
sees no farther than the concrete facts before it; a condition he unfairly
associated with the scientific mind in the abstract, and more especially with
Newton.
78. This is the principle called occasionally by
Blake, and always by Boehme, the "Mirror," or "Looking
Glass." Blake's names for these four principles, as seen in the world, in
contracted form, are Urizen, Luvah, Urthona, and Tharmas.
79. Possibly in some such way as Mozart, when
composing, heard the whole of a symphony. "Nor do I hear in my imagination
the parts successively, but I hear them as it were all at
once" (Holmes's Life and Correspondence of Mozart 1845,
pp 317-18)
80. Cf., for instance, "To be an
error, and to be cast out, is a part of God's design" (A Vision of the
Last Judgment, Gilchrist's Life, ii. p. 195); and Illustrations 2 and 16 to
the Book of Job, see the commentary on them in Blake's Vision of the
Book of Job, by J. H. Wicksteed, 1910, p. 21 and note 4. It is interesting
to note that, as Mr Bradley points out (Shakesperian Tragedy, pp. 37,
39, 324, 325), it is a cognate idea which seems to underlie Shakesperian
tragedy, and to make it bearable.
81. See the whole exposition of the Job illustrations
by Wicksteed, and specially p. 37.
82. In no Strange Land. Selected
Poems, 1908, p. 130.
83. For other examples of the expression of this idea
of the "Following Love," the quest of the soul by God, especially in
the anonymous Middle English poem of Quia amore langueo, see Mysticism,
by Evelyn Underhill, pp. 158-162.
84. The following remarks are much indebted to a
valuable article on Bergson and the Mystics, by Evelyn Underhill,
in the English Review, Feb. 1912, which should be consulted for a
fuller exposition of the light shed by Bergson's theories on the mystic
experience.
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