Imagine.
The ancient
abbey is vast and, in later centuries, will be crowded with ornate memorials. Nevertheless,
now – in London,
in 1771 – a few historic effigies and tombs can be seen in the shadowy aisles,
their carvings worn and their paint faded.
The newly-reformed Society of Antiquaries is eager to have a record of these treasures for surely their own nation’s history is now as worthy of study as the classical world?
A series of careful engravings are required, and that is why the boy sits in the hallowed gloom, pencil in hand, drawing the long dead. His master, James Basire, the foremost architectural line engraver in London, has chosen this fourteen year old apprentice specifically for this stage of the commission.
First of all, the boy has been copying casts of classical statues since he was ten. He has the ability to draw a good foot, a hand, a torso, a head, a detail and more. Secondly – and maybe this is just as important a reason – Master Basire knows the boy has a passionate, argumentative nature and that he is easiest when left to work alone. Certainly, the lad’s brain seems fit to burst with his tales of biblical visions and lines from scripture and Milton’s poetry.
Time
passes. The boy works. The tall windows let in little daylight so he lights a
candle stub or two. The small flames make the tombs look like great four-poster
beds: the stone slabs in place of soft mattresses and the hard, carved canopy instead
of curtains overhead.
His task, in drawing each tomb, is to demonstrate it from every angle and produce a record of every important detail and inscription.
Down below, under the fine stonework, he knows the bodies are waiting. Once or twice, where stones have been cracked and shifted, he spied bones and breathed dust from the darkness within.Now he raises his head and stares.
Up there, high up on their stony beds, the strange elongated effigies of old kings and queens face upwards, heavenwards, God-wards. The royal features are not for common, everyday eyes to view - and yet the Society has asked for a true record of all that is there, have they not?
He works. Now and then, he hears voices echo in the sacred air and once ghostly monks passed in a procession. He does not mind. Such spectres are better than the flesh-and-blood schoolboys who visit the abbey, mocking him and his work. He glances down at his marked knuckles, his eyes still alight with righteous anger. Master Basire was correct about that temper.
Imagine the boy, working. Imagine
what patterns this particular work must be forming in his mind.
All his
youthful energies are bound up with the spirits of this place: the sense of history,
of worldly and godly glory, of living words cut into stone, of the eternal
victory of death - and of his own dreams, eagerly calling him on to great
things. All he sees, hears and feels while working alone in that place will go
into his own work. He pauses, stretches his shoulders, bends over and draws again.
The
building is Westminster Abbey.
The boy?
His name is William Blake.
As I began reading Peter Ackroyd’s
excellent biography of Blake, I came across his account of this stage in the
boy’s apprenticeship and, startled by the scene conjured up, used it as a
starting point for my own writing, above.
Adolescent experiences can be intense enough to imprint perceptions that persist long afterwards - especially
if you are an imaginative young apprentice working twelve hours a day, six days
a week, and with a head constantly spinning with new thoughts and half-biblical
visions.
Reading about Blake standing on
the tombs, I felt as if a half-recognised aspect of Blake’s work had suddenly become
understandable.
There is, of course, the strongly sculptural nature of many of
his figures, but I also wondered – and this is only my thought which you can
take or leave – whether the young artist, leaning over the effigies on the
tombs, had so absorbed the physical and bodily memory of that encounter that he
recreated that stance over and over again in the form and shape of his paintings
and artwork.
Is this idea possible? Did the familiar "Blake" shape of the bending deity or spirit,
leaning over the human come from something remembered in his own body?
What do you think?
Meanwhile, I must see more and read more of Ackroyd’s
William Blake - and maybe more elsewhere, including Blake’s own account - and see
what I discover.
Penny Dolan
Lovely! This brings the whole scene so vividly, and arrestingly, to life.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this Penny. Fascinating insight into a complex man.
ReplyDeleteWonderful post, Penny. And I feel you're right about the 'Blake pose' even though it can never be proved.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great post - thank you, Penny!
ReplyDeleteThanks, everyone. There is a memorial to Blake in Westminster Abbey's Poet's Corner.
ReplyDeleteHis grave is in an open area known as Bunhill Fields, a public green space now caught up in a property development passed by London's Mayor for the adjacent site. The blocks of high-rise flats will make the current "open" Bunfield Fields into an almost a walled-in shade. Wonder what Blake would think of that? Green and pleasant land indeed?
Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteLovely post, Penny - thank you. I read Peter Ackroyd's biography of Blake years ago, and highly recommend it. I think it's my favourite of his books. But I had quite forgotten that scene in Westminster Abbey!
ReplyDelete