Dear Sir,
My Neighbor, Mr Gilchrist, has finished, or is on the point of finishing, a Book (to be in one Volume) on the Life of the Painter Blake,--Painter, or Engraver rather; a remarkable man, not unworthy of such a service. Mr Gilchrist wd prefer you as a Publisher, if it suited; if &c &c; --and to you therefore I first of all despatch him for survey & scrutiny.
I have not myself seen the Book, or any part of it; but from conversation I gather that Mr G¹s idea of the man is what I shd call accurate and good; the Book moreover is about the right size for such a subject; --and lastly I can predict with Confidence that it is faithfully done, and will be found an honest piece of delineation and examination. My own private guess wd be that such a Volume might sell, to a fair extent; --at all events I am justified in requesting you to examine it a little till you are satisfied about it.
Which is all at present from
Yours truly
T. Carlyle
The
letter above, heretofore unpublished (British Library, shelf no.
RP6421), is dated 28 November 1859 and is from Thomas Carlyle to Edward
Chapman, of Chapman and Hall, his (and Dickens¹s) publisher. Chapman,
the literary mind of the firm, passed on Gilchrist¹s manuscript,
perhaps finding the subject insufficiently literary to ³sell Š a fair extent,² or,
like Carlyle, not quite sure what he was selling, a book about a
³Painter, or Engraver
.² Macmillan published the biography, Life of Blake, in two
volumes with 121 illustrations in 1863, marking the beginning of modern
Blake studies. Its subtitle, Pictor
Ignotus, or unknown painter,
appears to acknowledge Carlyle¹s uncertainty (the letter was sent via
Gilchrist), and yet from another perspective it is misleading, as modern scholarship has
revealed a Blake relatively
well known during his life and shortly after his death. [1] He
merited 24 pages in Benjamin Heath Malkin¹s A Father¹s
Memoirs of his Son
(1806); a review, albeit nasty, by
Robert Hunt in the Examiner
(1809) and another, albeit in German, by Henry Crabb Robinson (1811);
at least
seven obituary notices; 34 pages in Joseph Smith¹s Nollekens
and His Times (1828; 2nd edition
1829); 46 pages in Allan
Cunningham¹s Lives of British Artists (1830;
republished 1831, 1837, 1839, 1842, 1844, 1846); reviews of Smith and
Cunningham, including ³The Inventions of William Blake, Painter and
Poet,² in the London University Magazine (1830); and entries in various
biographical
dictionaries and encyclopaedias, including Matthew
Pilkington¹s A General
Dictionary of Painters (1840;
also 1852 and 1858) and Charles Knight¹s The English
Cyclopaedia (1856).
[2]
But
this kind of documentation merely acknowledges that Blake had a
reputation. Indeed,
the way in which this ³remarkable man²
was known‹i.e., word of mouth, obituaries, biographies, reviews,
extracts from the poetry‹prevented his works, nearly all of which are
pictorial, from
ever being known well or deeply except by those who knew them
first-hand, and
that remained a very small number of collectors and friends. To ask how
well
known Blake was shortly after he died, then, is really to ask how Blake was known. Until Gilchrist, with
its numerous
illustrations and facsimiles, Blake was known almost exclusively
through
texts‹those about him and those few by him. This was as well as
many‹perhaps most‹readers cared to know him. Expectations of knowing
otherwise, of becoming both reader and viewer, must have been low,
either
because reproductions were costly and inaccurate or because
epistemological
preconceptions minimized their value‹or both. [3]
Today,
what is
selected for reproduction and how it is reproduced affects the Blake we
know
and how we know him. The same was true for Gilchrist. In this essay,
rather
than examine the pre-Gilchrist textual record about Blake, which has
been
studied in detail, I wish to focus on the pictorial record, which has
received
very little attention. I
wish to speculate on the factors behind and consequences of Gilchrist¹s
selection process by examining the illustrations in the Life in light of works reproduced and cited in
the main
public record before 1863, the people involved in the production of the
Life, the techniques by
which its illustrations were
made, and the works prepared for the Life but excluded. The works in this last
category are in a recently
discovered album titled Blake: Proofs, Photos, Tracings, compiled by W. J. Linton, the wood
engraver
responsible for the illustrations, most of which are thought to be wood
engravings, but are kerographs, a technique that Linton had invented in
1861.
[4] As we shall see, to
no small degree, the nature and
aesthetic
of his new reproductive
process affected the kinds of work selected and excluded for
reproduction, the result of which was to emphasize Blake the printmaker
and poet rather than painter.
The idea that Blake was an artist¹s artist‹that is, well respected by other artists but difficult and not likely to have a wide public‹was a theme first sounded by Malkin, repeated in the obituaries, and amplified by Smith and Cunningham. Through them and others, the public knew that Blake was an engraver, a painter, an illustrator, and even a poet; the works mentioned most often were Blake¹s illustrations to Robert Blair¹s The Grave and Edward Young¹s Night Thoughts, the engraving of Chaucers Canterbury Pilgrims, the Illustrations of the Book of Job, several illuminated books (Songs of Innocence and of Experience, America a Prophecy, Europe a Prophecy, Gates of Paradise, Jerusalem), and the pencil drawings of Visionary Heads. There were at least ³60 instances of poems printed in letterpress² during this period, representing 37 different poems; ³The Tyger² was printed at least seven times (Hoover 347; see also Bentley, Blake Books 74-75). But with the possible exception of The Grave, Night Thoughts, and the Book of Job engravings, the published prints that were in reasonably wide circulation, the public did not know what his works looked like, because the illuminated books, watercolors, and paintings were extremely rare, and Smith and others writing on Blake did not include reproductions of these or his other works.
In fact, only eight of Blake¹s images were reproduced in England between 1827 and 1863. Five were from the Visionary Heads, redrawn by John Varley, engraved by John Linnell on three plates, and published in Varley¹s A Treatise on Zodiacal Physiognomy; Illustrated by Engravings of Heads and Features (1828). They are Ghost of a Flea, the same image with mouth opened (the original drawing has mouth closed with a detail of its open mouth; hence, the second image is a reconstruction), Cancer, Reverse of the Coin of Nebuchadnezzar, and possibly Gemini, which appears based on Blake¹s ³A Girl in Profile, Perhaps Corinna² (Butlin 629.80, Essick, ³Marketplace ³128). Most of Varley¹s detailed description of Ghost of a Flea was quoted by Robert Southey in The Doctor (1834; 2nd edition 1848). The engraving with mouth open was reproduced (engraver unknown) again in the Art Journal (1858), with a brief notice of Blake. One wood engraving (³Thenot and Colinet Converse Seated beneath Two Trees²) from Thornton¹s The Pastorals of Virgil was reprinted from the original block in the Athenaeum (1843). And two designs from Blair¹s The Grave, Death¹s Door and Death of the Strong Wicked Man, were reproduced (engraved ³Normand fils²) in volumes III and IV respectively of G. Hamilton¹s The English School, A Series of The Most Approved Productions In Painting and Sculpture, Executed by British Artists (1831-32). Death¹s Door was reproduced five more times, in Howitt¹s Journal (1847), engraved by H. Harrison, and, as wood engravings by Linton, in Illustrated Exhibitor and Magazine of Art (1852) and The Ladies¹ Drawing Room Book (1852), both from the same block, and, from a different block, in Linton¹s Thirty Pictures by Deceased British Artists Engraved Expressly for The Art-Union of London (1860) and John Jackson and W. A. Chatto¹s A Treatise on Woodengraving (1861). [5]
Only fourteen reproductions of eight images, including three of Ghost of a Flea and six of Death¹s Door, were reproduced in England before Gilchrist‹and four of these were by Linton. Clearly, Death¹s Door was to Blake then what Ancient of Days is now, and whatever general fame Blake had was associated with it, his Grave designs in general, and his portrait of a ghost of a flea. Given this paucity of Blake reproductions, Samuel Palmer¹s ecstatic response to the Life and its 121 illustrations is understandable. He writes Mrs. Gilchrist:
Surely never book has been put forth more lovingly: the dear Author and the Editor,‹Mr. Linton, the Publisher, and Printer, seem all to have laboured at a labour of love: ‹and instead of being sparingly illustrated, as I understood it was to be, it is, both in quantity and unrivalled quality, the richest Book of all illustrated ones that I have ever seen. It is not a pearl thrown to the swinish many, but a tiara of jewels.‹What will they do? turn again and rend, or take kindly to this new and costly diet? [6]
Seventeen of the illustrations are not recorded in the List of Illustrations (xiii-xiv), which Linton wrote and sent to Rossetti by 12 June 1863, and five of the illustrations are not of Blake¹s works. [7] That final number of 116, however, reflects less diversity and bounty than it might suggest, as is revealed by a close examination of the title page, which Rossetti wrote (DW 487):
Life / of / William Blake, / ŒPictor Ignotus.¹ / With Selections from his Poems and Other Writings / By the Late / Alexander GilchristŠ./ Illustrated from Blake¹s Own Works, / in Facsimile by W. J. Linton, / And in Photolithography; /with a few of Blake¹s Original Plates. / In Two Volumes. / Vol.‹ / London and Cambridge: / Macmillan and Co./ 1863.
We are in the presence of a biographer who knows Robert Browning¹s poem ³Pictor Ignotus,² key lines of which Rossetti wanted to include as an epigraph (DW 483), although his suggestion (pace DW) was not followed. [8] We are told that this painter also wrote poetry and that examples of his poetry and art are reproduced. Blake is not identified as a printmaker, but the word ³plates² implies as much. Examples of his art and presumably prints are reproduced in ³facsimile² and in the new technology of ³photolithography,² which means that the illustrations duplicate the visual codes of the original medium rather than translate them into another code, like the hatched lines of engraving, and thus will bring the viewer closer to the original than conventional reproductions. Promising even greater fidelity, some illustrations are from Blake¹s ³original plates,² implying posthumous impressions. The Selections, compiled and edited by Rossetti, along with the Annotated Catalogue of Blake¹s Pictures and Drawings, written by William Michael Rossetti, forced Macmillan to publish the biography in two volumes to make room for their contributions without having to cut illustrations. [9]
II. Types of
Illustrations and
Reproductive Processes in the Life of Blake
For our purposes, the title page¹s key pieces of information are ³original plates,² ³facsimiles,² and Linton. The first refers to the sixteen relief etchings from Songs at the end of volume II and three wood engravings from Thornton¹s Virgil in volume I. But both sets of images, with one exception, are from electrotypes cast from the original plates and blocks. [10] The exception, the Experience title plate, was printed from a kerograph plate (see below). The electrotypes are identified as being the ³original plates² presumably because there is an exact one-to-one correspondence between the plate and its cast and hence, theoretically, the impressions are indistinguishable from the originals. Technically, these images are facsimiles, which by definition reproduce the codes, size, and color of the original. In addition to these 19 electrotypes, there are 14 other illustrations that are facsimiles in this strict sense: eight designs from For Children, five drawings, and one engraving. There are also 19 details of designs reproduced to size and style.
The illustrations Gilchrist describes as ³Facsimile² are not, strictly speaking, facsimiles, since they are reduced in size. ³Facsimile² refers to the ³Six Plates in Colour. One from ŒAmerica¹, two from ŒEurope¹, and three from the ŒJerusalem¹, all reduced² (xiv). These were printed separately and inserted like engravings. ³Colour² refers to the reddish brown ink in which they and the electrotypes of the Songs were printed, a color used by Tatham in the posthumous copies (but never by Blake) and preferred by Gilchrist, who believed that Jerusalem copy I, a posthumous copy, was ³so incomparably superior, from this cause [ink color] to any other I have seen, that no one could know the work properly without having examined this copy² (192-93). The ³Twenty-one Photo-lithographs from the Originals² (xiv) also fall into this category. Also reduced, these 22 plates (including the title page) were printed in black, but they are ³of² the originals and not ³from² the originals. There are 13 other illustrations that represent in reduced size an entire composition. Because they are reduced in size, we would today call these 41 illustrations ³reproductions.²
The facsimiles (of full designs and details) and reproductions account for 93 of the 116 Blake illustrations. The other kinds of illustrations in the Life are details and reconstructions. The former refers to a distinct part of a design, like a vignette or interlinear decoration, or even a small figure, reduced in size. A dozen of these were printed with the type and, along with many of the details executed to size and style of the original, functioned primarily as ornamental tailpieces, ending 29 of 39 chapters in volume I and interspersed five times among the Selections in volume II. In nearly all cases, lack of space was the reason for the absence of a tailpiece, and in most cases, the need to fill empty space was the reason for its presence. In only five cases does the tailpiece actually fit the subject or theme of the chapter it accompanies. Put another way, 29 of Linton¹s ornaments illustrate‹or, to be more exact, adorn‹the Life¹s two volumes. These were almost certainly designed by Linton after the pages were proofed and reset and the space at the end of the chapter or section was determined. [11] Reconstructions are of illuminated pages or parts of them, with a typographic text in place of Blake¹s (e.g., the details from Visions plate 3 and Thel plate 3 on pages 105, 2:71). The largest approximation is America plate 13 (112), a full-page design that was to have ³formal type . . . substitute . . . for the author¹s flowing hand-written poetry² (111). It is so represented in the 1880 edition, but apparently something went wrong in the first edition, where Gilchrist¹s text instead of Blake¹s lies within the design, transforming it into a full-page ornament‹and an effective advertisement for kerography.
The illustrations break down into five categories: 56 illuminated prints, 43 engravings, 13 drawings, three wood engravings, and one painting, a watercolor. They were meant to address what Gilchrist recognized as the inherent paradox in ³knowing Blake.² He states that two of Blake¹s watercolors, Dream of Queen Catherine and Oberon and Titania, both ³remarkable displays of imaginative power, and finished examples in the artist¹s peculiar manner,² were in the 1857 Manchester Art-Treasures Exhibition, but attracted ³few gazers, fewer admirers² (3). This, he says, is because Blake¹s audience ³needs to be read in Blake,² because one needs ³to have familiarized oneself with his unsophisticated, archaic, yet spiritual Œmanner,¹‹a style sui generis as no other artist¹s ever was,‹to be able to sympathize with, or even understand the equally individual strain of thought, of which it is the vehicle ³ (3). In short, to see Blake requires knowing him, which in turn requires seeing him. The idea, however, to reproduce Blake primarily in facsimile, as opposed to etched or engraved translations, appears to have been Linton¹s, and the illustration selection appears to have been started by Gilchrist and Linton and then supplemented by Rossetti, who in February 1863 ³consulted with him . . . about the illustrations² (DW 477). Indeed, ³the poet-artist² who edited Gilchrist¹s manuscript and the Selections also ³took a keen interest in the illustrations for the Life² (AG 87), and he, along with his brother, provided Linton ³with original drawings, plates, and photographs from which to copy² (Smith, Radical 147).
These provisions would have included drawings in the Notebook, probably prints from Songs of Innocence and of Experience, Book of Job, and other graphic works, and, as we shall see, photographs of illuminated prints. Photographs may seem an unlikely inclusion this early in the 19th century, but in fact it was not unusual for Rossetti to work from photographs (Bartram 135-43) and to have his own paintings and drawings photographed and to inscribe the photographs as gifts (F 2.221, 275, 290, 318, 324, 342, DW 611). For Edward Moxon¹s edition of Tennyson¹s poems (1857), which heralded in a new school of book illustration with its 54 illustrations by Pre-Raphaelite artists, Rossetti had three of his five pen and ink drawings photographed on the blocks before they were cut. The photographs, which were intended to check the accuracy of the prints, were shown with seven after William Holman Hunt¹s designs in the 1857 Pre-Raphaelite exhibition at Russell Place. Rossetti asked Mrs. Gilchrist on 15 January 1862 for a photograph of her husband so he could draw a portrait for the memoir he intended for the Life (F 2.449). William Rossetti sent two photographs of ³sketches by Blake² to Mrs. Gilchrist, 25 August 1862 (F 2.486), and, in late 1865, Dante had sent photographs of Blake¹s work to Charles Eliot Norton, who doesn¹t identify but found them ³deeply interesting² and ³very delightful. I know no pictures so full of poetic feeling or so poetic in conception as his² (Rossetti 169). [12]
Linton and Rossetti¹s first contact appears to have been around 1848, when Linton says he lent Charles Wells¹ Stories from Nature and the drama Joseph and his Brethren to Rossetti, who ³admired them and talked of illustrating the Stories for my engraving; the project, however, fell through² (Linton, Memories 65). [13] Linton¹s first wood engravings of Rossetti¹s designs were in late 1856, when he engraved two and Daziel the other three for the Moxon Tennyson. Rossetti, as an illustrator, was obsessed with detail and notoriously difficult to satisfy. On18 December 1856, he complains to William Allingham: ³But these engravers! What ministers of wrath! Your drawing comes to them. . . delicately, & is hewn in pieces . . . As yet, I fare best with W. J. Linton. He keeps stomach aches for you, but Dalziel deals in fevers & agues²(F 2.146). Writing on the same day to Ford Madox Brown, he states: ³Dalziel has sent me a second proof, much better, and I hope further corrections may do even more. But Linton is the man. I have got also [Linton¹s] 2nd proof of Mariana, which is quiet another thing² (F 2.151). Of his proof of Marianna in the South, Rossetti says to Linton on 26 January 1857: ³I can see nothing further to do, except perhaps to lighten the end of the nose in the profile still slightly. . . . It is excellent I think, & this profile now peculiarly so² (F 2.168). Linton, who engraved 14 of the designs for the Moxon Tennyson, sent Rossetti a proof of his Sir Galahad in January 1857, which Rossetti thought ³fine in many respects² (F 2.165), but still annotated it extensively for revisions (Marsh 11-15). Rossetti finally met Linton on 6 February 1857. Writing to William Bell Scott the following day, he says: ³Your friend W. J. Linton did two [wood engravings] for me, & I am convinced that he is a long way the best engraver living now that old Thompson is nearly out of the field. . . . He seems a most agreeable fellow. I am hoping to have some impressions of photographs which have been taken from one or two of my blocks, & in such case to send you copies² (F 2.170-71). [14] As noted, he took photographs of three blocks, the ones he gave the Dalziel brothers, another sign of his faith in Linton¹s skill. Of Rossetti, Linton said ³I had great regard, though I saw not much of him. . . . a man of genius both in art and literature; one, however, hindering the other, the literary preponderating, and by which he will be best recollected² (Memories 171). [15]
Rossetti next used Linton as his engraver for Goblin Market. Dissatisfied with the slow progress of the original engraver, he urged Macmillan in December of 1861 to use Linton, who was then working for him on the Life. Eleven months earlier, on behalf of a young artist in search of work, probably W. J. Wiegand (see below), he asked Macmillan if he needed a copyist, but the publisher ³said he would speak to Linton,² who Rossetti planned to ask as well (F 2.347). This suggests that Linton may have been working for Macmillan at the time and that the publisher, perhaps on Rossetti¹s recommendation, may have been the one to team illustrator and biographer. However they met, Smith is clearly mistaken about the Rossetti brothers commissioning Linton for Mrs. Gilchrist in 1862 (Radical 147), since Linton and Gilchrist were negotiating by 20 April of 1861, when Rossetti offered to secure Mrs. Burne-Jones as ³copyist . . . for the Blakes . . . if you & Linton cannot entertain the idea² (F 2.351-52). Within six weeks, Linton had a firm sense of what the Life needed in way of illustrations and became, in Rossetti¹s words, the ³middleman.² Rossetti, on 30 May 1861, tells his artist friend James Smetham: ³I trust Gilchrist¹s acquaintance may bring you some connection with his Blake book if you care to be connected with it; and I am sure it will be a first rate work, & that you would be just the man he wants. But there is a middleman‹Linton the engraver‹so it is not all under Gilchrist¹s control² (F 2.370). [16] Linton may have concurred: ³With Gilchrist I worked on his Life of Blake, having to get up the illustrations. So one Sunday I went with Gilchrist to see Linnell at his house,² where ³after dinner we were shown his Blake treasures, his portrait of Blake, the original drawings for the book of Job, proof impressions of the plates, and Blake¹s designs for Dante,‹taking care not to leave us alone with any² (Linton, Memories 181).
Linton was a draughtsman, engraver, printer, publisher, editor, poet, ³ardent Republican agitator, and friend of Mazzini and other advanced liberals² (Maré 67). Like Blake, he struggled all his life against the idea that the engraver was a craftsman and not an artist. By 21, ³he had become quite outspoken about the merits of white-line [wood engraving], which was Œquicker and more flexible,¹ and the role of the engraver as collaborator/translator with an artist, each a Œmember in the great Guild of Art¹ and not Œmere mechanic¹² (Engen Dictionary 161). [17] A master of Bewick¹s white line (Crane 47), Linton hated using his beloved wood engraving to reproduce pen and ink drawings, for these required producing black lines and going against the nature of the medium, where lines cut with the burin are below the inked surface and hence print white. Kerography, his new facsimile process, which he touted as a replacement for wood engraving, would, ironically, free wood engraving to be the medium of artists and not copyists. In July of 1861, Linton published a sixteen-page pamphlet titled Specimens of a New Process of Engraving for Surface-Printing. He no doubt told Gilchrist about his new process that spring, which he described as ideal for facsimilizing line drawings. Gilchrist, who defined relief etchings as facsimiles of drawings (69), would have immediately seen its value to the Life.
Linton
reproduces ³specimens² of kerography to show what it is capable of,
and, sounding like Blake in the Prospectus of 1793, defines its
advantages as lowering production costs and, most important,
eliminating translation. This new process of surface‹or relief‹printing
was intended to ³take the place of² wood engravings, whose ³great
disadvantage is, that at best
they are only translations‹and generally very imperfect translations‹of
the artist¹s drawings on the block² (3). The new process, ³while
costing no more to print . . . costs considerably less to produce,² but
its main advantage is that ³the artist is no longer at the mercy of the
engraver. An engraving by the new process is necessarily an
exact facsimile, even to the minute touch, of the draftsman¹s work, where an
artist¹s manner is of any value, the new process, therefore, is
infinitely superior to engraving on wood; capable also of giving
greater delicacy, and very much more minuteness and elaborations² (5).
Kerography can also do ³every thing which can be etched on steel or
copper. The only limit to its use is the capability of
surface-printing. For whatever can be printed from block in relief,
with type or separately, by hand-press or by steam, the new process is
available² (8-9). It also had advantages ³Over lithography: ‹Cheapness
in printing, greater delicacy and sharpness of line, greater certainty
and regularity of impression² (15). Linton
reproduces a sketch by the novelist and illustrator Thackeray in
facsimile. On the sketch, Thackeray writes: ³Dear Sir. Will this print
in relief? If so, one might write and draw
on the same plate. Send me, if possible,
a proof of this, and oblige.‹yours W. M. T² (illus. 1).
It is a drawing of a boy and a caricature of a man, and it is
the only specimen with text, which, even without Thackeray¹s comment
about combining text with image, exemplifies its use to reproduce
handwritten text. [18]
Kerography, which Linton does not explain technically, is a black line method and, not surprisingly, more complicated than he lets on. A copper plate is given ³an ordinary black etching ground² and coated with a layer of white wax, onto which the tracing is transferred so that the design on the plate is in the same direction as the original. The design is incised through the wax and ground with an etching needle, ³bitten in by acid in the same way as an etching, and then a cast taken from it, which would give the lines in relief, and this cast would be produced in hard metal, and probably electrotyped to print from in the ordinary way² (Crane 56). Because the cast reverses the image, the print is the same direction as the original. The technique approximates drawing, in that the design on the wax ground ³would appear in black line, so that the artist could see the effect pretty much as when printed, or as when drawing on paper² (Crane 56). The technique is ideal for reproducing flat, non-tonal line work, which, of course, practically defines Blake¹s relief-etched plates. It ³can be worked at hand-press or machine, with type or without² (Linton, Specimens 3), which made reconstructions and tailpieces possible. Crane describes kerography as ³to some extent an anticipation of some of the later mechanical processes of engraving metal plates of zinc or copper so as to adapt them to surface-printing, although in this case without any photographic agency² (56). [19]
The ³new process² may not have required a ³photographic agency,² i.e., a plate sensitized to accept a projected photographic negative, but it did use photographs. As noted, the Rossetti brothers supplied Linton with ³original drawings, plates, and photographs from which to copy.² At first, this claim appears based not on material fact but on kerography¹s need for models to trace. But an album of Linton¹s preliminary studies for the Life has recently come to light. Titled Blake: Proofs, Photos, Tracings, it is written in the spiky calligraphy that Linton used for the fly-titles (following the tables of contents) in volumes I and II of the Life. ³Proofs² refers to kerographic impressions from the Life; ³photos² refers to black-and-white photographs of illuminated plates that were reduced in size to fit the Life¹s pages and reversed, which means their texts were backwards and that the tracings of these images‹which are not extant‹ had to be counterproofed onto the kerographic plate to provide a print in the same direction as the original; and ³tracings² refers to the tracings in pencil and/or in pen and ink on transparent paper that were made of original images or photographs. [20] The tracings and proofs were Linton¹s doing, no doubt, but the photographs appear to have been Rossetti¹s. Together, these 72 proofs, photographs, and tracings help to clarify puzzling omissions in the Life, such as the Ancient of Days and Urizen designs, and to explain references in the correspondence among the participants to works apparently planned for the Life but not extant, such as Thel facsimiles and Book of Job border designs. They also reveal the originals that Linton copied, the unseen steps behind his facsimile-making technique, and, most interestingly, works initially selected but excluded from the Life. [21]
Cunningham concludes his biographical sketch by asserting that if the public could see the Blake of Songs of Innocence and of Experience, Gates of Paradise, and the Illustrations to the Book of Job, ³his best and most intelligible² works, then it would see that Blake ³was the possessor of very lofty faculties, with no common skill in art, and moreover that, both in thought and mode of treatment, he was a decided original² (181). These three works account for 60 of the 93 facsimiles and reproductions in the Life‹including one headpiece and nine tailpieces.
The seven pages from Innocence and nine from Experience came from ³ten plates² (Life 126), since many of the original plates were etched on both sides. Only nine plates were used, however, because the Experience title plate (which was probably on the verso of the ³Introduction² to Experience, which was not reproduced) was missing. The title plate is a kerograph facsimile, most likely from a tracing of the title plate in Songs copy T, which was then in the British Museum. In the facsimile, the date is missing, as are the bun on the female mourner¹s hair and the flourish on the ³T² in the colophon, and there are added lines in the back wall and columns. [22] The Experience impressions from the electrotypes, but not the title plate or the Innocence impressions, are in the Album.
Gates of Paradise appears to have made everyone¹s top 10 Blake list, though none of the early commentators appears to have realized that For Children and For the Sexes are different works, the former executed in 1793 with 18 plates and the latter consisting of these eighteen plates in their second states, executed c. 1818, and three new text plates. Gilchrist described the former as a ³singularly beautiful and characteristic volume, preeminently marked by significance and simplicity² (Life 101). Mrs. Gilchrist found a note to ³Look in the Gates of Paradise for headings to Chapters,² which she believed ³must refer to illustrations, as there is little or no letter-press² (AG 123). She had ³Mr Denman¹s² copy, which she thought must be ³imperfect,² ³for I find it spoken of as Œone of Blake¹s most beautiful and characteristic books . . . a little foolscap octavo containing sixteen plates of emblems accompanied by verse, with a title or motto to each plate¹² (AG 123). Denman, possibly a relative of Maria Denman, sister-in-law of Flaxman, is not recorded in Blake Books as owning a copy of Gates, but apparently owned a copy of For Children; the missing plates, the ³Keys to the Gates² and ³The Accuser of this World,² were transcribed in the Life probably from Linnell¹s For the Sexes copy B. Linton executed convincing kerograph facsimiles, presumably of Denman¹s copy, of plates 2, 4, 7, 9, 10, 14, 16 (Blake¹s numbers), and the frontispiece, in their first states, impressions of which are in the Album. The other possible model is For Children copy B, which was in the British Museum as of July 1862.
Including Job engravings was an easy decision. Smith notes that they ³received the highest congratulations² from respected Royal Academicians (474), and Cunningham found them to be ³very rare, very beautiful, and very peculiar,² and in ³the earlier fashion of workmanship,² bearing ³no resemblance whatever to the polished and graceful style which now prevails² (177). Ruskin, in his Elements of Drawing (1857), claims that ³in expressing conditions of glaring and flickering light,² Blake, in his Job engravings, ³is greater than Rembrandt² (XV 223). According to Gilchrist, the engravings, ³taken as a grand harmonious whole, [are] an instance of rare individual genius, of the highest art with whatever compared, that certainly constitutes his masterpiece² (137). And it could be taken as a whole because it was the only series reproduced in its entirety ‹which may have prevented the inclusion of Thel facsimiles (see below). It is not clear, however, who decided to include the entire series or who decided on photolithography. Linton¹s comments in the List of Illustrations (xiii) probably reveal part of the original plan for kerographic plates and the revision: ³Three Plates From Job. . . . Two only the centres the same size as the originals, and one reduced to show border. These Plates are given in duplicate in the Series rendered by Photolithography.² [23]
Rossetti began ³the Job chapter² at the end of October 1862, instead of the ³memoir² of Gilchrist, because that ³would be the best decision, as certainly the book would not be complete without some decided notice of the Job, according to Gilchrist¹s original intention² (F 2.500). He sent it to Mrs. Gilchrist on 13 December 1862 (F 2.509). He states: ³Except the Grave, these designs must be known to a larger circle than any other series by Blake; and yet they are by no means so familiar as to render unnecessary such imperfect reproduction of their intricate beauties as the scheme of this work made possible, or even the still more shadowy presentation of verbal description² (Life 285). By ³imperfect reproduction,² Rossetti appears to be referring to Linton¹s kerographs, because the first time he saw a photolithographic proof was a week later, on 19 December 1862: ³The proof you send me is quite a decided improvement, I think, on the other method. Indeed, allowing forth necessary limitation of mechanical means, it seems to me even remarkably successful. I should be much interested to know exactly what the process is² (F 2.517). By 11 February, he knows it is photolithography but questions the wisdom of reproducing all the plates: the Life ³might have been spared . . . without much loss² the ³thickening process² of ³the whole Job series by that photographic method of which specimens would have been sufficient, being of course imperfect though surprising² (DW 475). The decisions to have Job reproduced in the new technique of photolithography and in its entirety appear to have been neither Rossetti¹s nor Linton¹s and possibly made after they finished their work on Job, presumably by Macmillan or Mrs. Gilchrist. [24]
Linton¹s
³imperfect reproductions² were of the center designs of plates 5
and 14, the vignette of plate 15, and the whole design of plate 8. The
angels
bordering the heading for chapter 1 came from plate 18, and, as noted,
the
true-size figures used in nine tailpieces came from plate 12. The Album
contains impressions of plates 5 and 14, a reduced photograph of
Blake's plate 8, and
tracings of all the borders except one (see below). The kerographic
impressions of plates 5 and 14 are set within tracings of the borders,
Slightly more than half of the illustrations in the Life are from Songs, Gates, and the Book of Job. But if the public were to judge Blake¹s ³worth by his Urizen, his Prophecies of Europe and America, and his Jerusalem, our conclusion would be very unfavourable²: i.e., that he ³was unmeaning, mystical, and extravagant, and that his original mode of working out his conceptions was little better than a brilliant way of animating absurdity² (Cunningham 181-82). Gilchrist appears to take this as a challenge, without challenging the idea that the prophecies are incomprehensible, because despite the poetry, the illuminated books provide possibly his firmest grounds for considering Blake an artist. He reproduces many of the illuminated designs described by Cunningham and Smith, along with a selection of his own.
Visions, not mentioned in the obituaries, Smith, or Cunningham, [25] ³partakes of the same delicate mystic beauty as Thel, but tends also towards the incoherence of the writings which immediately followed it² (Life 106). The ³designs . . . are magnificent in energy and portentousness. . . . The title-page is of great beauty; the words are written over rainbow and cloud, from the centre of which emerges an old man in fire, other figures floating round. We give two specimens. One (page 105) illustrates the Argument [plate 3] we have quoted; the other (page 98), an incident in the poem (also quoted), where the eagles of Theotormon rend the flesh of Oothoon [plate 7]² (109). The first ³specimen²‹a telling echo of Linton¹s pamphlet on kerography‹is actually a reconstruction; it is true size and the only one in the chapter discussing Visions; the second is a much reduced detail used as a tailpiece for chapter 11. Figures from the title page were used for the Life¹s fly-title in volume II (with the space between the figures reduced) and for the tailpieces for chapters 17 and 26, the latter to size. A reduced figure of Oothoon in flames and cloud, from plate 11, ends volume II, and is placed under the spiky lettering of ³The End,² in imitation of the Visions¹ ending. All but the reconstruction on page 105 are ornaments whose inclusion appears almost random, determined by the need to fill space rather than illustrate text.
Also
in the Album is the tracing of America plate 13 used to create the
reconstruction on page 112. It is true size, in black wash over pencil,
probably of copy F, ³Mr. Monckton Milnes superb copy²
(Life 111-112),
and squared for reduction (illus.
2). In the space for text are handwritten instructions: ³Chap 14 / size
of page / from America.² Linton also reproduced America plate 7, which is not described but is
positioned exactly: ³Facing page 112. . . we give the fac-simile of a
whole page from the America, an exact fac-simile both as regards
drawing and writing (though reduced to about half the size of the
original)² (111). Plate 13, as noted, has Gilchrist¹s text instead of
Blake¹s, but the original plan was to create facing pages like those in
America copy F. But
what an odd sight that would have been, with plate 13 followed by plate
7, one in black ink and the other in reddish brown, one with a
letterpress text and the other with
Blake¹s handwritten text. (They are
sequential in the 1880 edition.) Gilchrist also singles out plates 14
and 18, but the only other illustration from America is of parts
of the title plate, whose adult figures and flying children ornament
the Life¹s fly-title
in volume I. This is Linton¹s second title page, because Rossetti found
the first to be ³no facsimile from anything of Blake¹s, but a sort of
design by someone else, and I think creates an unfavourable impression
as to the faithfulness of the work generally² (DW 481). [26]
Smith singles out Europe plate 12 in color-printed copy D, which depicts ³two angels pouring out the black spotted plague upon England . . . in which the fore-shorting of the legs, the grandeur of their positions, and the harmony with which they are adapted to each other and to their curved trumpets, are perfectly admirable² (479). Cunningham describes the same plate (178). Linton executed a kerograph reproduction of this plate, along with one of plate 15. Proofs of both plates and letterpress inscriptions are in the Album. The former is titled ³BLIGHTED MAISE. From EUROPE.² and the latter is ³SPIDER¹S WEB.‹From EUROPE.² As printed in the Life, ³Blighted Maise² and the periods in both inscriptions were deleted, the title no doubt on instructions from Rossetti, who recognized it as ³one of the foolish titles written in pencil at haphazard in the Museum copy of Europe [copy D] by a Mr. Palgrave to whom the copy belonged formerly. This ought to be corrected if possible² (DW 483). [27]
There is no preparatory material for Milton in the Album, though Linton reproduced the vignette of Blake¹s Felpham cottage (pl. 40) as the tailpiece for the chapter on Jerusalem and Milton (198), a chapter which Rossetti finished (Dorfman 81). [28] Milton, not mentioned by the previous commentators, seems to have completely baffled Gilchrist. It ³has no perceptible affinity with its title, so the designs it contains seem unconnected with the text. This principle of independence is carried even into Blake¹s own portrait of his cottage at Felpham, p. 198, which bears no accurate resemblance to the real place. In beauty, the drawings do not rank with Blake¹s most notable works² (195). Among the most ³notable works,² though, was Jerusalem, represented in the Life by three reproductions, six reconstructions, three details, one headpiece, and five ornamental tailpieces‹and an unused photograph and tracing in the Album (see below). This attention to the pictorial is warranted, according to Cunningham and Gilchrist, for the images, and not the verses, are where Blake¹s genius lies. Jerusalem is an ³extensive and strange work . . . The crowning defect is obscurity; . . . Yet, if the work be looked at for form and effect rather than for meaning, many figures may be pronounced worthy of Michael Angelo² (Cunningham160-61). Gilchrist similarly evaluates form separately from content, questioning how ³a man of Blake¹s high gifts ever came to produce such; nay, to consider this, as he really did, his greatest work,² while also noting that what is true of Blake¹s designs in Jerusalem is true of all of his art (192). [29]
Rossetti, examining Jerusalem copy A at the British Museum (F 2.492,
496), described a dozen plates and eight vignettes, including ³the
Crucifixion [plate 76],² ³an eagle-headed creature² [plate 78],²
³serpent-women . . . coiled with serpents [plate 63, 75],²
³Assyrian-looking human-visaged bulls . . . yoked to the plough or the
chariot [plates 33, 46],² ³rough intersecting circles, each containing
some hint of an angel [plate 75],² all ³unmistakable exponents of
genius² (194-195). Linton reproduced plates 39, 76, and 78, and
arranged on page 194 the vignettes from plates 33, 75, and 98 in loose
imitation of an illuminated page. The marginal decorations from plates
12, 5, and 7 accompany the text from plate 27 (³To the Jews²) to
reconstruct the look of illuminated pages (186-88). The top vignettes
from plates 3 and 77 are also reconstructed with type (183, 2.2). He
reproduced the illustration from plate 32, ³Jerusalem and her three
daughters² (193), and figures from plates 3, 9, 8, 12, and 62 as
tailpieces (with those from plates 3 and 9 reproduced true size), and
from plate 58 as a headpiece (27, 50, 75, 186, 209, 216, 51). In the
Album are
impressions of plates 39 and 76, a proof impression of plate 78, and
true-size tracings (ink over pencil and
squared for reduction) of the marginal designs from plates 12, 5, 7,
77, 75, 33, 98, and 62 (illus. 3).
The controversial Canterbury Pilgrims engraving was another obvious choice. The reproduction, a special project, was engraved in outline by Charles Simms, 1861, with details of eleven heads (from the Sompnour to the three priests) below the design, and printed on a long sheet (22.2 x 25.cm) folded into the book at page 230, within chapter 35, ³Appeal to the Public, 1808-10.² It is described in the List of Illustrations as ³Reduced from Blake¹s large Plate. The Heads under it done the size and in the style of the original.² Another engraving whose heads were reproduced ³the size and in the style of the original² was The Accusers, from 1793, which is not described in the text. Listed as ³A Plate (part of it)² (xiii) and used as a tailpiece to end the chapter on Visionary Heads, it is basically an ornament. The only other facsimile of an engraving might as well have been a detail. It is the tiny (3.2 x 8.0 cm) calling card that Blake executed in 1827 for George Cumberland (356), an impression of which is in the Album. The other project from the end of Blake¹s life, the Dante illustrations, consisting of 102 watercolors and seven engravings, has only one work reproduced, The Circle of the Traitors, reduced 66% but in the style of the engraving (334).
Nor are the illustrations to Night Thoughts, the work mentioned in the obits and other early commentaries, represented. This, however, is less surprising, since Gilchrist, like Cunningham, considered them failures: ³looked at merely as marginal book illustrations, the engravings are not strikingly successful. The space to be filled in these folio pages is of itself too large, and the size of the outlines is aesthetically anything but a gain² (140). The ³whole series exemplifies . . . [h]ow little Blake was adapted to ingratiate himself with the public² (140). According to William Rossetti, Linnell thought so little of them that he refused to believe that they were engraved by Blake. [30] The Grave is barely present in the Life. Gilchrist describes seven designs but reproduces only two, Death¹s Door very much reduced in outline (a mere 6.5 x 4.1 cm.) and used as a tailpiece ending the chapter that discusses The Grave, and the vignette of angels and old man from Death of the Good Man used as a tailpiece ending the chapter on Blake¹s death. The latter was executed by Linton as a favor to Mrs. Gilchrist (Smith, Radical 147). These are the only two designs Cunningham singles out. Upon closer look, The Grave¹s near absence may not be so puzzling. Because his drawings for the Grave were ³really published and pushed in the regular way, Blake is most widely known‹known at all, I may say‹to the public at large. It is the only volume, with his name on its title-page, which is not Œscarce¹² (Life 200).
Engravings, though given short shrift, fare much better than the watercolor drawings and tempera paintings. A dozen or so of the former are mentioned or briefly described. Jacob¹s Dream, for example, is ³a poetic and beautiful composition² (216), the Whore of Babylon is a ³grandly-conceived scene from the apocalyptic vision² (242), and Dream of Queen Katherine is ³among Blake¹s most highly finished and elaborate water-colour drawings, and one of his most beautiful and imaginative² (358). But only the 1805 version of Pestilence (Butlin 193), entitled Plague, is reproduced, and that much reduced, ornamented above and below the frame with details of two heads (54). An impression from the Life is in the Album. Gilchrist mentions the "118" (sic) Gray illustrations in passing (333) and was unaware of the 537 Night Thoughts illustrations, assuming that ³a complete set of drawings . . . had been made² for the 43 Night Thoughts engravings only, ³which were afterwards sold . . . and passed into one of the royal collections² (139-140). Neither series is recorded in William Rossetti¹s Catalogue. These are serious omissions, as the two series account for more than half of all of Blake¹s extant watercolors. Nor did Gilchrist or William Rossetti know of Joseph Thomas¹s sets of Milton illustrations (Comus, Paradise Lost, and On the Morning of Christ¹s Nativity). Gilchrist mentions Paradise Regained and the Butts set of illustrations to Paradise Lost only in passing (335); William Rossetti felt that the former was ³less inspired than usual and comparatively tame² (Gohdes and Baum 11). [31]
Drawings, less substantial and consequential than Blake¹s literary and biblical watercolors and paintings, were better represented, probably because Linton had access to Blake¹s Notebook‹and a reproductive technique more suitable to line. Five of the thirteen drawings in the Life are from the Notebook (pages 17, 44, 74, 67, and 75), all to size and all used as tailpieces (60, 89, 137, 172, 182), with only the drawing of Nebuchadnezzar, ³a fac-simile of what was probably the original sketch for² Marriage plate 24, fitting the chapter in which it appears (89). The drawing on page 137 looks like flames because it turns the hairs of an Urizenic beard (Notebook 75) upside down. A pen-and-ink wash drawing for Wollstonecraft¹s Original Stories for Children (91) and a pencil drawing of Mrs. Blake¹s portrait (318) are also reproduced. The other six drawings, much reduced, are from the Visionary Heads, three of which were mentioned by Cunningham. The Ghost of a Flea is reproduced with mouth open, as in Varley. Reproduced as headpiece to the chapter on the Visionary Heads is "Five Visionary Heads of Women," which was owned by Mrs. Gilchrist. Pencil tracings of this drawing, to size and squared for reduction, and of the drawing from Notebook 17 are in the Album.
As we have seen, Gilchrist reproduces designs from nearly all the books or series listed in the public record, and in many instances reproduces the specific work mentioned or described. The inclusions are less surprising, however, than the exclusions, particularly when the works were in the Album. These include posthumous impressions of ³A Divine Image² and ³A Little Boy Lost.² The former, only the seventh impression extant, was not mentioned in the Life and appears not to have been known to Gilchrist. A penis has been added to the kneeling figure in ³A Divine Image,² drawn in black ink with touches of white highlight. Left and top margins were partly wiped of ink. It appears likely that these were considered for kerographs, which would have given the Life 18 Songs facsimiles. [32]
As
noted, Gilchrist thought the Visions title page was ³of great beauty² (Life 109), though it was not reproduced. A
tracing of it in ink over pencil (probably of copy A or B, the British
Museum copies) is in the Album (illus. 4). It
provided the ornaments for volume II¹s
fly-title and the tailpieces for chapters 17 and 26.
More of the Visions might have made it into the Life had Mrs. Gilchrist not feared that the
publisher, Macmillan, would censure her. William Rossetti had written
insightfully about Visions¹ posing a ³formidable question² about how
³ascetic doctrines in theology and morals have involved the relation of
the sexes,² a question ³in whose cause [Blake] is never tired of
uprearing the banner of heresy and nonconformity² (AG 127). Mrs.
Gilchrist replies that she was ³afraid to
adopt entirely² his ³most vigorous and admirable² commentary because
³it was no use to put in what I was perfectly certain Macmillan (who
reads all the Proofs) would take out again. I am certain of this from
past experiences.² The sheets had already been set up twice and kept
production at a standstill for three weeks, so, to prevent further
delay, she
therefore Œreduced the subject¹ to still less‹to a very shadowy condition indeed‹but left enough, I trust, for the cause of truth and honesty. It might be well perhaps to mention to Mr. Swinburne, if he is so kind as to do what was proposed, that it would be perfectly useless to attempt to handle this side of Blake¹s writings‹that Mr. Macmillan is far more inexorable against any shade of heterodoxy in morals than in religionŠ. (AG 128)
Swinburne, who was interested in writing about Blake¹s ideas on religion and sex, referred to the publisher as ³the chaste Macmillan² and to Mrs. Gilchrist as ³Virtuous editor² (Swinburne, Letters 1:59-60). [33]
From America,
Smith singles out plate 14 (³another instance of Mr. Blake¹s favourite
figure of the old man entering at Death¹s door²) and plate 15, whose
³tail-piece represents the bottom of the sea, with various fishes
coming together to prey upon a dead body. The head piece is another
dead body lying on the surface of the waters, with an eagle feeding
upon it with outstretched wings² (477). Both Cunningham and Gilchrist
repeat this description (178, 113). Despite‹or because of‹the attention
paid to plate 15, it was not reproduced. A reversed photograph of this
plate, however, reduced to the size of the kerographic reproductions,
is in Linton¹s
Album, the first step in the selection process (illus. 5). Also in the
Album are reduced, reversed photographs of Europe plate 10 and‹to no surprise at all‹the Ancient
of Days. These photographs are of
a monochrome copy, possibly copy a, which was probably the model for
the reproductions of Europe plates 12 and 15.
Today, Ancient of Days is Blake¹s best-known image. Even then, it must have been well known. Smith states that if he were to compare Blake¹s ³giant forms . . . to the style of any preceding artist, Michel Angelo, Sir Joshua¹s favourite, would be the one; and were I to select a specimen as a corroboration of this opinion, I should instance the figure personifying the ŒAncient of Days,¹ . . . In my mind, his knowledge of drawing, as well as design, displayed in this figure, must at once convince the informed reader of his extraordinary abilities² (466). It was Blake¹s ³favourite² (Smith 478, Cunningham 179). Gilchrist also quotes Smith on the subject (127-128). Its absence from the Life is a mystery. Why include ³Spider¹s Web² instead? Did Rossetti or Macmillan veto the choice‹or was it Linton who decided not to take it to the tracing stage? In any event, the Ancient of Days had to wait till 1878 to be lithographically reproduced, as the frontispiece to Europe, in Works by William Blake (dated 1876 on the title page).
Also
missing, but not unexpectedly, is Urizen. It was not mentioned in the obituaries
or by Smith, though Cunningham had seen a copy and Gilchrist had
examined Milnes¹s beautiful late copy G. To Cunningham, ³Urizen, has
the merit or the fault of surpassing all human comprehension. . . . nor
does the strange kind of prose which is intermingled with the figures
serve to enlighten us. . . . He swims in gulphs of fire‹descends in
cataracts of flame‹holds combats with scaly serpents, or writhes in
anguish without any visible cause [plates 12? 6, 25, 7]² (155-156).
According to Gilchrist, Urizen, like ³its predecessors . . . is
shapeless, unfathomable; but in the heaping up of gloomy and terrible
images, the America and Europe are even exceeded² (130-31). The figures
are ³howling, weeping, writhing, or chained to rocks, or hurled
headlong into the abyss. . . . an old, amphibious-looking giant, with
rueful visage, letting himself sink slowly through the waters like a
frog [plate 12]; a skeleton coiled round resembling a fossil giant
imbedded in the rock [plate 8], etc.² (131-32). In the Album are a
reversed photograph, to size of the original, of plate 12, pasted in
upside down, so the figure looks like he is sinking, and a tracing in ink
over pencil of the skeleton in plate 8
(illus. 6). The latter work is inscribed ³from Europe.² The model for
the photograph and tracing was Milnes¹s copy G.
Milnes also owned a color-printed copy of Marriage (F), which Gilchrist alone praised highly. Marriage has no illustrations in the Life other than the running figure from plate 3 used as an unlisted tailpiece (241). It has no preparatory material in the Album. This is another odd omission, given Gilchrist¹s commentary: ³In the track of the mystical Book of Thel came in 1790 the still more mystical Marriage of Heaven and Hell, . . . perhaps the most curious and significant, while it is certainly the most daring in conception and gorgeous in illustration of all Blake¹s works² (78). Gilchrist quotes the text extensively (78-86) and describes all the designs (86-89). ³The power of these wild utterances is enhanced to the utmost by the rich adornments of design and colour in which they are set‹designs as imaginative as the text, colour which has the lustre of jewels² (86). Perhaps Gilchrist‹or Mrs. Gilchrist or Rossetti‹suspected that the nudity (plates 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 14, 21, 24) would make reproductions unacceptable to Macmillan. Palmer told Mrs. Gilchrist that there was much that ³would at once exclude the work from every drawing-room table in England² (Bentley, Blake Records 319n1). Fear of censure may have kept Linton from reproducing Jerusalem plate 63, one of the ³serpent-women . . . coiled with serpents² singled out by Rossetti (194). Linton had prepared a tracing of this vignette to size, in ink over pencil, but did not square it for reduction (illus. 3). A reversed, reduced photograph of plate 46, described by Rossetti as ³Assyrian-looking human-visaged bulls . . . yoked to the plough or the chariot² (194), is also in the Album.
As noted, the kerographic ³facsimiles² were printed on separate leaves in reddish-brown ink but described as being ³in colour² (xiv). It appears, though, that Mrs. Gilchrist and Linton had planned to produce all of Thel in color, possibly because Mrs. Gilchrist, in going through Gilchrist¹s notes, found ³that Thel was to be given entire² (AG 124). Whether this referred to texts or illustrations is not clear; the text eventually was reproduced, but the illustrations appear to have been derailed by Rossetti, who, in January 1863, writes Mrs. Gilchrist:
How about The Book of Thel? Where is it to come in the volume? If it is to be a facsimile affair it had better not interrupt the comfort of Part II but seek some corner of its own . . . It would have been much better to let it take its place with the other writings and leave the attempts at colour alone, as it is sure to be a failure. (DW 473)
The subject of Thel was also discussed in an undated February letter:
If anything
were to be
omitted the Revolution
extracts and the Thel
are the only things which would be no very desperate loss, but you told me of some
plan going
on with the Thel which
no doubt
puts this out of the question‹a plan of colouring‹of a very
hopeless nature (as well as expensive) by the bye, and likely to serve
no
purpose except to produce an impression of Blake¹s coloured works at
their worst instead of their best. (DW 475)
Rossetti apparently
lost no time speaking with Linton as well, for in an undated February
1863 letter to Mrs. Gilchrist he states: ³I have heard nothing of the
two volume plan, but spoke of it to Linton the other day‹he having
written to me about the illustrations over which I went and consulted
with him. The Plates of the Songs, Thel, and Job, are all to come together at the end, and
I shall preface them with a few remarks. The Thel fortunately is only to be printed in
(brown) monochrome. The illustrations on the whole are more
satisfactory than I had anticipated² (DW 477). Apparently, Rossetti
either convinced Linton that Thel, were it to be printed, should resemble
the other reproductions and facsimiles, in reddish-brown ink, or Mrs.
Gilchrist misspoke. But it is not clear from Rossetti¹s comments whether the Thel was executed. The prints themselves are
not known, but true-size pencil tracings for
all the plates except the motto are in the Album. The tracing of plate
3 was used to create the reconstruction (2.71), unlisted in the Life (illus. 7).
The
Album also contains, most surprisingly, pencil tracings of the borders
of all the Job plates except plate 4, all drawn true size
(approximately 21.9 x 17.1 cm.) and not squared for reduction
(illus. 8). The borders for plates 5 and 14 are pasted over Linton¹s
facsimiles of the central designs of these plates. It appears that
Linton intended to use the borders, reduced in size, as page designs
like his America plate 13
(112). [34]
Rossetti¹s letters to Gilchrist on 18 June and 23 August of 1861
suggests the same: ³Wiegand brought me . . . another plate he is doing
for your book, a Job
border with the America
head-piece in the middle² (F 2.374). ³Wiegand was here yesterday, and
said several Job
drawings were gone to be bitten in; and that a lot more are of various
kinds. . . . Linton sent me a book of specimens of his new style² (F
2.396). [35]
Apparently, Wiegand was assisting Linton in preparing the tracings
(³drawings²) for kerographic plates
(³bitten in²) that were meant as decorative borders but which were
ultimately rejected by either Macmillan or Rossetti, probably because,
by December of 1862, Job was being reproduced in its entirety in the
new technique of photolithography (F 2.517).
Conclusion
The 116 illustrations picture 22 different works or series, of which nine are illuminated books and nearly all the others are engravings and drawings. Only one watercolor is reproduced. This was the first time the general public saw reproductions of Blake¹s art and poetry, though given what was actually reproduced, they saw mostly Blake¹s graphic art and the art of his poetry. Gilchrist seems keenly aware of the need to reproduce the poetry visually, but also of the limitations of his facsimiles, or ³specimens²: ³Of the beauty of most of these designs, in their finished state, it would be quite impossible to obtain any notion, without the necessary adjunct of colour. The specimens . . . can at best only show form and arrangement‹the groundwork of the pages; the frames as it were in which the verses are set² (111). Nevertheless, for a public that had never seen an illuminated plate, these were indeed worth a thousand words. Readers, not knowing what to expect, expected very little‹and the question of accuracy did not haunt editors then as it does now. [36] Gilchrist, however, appears motivated less by editorial concerns about authorial intentions than by his locating in book illustrations the true genius of Blake. The poet he praises and represents in the Selections is the lyrical poet, with works taken exclusively from Poetical Sketches, Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience, Book of Thel, and the Notebook. The poet of Visions, America, Europe, Urizen, Milton, and Jerusalem eludes‹and often embarrasses‹him as well as Rossetti. These ³incomprehensible² texts, divorced from their original forms, put Blake at a particular disadvantage that is, fortunately, more than countered by the ³sublime² artwork. What Cunningham said of the Ancient of Days was said and felt to be equally true of these ³Prophetic Books²: ³admired less for its meaning than the grandeur of its outline² (178).
In his Supplementary chapter, Rossetti agrees with Smith about Blake¹s being a great colorist (475, 482) and acknowledges that to know Blake¹s art requires studying more than just reproductions and facsimiles. He advises ³the reader who wishes to study Blake as a colourist² to go to the things themselves, to the British Museum Print Room (373). He cautions, however, that ³All those in the collection are not equally valuable, since the various copies of Blake¹s own colouring differ extremely in finish and richness . . . . and some others of his works are there represented by copies which, I feel convinced, are not coloured by Blake¹s hand at all, but got up more or less in his manner, and brought into the market after his death² (373). He thinks the museum¹s copy of Songs (T1-2) is a poor one, but singles out two volumes, Song of Los (A) and Small Book of Designs (A), the latter described in Smith as ³coloured . . . with a degree of splendour and force, as almost to resemble sketches in oil colours² (479). Rossetti describes three in detail and four more generally, and, overall, prefers color-printed designs to those washed in watercolors (Life 374-75). [37]
Even without color, the illuminated plates are, relatively speaking, well represented, in appearance and in numbers, perhaps because Gilchrist agreed with Smith that
Blake¹s talent is not to be seen in his engravings from the designs of other artists, though he certainly honestly endeavoured to copy the beauties of Stothard, Flaxman, and those masters set before him by the few publishers who employed him; but his own engravings from his own mind are the productions which the man of true feeling must ever admire, and the predictions of Fuseli and Flaxman may hereafter be verified‹ŒThat a time will come when Blake¹s finest works will be as much sought after and treasured up in the portfolios of men of mind, as those of Michel Angelo are at present¹. (474)
But one must wonder whether reproductive technology was also driving the selection process. Linton¹s new process of kerography was best adapted for line work and not tone, and thus drawings, relief etchings, etchings, and engravings were more easily and successfully reproduced in facsimile than watercolors and paintings. The public now knew more about Blake, more facts and stories of his life, more of what he wrote and executed as printmaker and painter, but the works that they were able to see and read for themselves were mostly the poems, in letterpress, reconstruction, reproduction, and facsimile. The consequence is that Blake, the unknown painter, is portrayed primarily as printmaker-poet.
There is no doubt that the Life stimulated an interest in Blake¹s poetry and, in doing so, raised the question of how it was to be represented, in type or in facsimile. By 1868, Swinburne, in his William Blake: A Critical Essay, had provided the rationalization for editing Blake without images, for turning to Blake¹s advantage the limitations of print technology as a means for reproducing Blake pictorially (Eaves 109-114). Reproducing images required skilled artisans or new technologies, both of which increased the cost of production. Printing the poetry in type provided Blake with a much larger audience and enabled him to enter the canon. As Eaves notes, technological and economic ³necessity favored a literary Blake; a printed edition went to the top of the post-Gilchrist agenda. . . . Here is the straight road of literacy and legibility. A succession of editors, including William Rossetti (1874), Sampson (1905), Keynes (1925), and Plowman (1927), opened the way for the next (and perhaps the last) generation of Blake¹s literary editors, notably David V. Erdman and G. E. Bentley, Jr.² (114).
On the other hand, the Life, with its reproductions and facsimiles, created an interest in the poetry as originally presented. It gave rise to the idea that abstracting texts typographically from artifacts in which they are embodied (and versioned) ignored and distorted Blake¹s original intentions and the way meaning in illuminated books is created. The first to produce a full color facsimile was Swinburne¹s own publisher, John Camden Hotten. His color lithographic facsimile of Marriage copy F, also produced in 1868, would have been the first in what was to have been a complete series had the lithographer, Henry Bellars, not died. [38] A succession of lithographic facsimiles followed in the next two decades, including John Pearson¹s Jerusalem (1877), Works by William Blake (1878), William Muir¹s series of facsimiles from the Edmonton Press (1880s), and the third volume of Ellis and Yeats¹s The Works of William Blake (1893). The rationalization for the William Blake Trust facsimiles, beginning in the 1950s, and the digital facsimiles of the William Blake Archive, beginning in the 1990s, can be traced back to Gilchrist¹s and Linton¹s editorial example, if not their understanding or critique of Blake¹s poetry.
Gilchrist¹s taste and preferences, along with those of the Rossettis, his wife, illustrator, publisher, and the first biographers, all affected the List of Illustrations. So, too, did a reproductive technology that favored line over tone. With the exception of the Job border tracings, which were in effect made redundant, the seventeen illustrations in Linton¹s Album that did not appear in the Life are all from illuminated plates. They were all considered candidates for the Life, with the photographs making it past the first jury and the tracings past the second. Their exclusion may have been due to subject matter or lack of space, and possibly not Linton¹s or Rossetti¹s decision. But their existence‹and the absence of tracings and photographs of watercolor drawings and paintings other than Pestilence‹reinforces the argument that Gilchrist and the others preferred the printmaker-poet to the painter. The kinds of images that could get through the technological filter more or less intact were relief etchings reproduced as kerographs or lithographs, and as a consequence, while the poetry was making its way into printed editions, this area of Blake¹s artistic production was the first to be reproduced and quickly dominated Blake reproductions after the Life. Given the kinds of works represented in the Life and immediately afterwards, Blake¹s greatness as an artist appeared to lie primarily in the art of the book. It took another 62 years, with Darrell Figgis¹s The Paintings of William Blake (London, 1925) and its100 continuous tone collotypes and color photogravures of Blake¹s Milton designs, color-print drawings, biblical watercolors, and temperas, to create a more balanced picture and reveal that the greatness of the ³Pictor Ignotus² also lies in his works as a painter.
ILLUSTRATIONS
1. Linton, Specimens of a New Process of Engraving for Surface-Printing. Pages 4 and 5, showing three specimens of kerographs imitating pencil drawing, lithograph, and wood engraving, including ³An Experimental Drawing by Mr. Thackeray.²
2. America a Prophecy, plate 13. Tracing in ink over pencil, squared for reduction, 23.3 x 17.2 cm. The design was reproduced in the Life at page 112, reduced to 17.3 x 11.5 cm. The model was R. M. Milnes¹s copy F.
3. Jerusalem plates 33, 98, 63. Tracings in ink over pencil, to size, on three strips of transparent paper, 14.7 x 5.1 cm, 14.7 x 3.5 cm, 14.8 x 7.6 cm. The first and second vignettes were squared for reduction and used in the Life at page194, reduced to 2.3 x 10.6 cm and 1.5 x 10.6 cm respectively. The third and perhaps the most erotic of the Jerusalem vignettes was not squared or used in the Life. The model was R. M. Milnes¹s copy I.
4. Visions of the Daughters of Albion, plate 2. Tracing in pencil, to size, trimmed to 17 x 12.8 cm. The figure of Oothoon running was reproduced to size in the Life at page124; the fiends in the clouds were used in the fly-title in volume II, where they are reproduced to size but in an altered arrangement; the reclining figure at left was reproduced reduced at page160. The model was copy A or B, both in the British Museum.
5. America a Prophecy, plate 15. Reversed photograph, trimmed to within the plate borders, 15.6 x 11.4 cm, with tear in lines 7-8. Not reproduced in the Life. The model was R. M. Milnes¹s copy F.
6. Urizen plate 8. Tracing in ink over pencil, to size, 11.4 x 9.9 cm, on transparent paper, 14.0 x 12.7 cm, misidentified in pencil as ³from Europe.² Not reproduced in the Life. The model was R. M. Milnes¹s copy G.
7. The Book of Thel, plate 3. Tracing in pencil (tear in the top right corner), to size on sheet 18.5 x 12.8 cm. Top vignette only used in reconstruction in Life at page 2.71. The model was either R. M. Milnes¹s copy B or British Museum¹s copy D.
8. Illustrations of the Book of Job, plate 12. Tracing in pencil, to size, 21.9 x 17.1 cm. Figures from the border were used as tailpieces throughout the Life, at pages 11, 42, 118, 126, 233, 248, 2.97, 2.111, and 2.116.
WORKS CITED
Bartram,
Michael. The Pre Raphaelite
Camera, Aspects of Victorian Photography
(Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1985).
Baum, Paull Franklin and Clarence Gohdes, eds. Letters of William Michael Rossetti Concerning Whitman, Blake, and Shelley to Anne Gilchrist and her Son Herbert Gilchrist (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1931).
Bentley, G. E. Jr., Blake Books (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1977).
------. Blake Records (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969).
------.William Blake: The Critical Heritage (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1975).
Bridson, Gavin and Geoffrey Wakeman. Printmaking & Picture Printing : A Bibliographical Guide to Artistic & Industrial Techniques in Britain, 1750-1900 (Oxford: Plough Press, 1984).
Butlin, Martin. The Paintings and Drawings of William Blake (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1981).
Carey, Frances. ³James Smetham (1821-89) and Gilchrist¹s Life of Blake² Blake Newsletter 8 (Summer-Fall 1974): 17-25.
Crane, Walter. An Artist¹s Reminiscences (London: Methuen, 1907).
Cunningham, Allan. ³Life of Blake,² in The Lives of the Most Eminent British Painters, Sculptors, and Architects (London, 1830; reprinted in Wittreich).
Dorfman, Deborah. Blake in the 19th Century (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969).
Doughty, Oswald and John Robert Wahl, eds., Letters of Dante Gabriel Rossetti , volume II, 1861-1867 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1965).
Eaves, Morris. ³Graphicality: Multimedia Fables for ŒTextual¹Critics.² Reimagining Textuality: Textual Studies in the Late Age of Print, eds. Neil Fraistat and Elizabeth Bergmann Loiseaux (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2002): 99-122.
Engen, Rodney K. Dictionary of Victorian Wood Engravers (Cambridge: Chadwyck-Healey, 1985).
------. Pre-Raphaelite Prints (London: Lund Humphries Publishers, 1995).
Essick, Robert N.
³The Virgil Wood Engravings in Alexander Gilchrist¹s Life of
William Blake.² The Book
Collector 40 (1991): 579-81.
Fredeman, William E.,
ed. The Correspondence of Dante Gabriel Rossetti: The Formative
Years, 1835-1862, 2 vols.
(Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2002).
------. ³W. J. Linton¹s Tailpieces in Gilchrist¹s Life of William Blake.² Blake, An Illustrated Quarterly 14 (Spring 1981): 208-211.
Gilchrist, Alexander. Life of Blake, Pictor Ignotus (London: Macmillan, 1863).
Gilchrist, Herbert. Anne Gilchrist, Her Life and Writings (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1887).
Hoover, Suzanne R. ³William Blake in the Wilderness: A Closer Look at his Reputation 1827 1863.² William Blake: Essays in Honour of Sir Geoffrey Keynes, eds. Morton D. Paley and Michael Phillips (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1973), 310-48.
Linton, W. J. Memories (London: Lawrence and Bullen, 1895; reprinted New York: Augustus M. Kelley, 1970).
------. Specimens of a new Process of Engraving for Surface-Printing (London, 1861).
Malkin, Benjamin Heath. A Father¹s Memoirs of His Child (London 1806; reprinted in Wittreich).
Maré, Eric de. The Victorian Woodblock Illustrators (New York: the Sandstone Press, 1981).
Marsh, Jan. ³¹Hoping
you will not think me too fastidious¹: Pre-Raphaelite Artists and the
Moxon Tennyson.² JPRAS 2:1 (Spring 1989): 11-15.
Smith, Joseph. Nollekens and His Times (London,1828; reprinted in Wittreich).
Swinburne, Algernon. The Swinburne Letters, 6 vols. Ed. Cecil Y. Lang (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1959-62).
------. William Blake: A Critical Essay (London, 1868).
Viscomi, Joseph. Blake and the Idea of the Book (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993).
Wittreich, Joseph. 19th Century Accounts of William Blake (Gainseville, Florida: Scholars¹ Facsimiles & Reprints, 1970).
[*] Blake, Empire, and
Nation. Eds. Steven Clarke and David Worrall. London: Palgrave,
2005.
I am grateful to Brent Kinser, co-editor of the Carlyle letters, for
informing me about Carlyle¹s letter to Chapman and to Robert Essick,
Morton Paley, Jerome McGann, Morris Eaves, and Denise Vultee for
reading early versions of this essay and for their helpful suggestions.
[1] The history of
Blake¹s reception between his death in 1827 and his biography in 1863
has been presented in admirable detail by Deborah Dorfman, Blake in the 19th Century
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969), Shirley Dent and Jason
Wittaker, Radical Blake: Influence
and Afterlife from 1827 (London: Palgrave, 2002), and,
especially, Suzanne R.
Hoover, ³William Blake in the Wilderness: A Closer Look at his
Reputation 1827 1863,² William Blake: Essays in Honour of Sir
Geoffrey Keynes, eds. Morton D. Paley and Michael Phillips (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1973), 310-48. See also G. E. Bentley Jr., Blake
Books (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1977),
15-24, Blake Records (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969), and William
Blake: The Critical Heritage (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul,
1975). The main pre-1863 texts on Blake are reproduced in facsimile in Joseph Wittreich, 19th Century Accounts
of William Blake (Gainseville, Florida: Scholars¹ Facsimiles &
Reprints, 1970). All references to Malkin, Smith, and Cunningham are to
this volume, followed by the page numbers of the original publication.
[2] Cunningham¹s biography is 51 pages long in the second edition, also 1830 (reprinted 1880, 1886, and 1893), because Cunningham added seven poems and six paragraphs on the poetry that soften somewhat his initial harsh criticism. The seven poems are from Poetical Sketches and the Songs of Innocence and of Experience. Cunningham¹s sketch had the most currency but was actually the least informed. ³The Tiger² (sic) is mistakenly assumed to be one of the Poetical Sketches, the year of Blake¹s death is given as 1828, Europe and America are said to have been executed after the ³Inventions² to the Book of Job, and Jerusalem and Milton before The Grave. Numerous works are described without first-hand examination. Smith knew Blake and saw his works, but his detailed descriptions of Experience, Europe, America, and the Small and Large Book of Designs were written by Richard Thomas, librarian of the London Institute.
[3] To see how image can be interpreted as decorative and text as authentic and essential, how an ³antivisual tradition identifies reality with ideas in language and associates pictures with excess and the ornamentation or distortion of reality, and thus with entertainment, fantasy, and luxury,² see Morris Eaves, ³Graphicality: Multimedia Fables for ŒTextual¹ Critics,² Reimagining Textuality: Textual Studies in the Late Age of Print, eds. Neil Fraistat and Elizabeth Bergmann Loiseaux (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2002), 109. Eaves¹s primary objective is to explain how Swinburne could ³rationalize the editorial separation² of image and word in the typographic editions of Blake¹s poetry (113).
[4] See F. B. Smith, Radical Artisan, William
James
Linton 1812-97 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1973),
146-47; see also Linton, Three Score and Ten Years: 1820-1890
Recollections
(London:
Lawrence and Bullen, 1895, reprinted as Memories, New York: Augustus M. Kelley, 1970), 181,
and Walter
Crane, An Artist¹s Reminiscences (London: Methuen, 1907), 57. Crane, who was
an apprentice of
Linton¹s from 1859 through 1862, when Linton worked on the Life, claims unequivocally that all the
illustrations
executed by Linton are kerographs.
[5] Details from Job
engravings (angels from plates 5,
15, and 16) were reproduced in Anna Brownell Jameson, Sacred and
Legendary
Art (London, 1848). Plate 1
of Job, much reduced and with foreground altered, was published in
America in 1836, in The English
Version of the Polyglott Bible (Northampton, MA, and Buffalo,
NY). Also in America,
eleven of the twelve Grave
designs
(minus plate 3) were re-engraved one-quarter size by A. L. Dick in
1847,
reissued in 1858; two of these plates were reproduced in1858 in Littell¹s
Living Age magazine,
published in
Boston (see Bentley, Blake Books
534, 720, 730).
[6] Palmer and other young
artists who befriended Blake
in the last years of his life called him the ³Interpreter² and
themselves the ³Ancients.² He was also John Linnell¹s
son-in-law and, like Linnell, provided Gilchrist with much first-hand
information about Blake. His letter is from November 1863 and is quoted
from
Herbert Gilchrist, Anne Gilchrist, Her Life and Writings (London:
T. Fisher Unwin, 1887), 143. Hereafter cited as AG.
[7] Oswald Doughty and John
Robert Wahl, eds., Letters
of Dante Gabriel Rossetti , volume
II, 1861-1867 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1965), 489. Hereafter cited as
DW.
Volume I and most of volume II of this four volume edition has now been
superceded by William E. Fredeman, ed. The Correspondence of Dante
Gabriel
Rossetti: The Formative Years, 1835-1862,
volume I, 1835-54, volume II, 1855-61 (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2002).
Hereafter cited as F 1 and F 2.
[8] The lines are: ³The
sanctuary¹s gloom at
least shall ward / Vain tongues from where my pictures stand apart.²
Doughty and Wahl state that the suggestion was followed in both the
1863 and
1880 editions (483n3). They are mistaken.
[9]
Gilchrist had intended a two-part biography in one volume, with
selections from the poetry to go in Part II. But he died suddenly of
scarlet fever on 30 November 1861, leaving the biography almost
completed but the Selections only sketched out and unedited. Rossetti,
who lent Gilchrist Blake¹s Notebook (then called the Rossetti
Manuscript), had been advising him about Blake¹s poetry since November
1860 (F 2.326). On 5 December 1861, one week after Gilchrist died,
Rossetti offered Mrs. Gilchrist his and his brother¹s assistance in
completing the Life (F
2.425). A little more than two months later, on 11 February 1862,
Rossetti¹s wife Elizabeth (Lizzie) died of
an overdose of laudanum. He and Mrs. Gilchrist appear to have worked on
the Life, at least in
part, to ward off
grief. On 2 March, he tells her: ³But I already begin to find the
inactive moments the most unbearable and must hope for the power, . . .
of working steadily without delay² (F 2.457). He tells Linton that ³the
only possible refuge will be in work² (F 2.459). On the first
anniversary of Lizzie¹s death, he writes Mrs. Gilchrist that ³it would
be an infinite pity² if the Lifeshould not come thoroughly and include a
properly and competently edited collection of his writings. Indeed I
almost fancy that the really best plan, if this curtailment is to take
place, would be to include no unpublished matter [poems in the
Notebook] and let that come harmoniously as a whole in some separate
form which I should see to, having always meant to do so. To mutilate
the Songs would be a real sin, . . . If anything were to be omitted the
Revolution extracts and
the Thel are the only
things which would be no very desperate loss. . . . (DW 475).
[10] See Bentley, Blake Books 429, for a history of the electrotypes, and Robert N. Essick, ³The Virgil Wood Engravings in Alexander Gilchrist¹s Life of William Blake,² The Book Collector 40 (1991), 579-81. Electrotypes could be mounted on blocks to be type-high and thus printed with the type.
[11] At the time of
Gilchrist¹s death, only eight
chapters had been set in type (Life
v). These eight have five tailpieces, though probably not when proofed.
The
final number and placement of tailpieces‹and presumably their creation,
which was usually size specific‹ could not have been selected until the
chapters were proofed and set for final printing. F. B. Smith believes
that the
tailpieces in volume II ³at pages 24, 97, 111, and 116 reveal
Linton¹s usual wispy line and moreover do not . . . appear elsewhere in
Blake¹s oeuvre² (Radical
147-48). Actually, the last three are from the Book of Job plate 12;
the first
one, though, and the tailpieces at 307 and 367 (a slouching figure, a
sunset,
and cliffs, respectively) are almost certainly by Linton. Smith
suggests that
³his High Victorian embellishments may have rendered Blake a little
less
alien
to the public of the 1860s and 1880s² (Radical,148). Linton was particularly fond of the
angelic
figures in Job plate 12, taking nine of the ornamental tailpieces from
it. See
Robert Gleckner, ³W. J. Linton¹s Tailpieces in Gilchrist¹s Life
of William Blake,² Blake,
An
Illustrated Quarterly 57 (Spring 1981), 208-211.
[12] For the use of
photography in Rossetti¹s work and the other Pre-Raphaelite artists,
see Michael Bartram, The Pre Raphaelite Camera, Aspects of
Victorian Photography
(Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1985).
[13] Linton published a few of the stories in the Illustrated Family Journal and the Illuminated Magazine, both of which he edited in 1845. Rossetti, who expresses his admiration for Wells in early 1848 but does not mention the Linton connection, introduced Wells to Morris and Swinburne, who wrote a preface to the drama when republished in 1876. Rossetti praises both of Well¹s works in his Supplementary chapter in the Life (381-82) as yet other examples of neglected genius.
[14] ³Thompson² is John
Thompson (1785-1866),
with whom Linton studied for two years (1836-38) and whom he described
in his Masters
of Wood Engraving (1889) as
³beyond question entitled to rank above all the men who have engraved
in
wood² (Engen, Dictionary
161). In the letter to Scott, Rossetti penned a little poem addressed
to the
Dalziel brothers: ³O
woodman, spare that block, / O gash not anyhow! / It took 10
days by
clock‹ / I¹d fain protect it now. / (Chorus of wild laughter. / The
curtain falls² (F 2.170). In defense of the Dalziel brothers, Edward
and
George, who had the ³most influential and successful firm of wood
engravers, draughtsmen, printers and publishers of the period² (Engen, Dictionary 62), Rossetti¹s first drawing for them on
wood
was an engraver¹s nightmare, with wash, pencil, colored chalk, and pen
and ink, which do not reduce well to the black and white of wood
engraving
(Engen, Pre-Raphaelite Print
94).
[15] In March of 1857,
Linton and Rossetti began planning
an edition of the Brownings to be illustrated by PreRaphaelite artists,
comparable to the Moxon Tennyson, but nothing came of the project (F
2.176).
Rossetti produced only four more drawings on the block, two for
Christina
Rossetti¹s Goblin Market and Other Poems (1862) and two designs for her Prince¹s
Progress and Other Poems in
1866
(Parker 54, 63), three of which Linton engraved.
[16] Smetham did not contribute any illustrations to the Life, but his review essay from 1869 in the London Quarterly Review was reprinted in the 1880 edition. See Frances Carey, ³James Smetham (1821-89) and Gilchrist¹s Life of Blake² Blake Newsletter 8 (Summer-Fall 1974): 17-25.
[17] For similarities between Linton and Blake regarding the engraver as artist rather than copyist and the domination of line over tone, see Robert Gleckner, ³W. J. Linton, a Latter-day Blake.² Bulletin of Research in the Humanities 85 (1982): 220-221.
[18] Ruskin is said to have ³heard of the process and called . . . for instruction in its technique² (Smith, Radical 146; see also Crane 57). Rossetti writes Gilchrist on 23 August 1861 that ³Linton sent me a book of specimens of his new style, but I must say I think no better of it. However, I must try to do the drawings for my book that way if at all, as I have no time for a longer process² (F 2.396). Rossetti is referring to the illustrated title plate (The Rose Garden) he prepared for his The Early Italian Poets. On 27 October, though, he tells his publisher, William Smith Williams: ³I am sorry to say Linton¹s plan has not succeeded with me.² He proposes using wood engraving, the ³longer process,² or ³adopt[ing] the photograph plan you proposed, or else omit it altogether² (F 2.412). The photographic process was not identified and the drawing was not included.
[19] Crane notes that he
executed a head of a dog
³more or less after Landseer² as one of the specimens (57) and that
Linton invented kerography ³in association with a man named Hancock,
who
prepared the plates² (56).
See Gavin Bridson and Geoffrey Wakeman, Printmaking &
Picture
Printing: A Bibliographical Guide to Artistic & Industrial
Techniques in
Britain, 1750-1900 (Oxford:
Plough
Press, 1984), 104-07, for
other
experiments in creating relief surfaces for line drawings. The method
was too
cumbersome to succeed and could not compete with lithography, which
also
duplicates drawings without translating them, or with photolithography
and photoengraving, which eliminated even the need to redraw the
original
image.
[20] The Album is 33 x
26.7 cm and consists of fifty-nine unnumbered pages (counting the title
page) in eight gatherings, stitched individually and
taped together. The first and last leaves are pasted down to brown
paper that
was used as a cover. All tracings, photographs, and proofs were trimmed
and
pasted down on the recto of the leaves. Images small enough to fit the Life¹s
pages were traced directly; for those that were too large, either the
works were
reduced photographically and the photograph
traced, or the tracing of the original was squared for reduction, which
means
that it was redrawn on paper with a smaller grid.
[21] Linton moved to New York City in 1866 and a few years later to a cottage in Hamden outside of New Haven, where he set up the Appledore Press (thought to be the first private press in America, Maré 67), and lived a Blakean life of poet-craftsman, printing his own illustrated books and poems. He received an honorary Masters of Arts degree from Yale in 1891, and was the first wood engraver elected to the American Academy of Arts (1880). I began looking through the Linton papers at Yale University in the summer of 1989, when I suspected Linton may have been responsible for a series of facsimiles of There is No Natural Religion that had been taken as authentic copies; see Viscomi, Blake and the Idea of the Book (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993), chapter 21. The Album is in Yale¹s Beinecke Library, ³the Gift of Alfred E. Hamill, Yale 1905,² given apparently in 1940 but uncatalogued until its re-discovery in 1989. It was not part of the Appledore Press or Hamden Cottage material as originally received. A more recent addition to the Linton Archive at the Beinecke Library is ³A Collection of 109 pieces consisting of manuscripts, engravings, scrapbooks, correspondence, photographs, pamphlets, broadsides, clippings and periodicals by and about William James Linton.² These are in four boxes and are from the estate of Mrs. Harry Cook, May 1980.
[22] Bentley could not explain the discrepancy between the facsimile and original and guessed correctly that the Experience title plate was from a nineteenth-century facsimile (Blake Books 429 n5).
[23] Rossetti interprets
Linton¹s comments on the
Job as his not giving up: ³I received the list of illustrations from
Linton, and am sending it on to the Printer‹I see he still includes the
Job Plates which he
copied, in spite of the
photolithographs which might be considered to supersede them. But
certainly it
seemed a pity to leave them out after the trouble and expense² (12 June
1863, to Mrs. Gilchrist, DW 489).
[24] Rossetti at first thought the photolithographs were an unnecessary indulgence, but then found them pleasing, ³being, though blurry, very full of colour, and not losing perhaps by reduction but getting concentrated in a pleasant way² (DW 477). Linton¹s three Job facsimiles were removed in the 1880 edition, no doubt because of redundancy, and the photolithographs were replaced with photointaglios, which are sharper and less muddy. Linton¹s Job vignettes and tailpieces, though, remained. Linton was no doubt opposed to the photolithographs‹indeed, to photomechanical reproductions in general and the use of photographic technology in wood engraving in particular. Photographs freed the designer, in that he could work on paper any size instead of the block and retain the drawing for comparison, and could reverse the design mechanically. But it was the death knell for wood engraving as an art and industry. Linton wrote insightfully late in his life about photography¹s negative effect on art: ³The Engraver: His Function and Status,² Scribner¹s Monthly 16 (1878), 237-42, and ³Art in Engraving on Wood,² Atlantic Monthly 43 (1879), 705-15. Eight articles written in 1880 for the American Art Review were issued as History of Wood-engraving in America (Boston: Estes and Lauriat, 1882).
[25] Nor are All
Religions are One, There is No Natural Religion, Book
of Los, Book of Ahania, or Song
of Los. Gilchrist mentions the last
two books but does not know of the other three, though W. M. Rossetti
lists the
second in his catalogue.
[26] In 1861, Macmillan also rejected a Linton design for another book, ³a delicate, Blakean vignette of two floating nudes.² Macmillan ³ordered its omission, despite Linton¹s protest: Œit would simply give offence. . . it may be an artistic wonder, but I confess that to myself its appropriate place would be as the tailpiece of some work of French Œfacetiae¹² (Smith, Radical 145).
[27] Rossetti is correct;
the inscription was not
Blake¹s, but neither was it Palgrave¹s. It appears certainly to be
by George Cumberland (Bentley, Blake Books 159 n2). Linton reused the kerograph of Europe plate 12 for the title page to his Famine:
a
Mask (1875, printed 1886), replacing Blake¹s text
with his own (see Smith, Radical 196).
[28] Linton most likely
used Milton copy A, which
was acquired by the British Museum
Print Room in 1859.
[29] Gilchrist may have
spoken about Jerusalem to
Tatham, whose manuscript Life of Blake resurfaced in late 1863 (Rossetti Papers, 41), too late to be helpful to Gilchrist or
his
editors. Tatham interpreted Jerusalem
as proof of the ³authenticity² of Blake¹s visions and
believed that many of its ³sublime² and ³awful diagrams of
an
eternal phantasy² were ³never surpassed² by ³Michael
Angelo, Julio Romano or any other great man . . . Even supposing the
poetry to
be the mere vehicle or a mere alloy for the sake of producing or
combining
these wonderful thoughts, it should at all events be looked upon with
some
respect² (Wittreich 217-28).
[30] See Letters of
William Michael Rossetti Concerning
Whitman, Blake, and Shelley to Anne Gilchrist and her Son Herbert
Gilchrist,
eds. Clarence Gohdes and Paull Franklin Baum
(Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press,
1931), 11.
[31] One learns from
Gilchrist that Blake painted, but
learns relatively little about what. Gilchrist is biographer first and
foremost: ³Many of the almost numberless host of Blake¹s
water-colour drawings, on high scriptural and poetic themes, or frescoes, as he called those (even on paper) more richly coloured, and with more impasto
than the
rest, continued to be produced; some for Mr. Butts, some to lie on
hand; all
now widely dispersed, nearly all undated, unhappily, though mostly signed. If men would but realize the possible value
of a date!²(245). This
from a man who disdained
footnotes.
[32] Both impressions are
printed in black ink on thick
white, unmarked wove paper. ³A Divine Image² measures 11.2 x 6.8
cm., which is the same as Keynes and Morgan pulls, on a leaf of 20.9 x
16.5
cm., and ³A Little Lost Boy² measures 11.1 x 6.8 cm. on a 17.4 x
12.1 cm. sheet.
[33] Mrs. Gilchrist ³found . . . the only place where dear Alec had left an absolute blank that must be filled in‹was for some account of Blake¹s mystic writings, or Œprophetic Books,¹ as he called them² (AG 125). To William Rossetti, she admitted: ³I look forward with immense interest and curiosity to reading Mr Swinburne¹s interpretation of the Prophetic Books; not without a lurking suspicion, though, he may have been insensibly led here and there to create a meaning out of his own great abundance² (Rossetti Papers 27). It was not only the prophetic poems, though, that concerned Macmillan. Wishing for ³a less shuddering publisher,² Dante Rossetti asked Mrs. Gilchrist to ³make a stand for the passage from The Everlasting Gospel about the Woman taken in Adultery. It is one of the finest things Blake ever wrote, and if there is anything to shock ordinary readers it is merely in the opening, which could be omitted, and the poem made to begin with ŒJesus sat in Moses¹ chair¹ etc.²(DW 471, 465-66). For an example of Macmillan censuring Linton, see note 26.
[34] Gleckner assumed that
Linton had executed ³wood
engravings² of ³the entire series² (³Tailpieces² 208),
based on the presence of tailpieces from a plate not reproduced in the Life.
[35] In AG 89, ³Wiegand² is misspelled ³Weigall,² and in DW 418, it is misspelled ³Wigand.² Dorfman, referring to him as Weigall, identifies him as an engraver (5), but she apparently confuses him with Charles Harvey Weigall, who was a watercolorist and engraver born in 1794 and would have been around 67 years old in 1861. William Rossetti identifies him as ³Wigand² and as ³a young man known more particularly to some of my aunts² (Rossetti Papers 223). He sat for the head of Boswell in Dante Rossetti¹s Dr. Johnson at the Mitre. Fredeman identifies him as W. J. Wiegand, a young artist befriended by Rossetti in January 1861 and for whom Rossetti sought employment with Macmillan (F 2.347n2). By June, he appears to have been assisting Linton, possibly as a copyist in preparation of kerographic plates.
[36] Rossetti writes Mrs.
Gilchrist that he ³should like to have the opportunity of writing a
head-note [to Thel] and
revising its text as to punctuation etc., as all Blake¹s writings
greatly need this kind of attention² (DW 473). He is
well known to have ³corrected² Blake¹s punctuation, spelling, grammar,
even word choice and order‹what Gilchrist referred to as ³technical
flaws and impediments² (4). No doubt, a poet as disciplined as
Rossetti, whose verses are syntactically tight, agreed with Gilchrist
and thought that an untutored genius like Blake required a little help
in doing what he would have done had he been better trained. Linton, on
the other hand, tried to reproduce Blake as accurately as possible, but
because the reproductions were done by hand, they vary subtly from the
originals.
[37] William Rossetti admits the same preference at a more basic level, liking the color-printed drawings and illuminated books more than the watercolors: ³It has already been explained elsewhere that the most complete, solid, and powerful works in colour left by Blake are to be found among his colour-printed designs. His water-colours are all, comparatively speaking, washy and slight; but some have a general character of strength, brilliancy, etc. of execution; and these may be spoken of below, with the needful implied reservation, as strong and brilliant² (Life 2.199).
[38] See Morton Paley, ³John Camden Hotten, A. C. Swinburne, and the Blake Facsimiles of 1868,² Bulletin of the New York Public Library 79 (1976): 259-96. Swinburne¹s William Blake: A Critical Essay (London, 1868), which began as a review of the Life and centers on the Marriage, was published with Bellars¹s color facsimiles of Marriage plates 1, 8, and 20 from copy F. Its other facsimiles also seem to be by Bellars: The Book of Thel plate 1, Milton plate 8, and Jerusalem plates 33, 70, and 81 (from copies D, A, and A respectively, all then in the British Museum). Plate 70 is reduced and colored in Blake¹s style but duplicating no known copy; plates 33 and 81 are reduced and monochrome.