
Sheila A. Spector, "Glorious
Incomprehensible": The Development of Blake's Kabbalistic Language.
Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell
University Press, 2001. x + 202pp. Illus: 50 b&w and 4 color.
$46.50 (Hdbk; ISBN: 0-8387-5469-4).
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface: Blake as a Kabbalist
Acknowledgements
A Note on the Texts
Introduction: Blake's Problem with Language
1. Contexts: The Languages of Eighteenth-Century England
2. Pre-Intentionality: "Newton's Sleep"
3. The Fact of Intentionality: "And twofold Always"
4. The Concept of Intentionality: "soft Beulahs night"
5. The Divine Intentionality: "my supreme delight"
Conclusion: The Poetic Genius
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index

Sheila A. Spector, "Wonders
Divine": The Development of Blake's Kabbalistic Myth. Lewisburg, PA:
Bucknell University Press,
2001. 213pp. Illus.: 54 b&w and 4 color. $59.50 (Hdbk; ISBN:
0-8387-5468-6).
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface: Blake as a Kabbalist
Acknowledgements
A Note on the Texts
Introduction: Blake's Problem with Myth
1. Contexts: The Myths of Eighteenth-Century England
2. From Calvinism to Kabbalism: Transforming Myths
3. Pre-Mythology: Miltonic Antecedents
4. The Fact of Myth: Contemporary Apocalypse
5. The Concept of Myth: Psychomachia
6. The Transcendent Myth: Kabbalism
Conclusion: The Eternal Prophet
Notes
Glossary
Select Bibliography
Index
N.B.: In this review, the former work is abbreviated as GI,
and the latter work is abbreviated as WD.
Bibliographic Citation: Lussier, Mark
S. "On Sheila A. Spector, "Glorious
Incomprehensible": The Development of Blake's Kabbalistic Language, and "Wonders
Divine": The Development of Blake's Kabbalistic Myth."
[date of access]. Romantic Circles Reviews 8.1 (2005): 14 pars. 28 Feb.
2005. <http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/spector.html>.
Reviewed by
Mark S. Lussier
Arizona State University
- After a period of seeming dearth in Blake studies, where individual studies of the
poet/prophet were rare while collective studies of Romanticism focused on broad movements
like colonialism, historicism, and imperialism abounded, the last ten years have seen an
explosion of both single studies dedicated to particular aspects of Blake's visionary
agenda and essay collections presenting scholarly analyses across a broad spectrum of
concerns. This re-turn trend toward single author studies actually delights me, since I've
always preferred, as a reader, to participate fully in the critical struggle between the
unruly artist and the striving critic that shapes the very background radiation to most
memorable studies of Blake. With the appearance of Sheila Spector's double-volume
examination of the Kabbalistic dimensions of Blake's linguistic and mythic efforts, the
ground of future discussions of the poet's divine vision has shifted radically, since any
motivated study of the mythic and mystic dimensions of the major epics would now be
required to address this complex mapping of the evolution of "a stable core of
fourfold symbols that, remaining fairly close to their kabbalistic prototypes, provide a
basis for the later alterations" (WD 107) of the myth after the Lambeth
period.
- Before entering more fully into the dense and enriched environment of Spector's
arguments, however, I feel compelled to begin with the physical objects themselves.
Setting aside, for the moment, the logic or necessity behind the double-volumes
themselves, the books are generous in their illustrations and luxurious in their
dimensions, positioning tactile pleasure at the horizon of reception. As someone
periodically involved in publishing work on Blake (and thereby as someone who knows the
cost of illustrations), I find the works delightfully visual and laud both author and
publisher for this commitment. "Glorious Incomprehensible" includes four
color and fifty-two black & white reproductions, offering not only a massive range of
Blakean images but an impressive array of images drawn from the Kabbalistic tradition (my
personal favorite was "The Right Table of the Commutations" found on page
thirty). "Wonders Divine" equally delights in its copious visual field,
although the emphasis shifts appropriately to Blake's works, and taken together the
volumes sound the depths of Blake's indebtedness to the Hebraic tradition generally and
Jewish mysticism specifically.
- The analogies between the Kabbalistic and Blakean mythopoeic systems are copious; within
both, words function simultaneously as "motivated signs" and "incarnate
symbols" (GI 32), thereby giving rise to "a fully conceived version of
Christian Kabbalism" capable of articulating Blake's "own prophetic vision"
(WD 24). The somewhat mirrored structure Spector provides in these works
fosters an unusual and exemplary degree of 'intra-textuality' (a mode often operative in
Blake's own work) that allows readers to better contextualize the simultaneity of
development for Blake's linguistic and mythic codification of collective tradition and
individual genius now recognized as the emanative core of the illuminated books. Not
surprisingly, Blake's "intellectual orientation" (GI 43) differed
significantly from contemporary theories of language and rhetoric, with the poet rejecting
"the materialistic definition of language" in preference for its spiritual
operations, linking his thinking somewhat with Hugh Blair and George Berkeley. Here
linguistic interest intersects spiritual demand, and Spector's survey of the religious
contexts within which Blake hones his prophetic stance thoroughly supports her view of the
prophecies as seeking "a linguistic form that could transcend its own grammatical
structure" (GI 53). Furthermore, this discussion, when involved
intra-textually with the mythic contexts discussed in "Wonders Divine," interconnects
in splendid fashion how a myth built through "amalgamation" (WD 34) best
serves a language striving to overcome its own prison-house. I would argue that
Spector's critical effort is best appreciated when readers undertake the type of
interrelated reading across the volumes just discussed, but for the remainder of this
review, I will address the volumes individually, beginning with "Glorious
Incomprehensible" and proceeding to "Wonders Divine."
- Having convincingly established the 'gaze of intentionality' in Blake's work in the
introduction and first chapter, where spiritual/prophetic discourse strives across the
history of its textual development "to transform consciousness" (GI 55),
Spector structures her discussion accordingly: "In the earliest composite art,
Blake's linguistic manipulations are restricted to the material surface, manifesting a
kind of pre-intentional level of consciousness. . . . Then, in the early
prophecies, he explores the fact of intentionality, attempting to liberate thought
by inverting fundamental principles upon which conventional language is predicated. . . .
Consequently, in the minor prophecies, Blake explores the concept underlying the
material system, . . . [and] in the major prophecies, he was able to create a mystical
form of language through which, finally, in Jerusalem, he himself could merge with
the ultimate referent, the Divine Vision" (GI 56). Certainly, no recent
critic has read this movement in Blake's work from pre-intentionality to ultimate
significance as intensely as Spector, and the approach provides a linguistic context for
Blake's provocative endorsement of etymological contradiction, an ambiguity vibrantly
present in his appropriation of Hebrew.
- In "Pre-Intentionality: 'Newton's Sleep,'" Spector analyzes this
"contradictory" verbal presence through Thel, Tiriel and Visions
of the Daughters, finding literal and symbolic borrowings in the process and
leading, in the case of Thel, to the conclusion that "the poem as a whole was
generated around the various Hebraic meanings Blake found for the single phoneme thel"
(GI 63). The "non-grammatical" language Tiriel utters expresses "the
failure of the hero to effect any valid intentional experiences" (GI 67),
thereby unveiling "the [very] impossibility of knowing" (GI 71). In Visions
of the Daughters, the linguistic responses of Oothoon, Bromion, and Theotormon to a
former's brutal rape shape "an extended analysis of three distinct modes of thought,
articulated in three different languages" (GI 72). Not surprisingly, as
Spector observes, the trajectory of development points toward Blake's deepening awareness
of complex connections "between language and the mind," exposing in the process
"the fallacy of 'semantic idealism,' the implication that, ultimately, words can only
convey a speaker's state of mind" (80).
- Blake's stance against Locke's view of language opens the third chapter, since the
subversion of the material surface in the earliest works sought "to reveal the
fallacies inherent in empiricism" (GI 81), and with The Marriage of Heaven
and Hell, he introduces contraries as an "alternative theory upon which to base
an intentional relationship" (GI 81). Spector charts this alternative from The
Marriage through America and Europe and into Songs of Innocence and
Of Experience, with etymologies and phonetic echoes of character names forming
"an underlying layer of Hebrew for what are actually totally unrelated concepts"
and therein supplementing a view of "language" seen as offering "no
underlying system or organization" (GI 88, 98). The analysis here arrives at a
familiar insight through a "crooked path," since the linguistic flirtation with
contraries (structural and linguistic) proved "self-limiting" (GI 108),
which pointed to a problem in Blake's conceptualization of intentionality itself and which
necessitated, in Spector's view, a shift "to allegory, a metaphorical trope that
enables him to objectify the process of language formation through a series of
personifications whose interactions could then be analyzed" (GI 109).
- Blake's labor to reformulate his conception of intentionality occupies Chapter Four,
which traces Blake's refinement of his allegorical mode sequentially from The Song of
Los through the books of Urizen and Ahania to The Book of Los and
turns to the visual field of these works to argue that collectively "they force us to
acknowledge the limitation of language, for in order to make sense of the composite art,
we must allegorize, that is, create a context through which a plausible relationship
between the visual and verbal art can be established" (GI 112). Rational and
spiritual layers of language, the soul of respective symbolic layers, collide. Not
surprisingly, Urizen is seen as attempting "to expand the [textual] focus
beyond the material effects of language," and in Ahania, whose name
"suggests binding and/or fastening," the emanation of Urizen emerges as
"the mode of thought that connects the subjective consciousness with reality" (GI
115, 121). Blake's solution to the problematics of linguistic appropriation and
transmutation appears in The Book of Los, which "has been entirely liberated
from the constraints of corporeality" and which adopts a "metalinguistic
thrust" to "replace conventional modes of thought with categories capable of
promoting the visionary faculty" (GI 121, 123, 124).
- In the fifth chapter, "The Divine Intentionality: 'my supreme delight,'"
Spector concludes her analysis of intentionality through detailed engagements with the
major prophecies, offering a highly complex and satisfying assessment of Blake's drive to
achieve his "supreme delight" through apprehending the "ultimate
referent" of divine intentionality, a "progression from what appears to have
been Blake's original intention to produce a conventional allegory in the earlier portions
of Vala/The Four Zoas, to an objective delineation of the via mystica in Milton,
and finally, through its subjective actualization in Jerusalem" (GI
128). The play of Hebraic etymologies is traced with insight and energy through this
chapter and offers considerable clarification of the shift across the epics "from the
allegory of self-reflection [to] a transformative mode of speech" (GI 127)
that allows particular (William Blake) and general (Divine Vision) to merge. This
self-reflectivity is most memorably displayed in Milton when past and present poets
merge via the poetic character of Los, which also articulates those new categories of
thought posited previously by Spector, and in Jerusalem Blake shifts from theoria
to praxis, deploying a "grammar of practice" whose modulations of
"sounds and rhythms produce an almost hypnotic effect" that establishes
"the locomotive means by which others might achieve visions of their own" (GI
151, 156).
- The concluding focus on "Poetic Genius" allows Spector to connect Blake's use
of multilayered language enriched by Hebraic linguistic resonances and his own poetic
practices and to chart its transformations, a progressive shift away from "linking
words to their referents in external reality" and toward a "kabbalistic myth as
the structuring principle through which to rebuild the ur-language of Adam" (167).
Obviously, this focus shifts readers to the concerns explored in "Wonders
Divine," where myth viewed through the critical lens of intentionality
"focuses on the ways different levels of consciousness establish relationships with
their respective referents" and where the analysis of Blake's myth parallels that of
his language to track "a profound shift in Blake's subjective consciousness" (WD
19) across his written work. Spector's exploration of structural correspondences between
Blake's syncretic myth and kabbalistic planes of experience and existence, both emanative
models, is detailed in its connections ("the goal is integration of all elements into
a composite totality" [WD 23]) and broad in its aspirations ("a
diachronic analysis of these underlying structures that Blake's shifting attitude toward
myth, and through myth the evolving creative consciousness" [WD 24]).
- The opening chapter deftly discusses prevalent Christian exotericism at the core of
European mythic formations and the sub-current "esoteric myth of Kabbalism"
dispersed "in the same geographical locales" (WD 27), a dual presence
giving rise to "a Christianization of Jewish mysticism" (WD 29) across
Renaissance Europe. The subsequent discussion of the arrival of this presence in England
provides the last layer of a solid contextual foundation upon which to mount the argument
that "Blake's myth comprises an amalgamation of the Christianized version of
Lurianism superimposed on an Anglo-Israelite base" (WD 34) but which
recognizes this final mythic state as the product "of a forty-year intellectual
process" (WD 35). Given this spectrum of concerns, Chapter Two moves rapidly
through discussions of "Milton's justification of Calvinism" as "the mythic
heritage of virtually all of English ever since" (WD 36), the dominate dual
categories within which "Kabbalistic speculations fall" (WD 39), and
their amalgamation in Christian Kabbalists like Mirandola and von Rosenroth into "an
ecumenist Judeo-Christian myth" (WD 46). Here Spector, for perhaps the only
time across both volumes, allows the enriched analytic environment she creates to
dissipate somewhat, and the third chapter on "Pre-Mythology: Miltonic
Antecedents" was the least satisfying, perhaps because the terseness of the analysis
did not allow for greater critical synthesis, although its closing discussion of Visions
of the Daughters of Albion certainly confirms the author's sense of its simultaneous
functions as transition to myth and as preliminary framing for "the problems he was
to work on in the illuminated books" (WD 58).
- The loss of critical intensity, however, was brief, and "The Fact of Myth:
Contemporary Apocalypse" (Chapter Four) pursues the implications of Blake's insight
that "myth controls thought" (WD 59) with considerable energy across The
Marriage, Songs of Innocence and Of Experience, and the historical prophecies America
and Europe. Blake's refutation of Miltonic narrative and mythic commitment in The
Marriage has received extensive prior analysis, which renders almost all discussions
hopelessly incomplete, yet Spector's identification of the problems encountered in the
work's reconfiguration of exoteric myth along esoteric lines (overturning figural
functions while retaining etymological essences) helps elucidate Blake's vacillation in
the inclusion and later alteration of mythic entities like Rintrah and Urthona, not to
mention the nuclear family in the closing "A Song of Liberty." The subsequent
discussion of Songs extends the pursuit of mythic maturation in its vibrant visual
fields, having established its linguistic presence in the metalanguage of The Marriage,
with Blake beginning already to probe the limitations of a dyadic structure for mental
experience suggested in the work's title, displacing "the interest off of the duality
of good and evil, and onto the mythic structure from which the duality originally
derived" (WD 65). Once archetypal base and mythic structuration are provided a
unified framework, "an alternative set of archetypes" (WD 72) emerges to
figure forth "an alternative mode of thought," one that indicts
"theological doctrine that posits physical hardships as the birthright of all
descendents of Adam" (WD 74). The terse analyses of America and Europe
confirm this view of Blake's developing myth, with both works beginning to display
"kabbalistic elements," although the author acknowledges that, at this
nascent stage, those traces "are far from developed" (WD 83).
- In Spector's view, Blake's early mythic gestures taught him "the impossibility of
renovating the exoteric myth into a viable structure" (WD 85), and in the
poetic sequence beginning with The Song of Los and extending through The Book of
Los, Blake begins to fashion a syncretic myth from both exoteric and esoteric
traditions. The deepening semiotic miasma of these works (with full-page walls of
words often interspersed with full-page illustrations) suggests that Blake refines his
concept of myth toward an interactive psycho-historical myth increasingly conversant with
the minute particulars of "kabbalistic cosmogony," especially that associated
"with the Sefirotic Tree, the ten hypostases assuming the same kind of
fourfold configuration embodied in the souls and worlds" (WD 86). The
correspondences traced here are concrete and detailed, leaving little doubt about Blake's
indebtedness to kabbalistic structuration, and the mythic development begun in Los's song
is charted with great energy in Urizen and Ahania, with the former
superimposing kabbalistic elements onto Milton's two falls while the latter probes the
faulty "judgment" exhibited by Urizen that alienates him from "the
ameliorating qualities of love," the alienation of the Rational from the Spiritual
Soul. Thus, the prophetic sequence provides the opportunity to see Blake's process of
building myth through appropriation, transmutation, and amelioration, even though the
sequence ultimately fails to "cohere into a unified system" (WD 105).
- Of course, the work turns to the large epics in seeking that coherence through the
unifying presence of "The Transcendent Myth: Kabbalism" (Chapter Six), where
Spector argues that "the various kabbalistic motifs Blake had been experimenting with
evolve into a complex, multifaceted myth whose archetypal structure provides the means of
reconciling the two dilemmas [the functions of Christ and the prophet in the fallen
world]" (WD 107), yet readers persuaded by Peter Otto's recent critique of
transcendence in The Four Zoas will perhaps balk at the rather abbreviated and
somewhat mechanical application of transcendental kabbalistic elements to the work's
various nights. The analysis continues to be crisp and compelling, especially when it
ventures into the contorted visual field of the manuscript itself, and the discussion of Milton
allows a spatialization of these concerns relative to the "speculative and
contemplative forms of Kabbalism" (WD 131) as Blake moves to transform mundane
into sublime allegory (WD 132). As in most sections of both volumes, Spector here
continues to shower her readers with provocative etymologies that weave the exoteric
Christian and esoteric Hebraic into a unified framework, although the major difference
between the two emerging in Milton (the presence of an "Internal Saviour, now
defined as the visionary faculty that enables humanity to develop its full potential"
[WD 137]) highlights Blake's particular view of prophetic agency and its supporting
visionary faculty. With the mythic and mystic work refined through The Four Zoas
and Milton completed, Blake offers in Jerusalem "a perfect poem, one
whose form and content coalesce in the artistic representation of the Divine Vision"
(WD 140), restoring a balance between the visionary and the material, between
consciousness and cosmos, through endless acts of self-annihilation now associated with
the eternal prophet operative within all. Appropriately, given this emphasis in Blake's
culminating epic, the volume concentrated on myth concludes with a meditation on "The
Eternal Prophet" (just as the former volume focused on language concluded with a
meditation on "The Poetic Genius"), a contemplation moving well beyond the
expected emphasis on the Hebraic, which recedes to the background to allow Blake's works
concluding priority.
- This work is undoubtedly the most detailed and energetic assessment of the role a
vibrant and emergent Jewish mystical tradition played in Blake's final crafting of his
myth. The achievements that stand behind these volumes are copious indeed, and this
learned work offers cogent and persuasive arguments for Blake's syncretic path through
kabbalistic thought in the maturation of his psycho-historical myth. However, as this
detailed review also suggests, the very depth of Spector's dual volumes can impede readers
unwilling to swim through its tentative assertions (which occur early and often) and its
highly specialized language (which functions as its own linguistic unconscious). As well,
the "intra-textual" dimension of these volumes discussed above as a strength can
also impede an unencumbered and direct engagement with the parallel concerns. Although
these two critical reservations occasionally coalesce into "readerly"
resistance, the depth of analysis, the relentless pursuit of etymological connections, and
the insistently strong writing overcome such resistances and will temper understand of
Blake's mythic impulses for the foreseeable future.
Romantic
Circles Reviews
Editors,
Jeffrey N. Cox & Charles
Snodgrass
Associate
Editor, Jeffrey Ritchie
Review
published: March 2005.
Romantic
Circles - Reviews -
Winter 2005 - Sheila Spector,
"Glorious Incomprehensible"
and "Wonders Divine"
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