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| List of Illustrations Preface Chronology Map: Blake’s Britain Map: Blake’s London, 1757-1827 Map: The Holy Land The Texts of the Poems List of Key Terms POEMS AND PROPHECIES From Poetical Sketches To Spring To Summer To Autumn To Winter To the Evening Star To Morning Song: "How sweet I roam’d" Song: "My silks and fine array" Song: "Love and harmony combine" Song: "I love the jocund dance" Song: "Memory, hither come" Mad Song Song: "Fresh from the dewy hill" Song: "When early morn walks forth" To the Muses Prologue: Intended for a Dramatic Piece of King Edward IV Prologue to King John A War Song to Englishmen [Poems Written in a Copy of Poetical Sketches] Song by a Shepherd Song by an Old Shepherd All Religions Are One (Illuminated Book) There Is No Natural Religion (Illuminated Book) Songs of Innocence and of Experience (Illuminated Book) Songs of Innocence Introduction The Shepherd The Ecchoing Green The Lamb The Little Black Boy The Blossom The Chimney Sweeper The Little Boy Lost The Little Boy Found Laughing Song A Cradle Song The Divine Image Holy Thursday Night Spring Nurse’s Song Infant Joy A Dream On Another’s Sorrow Songs of Experience Introduction Earth’s Answer The Clod & the Pebble Holy Thursday The Little Girl Lost The Little Girl Found The Chimney Sweeper Nurse&s Song The Sick Rose The Fly The Angel The Tyger My Pretty Rose Tree Ah! Sun-Flower The Lilly The Garden of Love The Little Vagabond London The Human Abstract Infant Sorrow A Poison Tree A Little Boy Lost A Little Girl Lost To Tirzah The School-Boy The Voice of the Ancient Bard A Divine Image The Book of Thel (Illuminated Book) Visions of the Daughters of Albion (Illuminated Book) The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (Illuminated Book) America: A Prophecy (Illuminated Book) Europe: A Prophecy (Illuminated Book) The Song of Los (Illuminated Book) Africa Asia The Book of Urizen (Illuminated Book) The Book of Ahania (Illuminated Book) The Book of Los (Illuminated Book) Poems from Blake’s Notebook I. Working Drafts London (Drafts ca. 1792) London (Printed version, 1794) The Tyger (Drafts, ca. 1792) The Tyger (Printed Version, 1794) Infant Sorrow (Drafts, of uncertain date) Infant Sorrow (Printed Version, 1794) II. A Projected Plate "O lapwing thou fliest around the heath" An answer to the parson [Experiment]: "Thou hast a lap full of seed" Riches "If you trap the moment before its ripe" III. Vision Eternity "Since all the Riches of this World" To God To Nobodaddy "If it is True What the Prophets write" "The Hebrew Nation did not write it" "Some Men created for destruction come" "You dont believe I wont attempt to make ye" "Mock on Mock on Voltaire Rousseau" "I will tell you what Joseph of Arimathea" Merlins prophecy An ancient Proverb "The sword sung on the barren heath" "Why should I care for the men of thames" "Who will exchange his own fire side" "Let the Brothels of Paris be opened" "Great Men & Fools do often me Inspire" "He whole Life is an Epigram..." "The Errors of a Wise Man make your Rule" Lacedemonian Instruction Motto to the Songs of Innocence & of Experience "Anger & Wrath my bosom rends" "The Angel that presided oer my birth" "I am no Homers Hero you all know" "I heard an Angel singing" "Terror in the house does roar" "Great things are done when Men & Mountains meet" "When Klopstock England defied" Day Morning IV. Love: The Sexes "What is it men in women do require" "Abstinence sows sand all over" "In a wife I should desire" "When a Man has Married a Wife" "A Woman Scaly & a Man all Hairy" "Why was Cupid a Boy" How to know Love from Deceit "The look of love alarms" "Soft deceit & Idleness" "Silent Silent Night" "Are not the joys of morning sweeter" V. Love: Stories The Fairy "Never pain to tell they love" "I feard the fury of my wind" "I saw a chapel all of gold" "I laid me down upon a bank" "I asked a thief to steal me a peach" Soft Snow "An old maid early eer I knew" "Grown old in Love from Seven Times Seven" The Washer Womans Song A cradle song To my Mirtle "My Spectre around me night & day" [Related Stanzas] The Birds VI. Art and Artists "Now Art has lost its mental Charms" To the Queen "The Caverns of the Grave Ive seen" "I rose up in the dawn of day" "You say their Pictures well Painted be" Blakes apology for his Catalogue English Encouragement of Art "The only man that eer I knew" "Madman I have been calld..." The Pickering Manuscript The Smile The Golden Net The Mental Traveller The Land of Dreams Mary The Crystal Cabinet The Grey Monk Auguries of Innocence Long John Brown & Little Mary Bell William Bond From The Four Zoas Milton (Illuminated Book) From Jerusalem (Illuminated Book) The Ghost of Abel (Illuminated Book) The Everlasting Gospel "There is not one moral virtue..." "If Moral Virtue was Christianity" "What can this Gospel of Jesus be?" "Was Jesus Born of a Virgin Pure" "Was Jesus Humble..." Was Jesus gentle..." "Was Jesus Chaste..." "The Vision of Christ that thou dost see" To the Accuser who is The God of This World Related Prose An Island in the Moon Prospectus: To the Public From A Descriptive Catalogue and [An Advertisement] From A Vision of the Last Judgment A Public Address to the Chalcographic Society The Laocoo!n (Yah and His Two Sons) On Homer’s Poetry On Virgil Blake’s Marginalia On John Casper Lavater, Aphorisms on Man (ca. 1789) On Emanuel Swedenborg, The Wisdom of Angels, Concerning Divine Love and Divine Wisdom (1788) On R. Watson, Bishop of Llandoff, An Apology for the Bible...addressed to Thomas Paine (1797) On Francis Bacon, Essay Moral, Economical and Political (1797) On Henry Boyd, A Translation of "The Inferno" in English Verse, with Historical Notes (1785) On The Works of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Knight, Edited by Edmund Malone (3 volumes) (1798) On George Berkeley, Siris: A Chain of Philosophical Reflections (1744) On William Wordsworth, Preface to The Excursion, Being A Portion of the Recluse, A Poem (1814) On William Wordsworth, Poems: Including Lyrical Ballads, Vol. I - 1815) On Robert John Thornton, The Lord’s Prayer, Newly Translated (1827) Blake’s Letters To the Reverend Dr. John Trusler, August 23, 1799 To William Hayley, May 6, 1800 To George Cumberland, July 2, 1800 To John Flaxman, September 12, 1800 To William Hayley, September 16, 1800 To Thomas Butts, September 23, 1800 To Thomas Butts, October 2, 1800 To Thomas Butts, January 10, 1802 To Thomas Butts, November 22, 1802 (second letter) To James Blake, January 30, 1803 To Thomas Butts, April 25, 1803 To Thomas Butts, August 16, 1803 Blake’s Memorandum, August 1803 To William Hayley, October 7, 1802 To William Hayley, October 23, 1804 To William Hayler, December 11, 1805 To Dawson Turner, June 9, 1818 To George Cumberland, April 12, 1827 To Thomas Butts, April 25, 1803 (excerpt) Criticisms COMMENTS BY CONTEMPORARIES Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Letter to C.A. Tulk, February 12, 1818 Charles Lamb - Letter to Bernard Barton, May 15, 1824 John Thomas Smith - From Nollekens and his Times (1828) Frederick Tatham - From "Life of Blake" (1832?) Henry Crabb Robinson - From Reminiscences (1852) Samuel Palmer - Letter to Alexander Gilchrist, August 23, 1855 TWENTIETH-CENTURY CRITICISM T.S. Eliot - William Blake Northrop Frye - Blake’s Treatment of the Archetype Jean H. Hagstrum - [On Innocence and Experience] Robert F. Gleckner - Point of View and Context in Blake’s Songs Irene Tayler - The Woman Scaly Martin K. Nurmi - [On The Marriage of Heaven and Hell] Martin Price - The Standard of Energy David V. Erdman - America: New Expanses Harold Bloom - [On Milton] E.J. Rose - The Symbolism of the Opened Center and Poetic Theory in Blake’s Jerusalem Bibliography Index of Titles and First Lines |
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