William Blake: His Philosophy and Symbols |
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Page 268
... poets with a purpose allow their songs to grow into existence through this healthful and natural order of change ? Do they not habitually begin with the pen ? ' 1 Blake did even more than this . In this poem he declared his divine ...
... poets with a purpose allow their songs to grow into existence through this healthful and natural order of change ? Do they not habitually begin with the pen ? ' 1 Blake did even more than this . In this poem he declared his divine ...
Page 270
... poem when he wrote his Essay on Chimney - Sweeps with their little professional notes sounding like the peep , peep of a young sparrow . . . poor blots - innocent blacknesses ! ' THE DIVINE IMAGE . This poem was composed by Blake in the ...
... poem when he wrote his Essay on Chimney - Sweeps with their little professional notes sounding like the peep , peep of a young sparrow . . . poor blots - innocent blacknesses ! ' THE DIVINE IMAGE . This poem was composed by Blake in the ...
Page 276
... poem is undoubtedly the best known of all Blake's works , and one of the very great poems in the English language . Every school child knows it , and yet its thought is so profound that it touches everywhere upon the problems of all ...
... poem is undoubtedly the best known of all Blake's works , and one of the very great poems in the English language . Every school child knows it , and yet its thought is so profound that it touches everywhere upon the problems of all ...
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Common terms and phrases
Ahania America Angel appears become Beulah Bible Blake body Book Book of Los Book of Urizen Bromion Christ Church clouds Commentary copy Creation Daughters of Albion death decoration Divine doctrine earth Emanation Enion Enitharmon error Eternity evil eyes Fall false Felpham Female fire flames flesh Four Zoas Gate Hayley Heaven and Hell human illustration Imagination Inspiration Jakob Böhme Jerusalem Jesus Last Judgment Leutha Line Loins Luvah Marriage of Heaven material Milton Moon mystical Nature never Night nude Oothoon Palamabron Paradise passage Passion philosophy Plate poem Poet Poetic Poetry Proverb Rahab Reason Religion repeated represents Revolution Rintrah Satan Selfhood sense serpent Shadow Songs of Experience Songs of Innocence sons soul Space Spectre spirit stanza stars symbol Tharmas Thel Theotormon things thou thought Tiriel Tree truth Ulro Urizen Urthona Vala verse VIII vision William Blake woman wrath wrote