Blake's Poetry Design Authoritative Texts Illuminations in Color and Monochrome Related Prose Criticism

Johson Mary Lynn

Blake's Poetry Design Authoritative Texts Illuminations in Color and Monochrome Related Prose Criticism English Mary Lynn Johnson - New York W.W Norton & Company 1979 - vi-618 p. soft bound 13*21.3 cm

ILLUMINATED WORKS
All Religions Are One (1788)
There Is No Natural Religion (1788)
Songs of Innocence and of Experience (1789-94)
Songs of Innocence (1789)
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 (1793)
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 (1789)
Visions of the Daughters of Albion (1793)
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (1790)
America (1793)
Europe (1794)
The Song of Los (1794)
Africa
Asia
The Book of Urizen (1794)
The Book of Ahania (1794)
The Book of Los (1794)
Milton (1804; c. 1810-18)
Jerusalem (1804; c. 1820)
For the Sexes: The Gates of Paradise (1820)
"Mutual Forgiveness of each Vice"
The Keys of the Gates
To the Accuser who is The God of This World
The Ghost of Abel (1822)
On Homer's Poetry / On Virgil (1822)
Yah & His Two Sons Satan & Adam [The Laocoön] (1826)
OTHER WRITINGS
From Poetical Sketches (1783)
To Spring
To Summer
To Autumn
To Winter
To the Evening Star
Song ("How sweet I roam'd from field to field")
Song ("Love and harmony combine")
Mad Song
To the Muses
[An Island in the Moon] (1785)
To the Public [Prospectus] (1793)
From The Notebook (1787-1818)
London (drafts c. 1792)
The Tyger (drafts c. 1792)
Infant Sorrow (drafts, date uncertain)
Motto to the Songs of Innocence & of Experience
A cradle song
"I heard an Angel singing"
An ancient Proverb
"Why should I care for the men of thames"
How to know Love From Deceit
"O lapwing thou fliest around the heath"
"Thou hast a lap full of seed"
"The sword sung on the barren heath"
"If you trap the moment before its ripe"
Eternity
"The Angel that presided oer my birth"
Morning
"Great things are done when Men & Mountains meet"
An answer to the parson
To God
To Nobodaddy
"Let the Brothels of Paris be opened"
"When Klopstock England defied"
"The Hebrew Nation did not write it"
"If it is True What the Prophets write"
"I saw a chapel all of gold"
Merlins prophecy
Soft Snow
"Abstinence sows sand all over"
"What is it men in women do require"
"In a wife I would desire"
"When a Man has Married a Wife"
"A Woman Scaly & a Man all Hairy"
"Her whole Life is an Epigram"
"An old maid early eer I knew"
The Fairy
"Never pain to tell thy love"
"I asked a thief to steal me a peach"
My Spectre around me night & day"
[Related stanzas]
"You don't believe I wont attempt to make ye"
"Mock on Mock on Voltaire Rousseau"
"The only Man that eer I knew"
"The Caverns of the Grave Ive seen"
Riches
"Since all the Riches of this World"
"I rose up in the dawn of day"
Blakes apology for his Catalogue
[The "Auguries" (Pickering) Manuscript] (c. 1805)
The Smile
The Golden Net
The Mental Traveller
The Land of Dreams
Mary
The Crystal Cabinet
The Gray Monk
Auguries of Innocence
Long John Brown & Little Mary Bell
William Bond
From Vala / The Four Zoas (c. 1797-1805)
From Exhibition of Paintings in Fresco [Advertisement] (1809)
"In the last Battle that Arthur fought . . . "
The Invention of a Portable Fresco
From A Descriptive Catalogue (1809)
From [A Vision of the Last Judgment] (1810)
From [A Public Address to the Chalcographic Society] (1809-10)
[The Everlasting Gospel] (c. 1818)
From The Marginalia (1789-1827)
From On Lavater, Aphorisms on Man (1788)
From On Swedenborg, Wisdom of Angels (1788)
From On Watson, Apology for the Bible (1797)
From On Bacon, Essays (1798)
From On Dante, Inferno (1785; notes c. 1800)
From On Reynolds, Works (1798; notes c. 1800-9)
From On Spurzheim, Observations on . . . Insanity (1817)
From On Wordsworth, The Excursion (1814; notes 1826)
From On Wordsworth, Poems (1814; notes 1826)
From On Thornton, Lord's Prayer (1827)
From The Letters
To Trusler, 23 August 1799
From To Cumberland, 2 July 1800
From To Cumberland, 1 September 1800
"Dear Generous Cumberland . . . "
To Flaxman, 12 September 1800
"I bless thee O Father of Heaven & Earth . . ."
From To Flaxman, 21 September 1800
From To Butts, 2 October 1800
"To my Friend Butts I write . . ."
From To Butts, 22 November 1800
From To Butts, 22 November 1800 [second letter]
"With happiness stretchd across the hills . . . "
From To Butts, 10 January 180[3]
From To James Blake, 30 January 1803
From To Butts, 25 April 1803
From To Butts, 6 July 1803
From To Butts, 16 August 1803
"O why was I born with a different face . . ."
[Blake's Memorandum, August 1803]
From To Hayley, 7 October 1803
From To Hayley, 23 October 1804
From To Hayley, 11 December 1805
To Turner, 9 June 1818
To Cumberland, 12 April 1827
Criticism
Comments by Contemporaries
Robert Hunt - From Mr Blake's Exhibition (1809)
Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Blake's Poems, Letter to C. A. Tulk [1818]
John Thomas Smith - From Nollekens and his Times (1828)
Frederick Tatham - From Life of Blake (?1832)
Henry Crabb Robinson - From Reminiscences (1853)
Samuel Palmer - Letter to Alexander Gilchrist (1855)
Twentieth and Twenty-first Century Perspectives
Allen Ginsberg – [My Vision of Blake] (1966)
Northrop Frye – Blake's Treatment of the Archetype (1951)
W. J. T. Mitchell – Dangerous Blake (1982)
Joseph Viscomi – [Blake's Relief Etching Process: A Simplifed Account] (1983)
Stephen C. Behrendt – [The ‘Third Text' of Blake's Illuminated Books] (1999)
Martin K. Nurmi – [On The Marriage of Heaven and Hell] (1957)
Alicia Ostriker – Desire Gratified and Ungratified (1982)
Nelson Hilton – Some Polysemous Words in Blake (1983)
Jon Mee – [Blake the Bricoleur] (1992)
Saree Makdisi – Fierce Rushing: William Blake and the Cultural Politics of the 1790s (2003)
Julia Wright – "How Different the World to Them": Revolutionary Heterogeneity and Alienation (2004)
Morris Eaves – The Title-page of The Book of Urizen (1973)
Harold Bloom – [On the Theodicy of Blake's Milton] (1963)
Vincent Arthur De Luca – A Wall of Words: The Sublime as Text (1986)
Maps
Blake's Britain
Blake's Holy Land
Blake's London
Textual Technicalities
William Blake: A Chronology
Bibliography, with Index of Scholars and Critics
Index of Titles and First Lines

0-393-09083-3

821.7 / JOH

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