LIFE
OF
WILLIAM BLAKE,
VOL. II.
LIFE
OF
WILLIAM BLAKE
WITH SELECTIONS FROM HIS POEMS AND OTHER WRITINGS
BY
OF THE MIDDLE TEMPLE, BARRISTER-AT-LAW
AUTHOR OF "THE LIFE OF WILLIAM ETTY, R.A."
A NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION
ILLUSTRATED FROM BLAKE'S OWN WORKS
WITH ADDITIONAL LETTERS AND A MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR
IN TWO VOLUMES
VOL. II.
London
MACMILLAN AND CO.
1880.
The Right of Translation is Reserved
| PAGE | |
| Introductory Note | 1 |
| Song. My silks and fine array | 3 |
| Song. Love and harmony combine | 4 |
| Song. I love the jocund dance | 5 |
| Mad Song. The wild winds weep | 6 |
| Song. How sweet I roamed from field to field | 7 |
| Song. Memory, hither come | 8 |
| To the Muses. Whether on Ida's shady brow | 9 |
| To the Evening Star. Thou fair-hair'd angel of the Evening | 10 |
| To Spring. O thou, with dewy locks, who lookest down | 11 |
| To Summer. O thou who passest thro' our valleys in | 12 |
| Blind-Man's Buff. When silver snow decks Susan's clothes | 13 |
| King Edward the Third (Selections from) | 16 |
| Introductory Note | 27 |
| Introduction. Piping down the valleys wild | 29 |
| The Shepherd. How sweet is the shepherd's sweet lot | 30 |
| PAGE | |
| The Echoing Green. The sun does arise | 31 |
| The Lamb. Little lamb, who made thee? | 32 |
| The Little Black Boy. My mother bore me in the southern wild | 33 |
| The Blossom. Merry, merry sparrow! | 34 |
| The Chimney-Sweeper. When my mother died I was very young | 35 |
| The Little Boy Lost. Father, father, where are you going? | 36 |
| The Little Boy Found. The little boy lost in the lonely fen | 36 |
| Laughing Song. When the great woods laugh with the voice of joy | 37 |
| Cradle Song. Sweet dreams form a shade | 38 |
| The Divine Image. To mercy, pity, peace, and love | 40 |
| Holy Thursday. 'Twas on a Holy Thursday, their innocent faces clean | 41 |
| Night. The Sun descending in the West | 42 |
| Spring. Sound the flute! | 44 |
| Nurse's Song. When the voices of children are heard on the green | 45 |
| Infant Joy. I have no name | 46 |
| A Dream. Once a dream did weave a shade | 47 |
| On Another's Sorrow. Can I see another's woe | 48 |
| The Voice of the Ancient Bard. Youth of delight! come hither | 50 |
| Introduction. Hear the voice of the bard | 51 |
| Earth's Answer. Earth raised up her head | 52 |
| The Clod and the Pebble. Love seeketh not itself to please | 53 |
| Holy Thursday. Is this a holy thing to see | 54 |
| The Little Girl Lost. In futurity | 55 |
| The Little Girl Found. All the night in woe | 57 |
| The Chimney Sweeper. A little black thing among the snow | 59 |
| The Sick Rose. O Rose, thou art sick! | 60 |
| Nurse's Song. When the voices of children are heard on the green | 60 |
| The Fly. Little Fly | 61 |
| The Angel. I dreamt a dream! What can it mean? | 62 |
| The Tiger. Tiger, tiger, burning bright | 63 |
| My Pretty Rose Tree. A flower was offered to me | 64 |
| PAGE | |
| Ah! Sunflower. Ah! Sunflower! weary of time | 64 |
| The Lily. The modest rose puts forth a thorn | 65 |
| The Garden of Love. I laid me down upon a bank | 65 |
| The Little Vagabond. Dear mother, dear mother, the church is cold | 66 |
| London. I wander through each charter'd street | 67 |
| The Human Abstract. Pity would be no more | 68 |
| Infant Sorrow. My mother groaned, my father wept | 69 |
| Christian Forbearance. I was angry with my friend | 69 |
| A Little Boy Lost. Nought loves another as itself | 70 |
| A Little Girl Lost. Children of the future age | 71 |
| A Cradle Song. Sleep, sleep, beauty bright | 73 |
| The Schoolboy. I love to rise on a summer morn | 74 |
| To Tirzah. Whate'er is born of mortal birth | 76 |
| THE BOOK OF THEL | 77 |
| Introductory Note | 85 |
| The Birds. Where thou dwellest, in what grove | 89 |
| Broken Love. My spectre around me night and day | 90 |
| The Two Songs. I heard an angel singing | 93 |
| The Defiled Sanctuary. I saw a chapel all of gold | 94 |
| Cupid. Why was Cupid a boy? | 95 |
| The Woman taken in Adultery. The vision of Christ that thou dost see | 96 |
| Love's Secret. Never seek to tell thy love | 98 |
| The Wild Flower's Song. As I wandered in the forest | 99 |
| The Crystal Cabinet. The maiden caught me in the wild | 100 |
| Smile and Frown. There is a smile of love | 102 |
| The Golden Net. Beneath a white thorn's lovely May | 103 |
| The Land of Dreams. Awake, awake, my little boy | 104 |
| Mary. Sweet Mary, the first time she ever was there | 105 |
| Auguries of Innocence. To see a world in a grain of sand | 107 |
| The Mental Traveller. I travelled through a land of men | 112 |
| In A Myrtle Shade. To a lovely myrtle bound | 118 |
| William Bond. I wonder whether the girls are mad | 119 |
| PAGE | |
| Scoffers. Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau | 121 |
| The Agony of Faith. "I see, I see," the mother said | 123 |
| Daybreak. To find the western path | 124 |
| Thames and Ohio. Why should I care for the men of Thames? | 124 |
| Young Love. Are not the joys of morning sweeter | 125 |
| Riches. Since all the riches of this world | 125 |
| Opportunity. He who bends to himself a joy | 126 |
| Seed Sowing. Thou hast a lapful of seed | 126 |
| Barren Blossom. I feared the fury of my wind | 127 |
| Night and Day. Silent, silent night | 127 |
| Love and Deceit. Love to faults is always blind | 128 |
| Couplets and Fragments | 129 |
| Epigrams and Satirical Pieces on Art and Artists | 132 |
| Introductory Note | 137 |
| Descriptive Catalogue | 139 |
| Public Address | 164 |
| Memoranda by Blake of his mode of Engraving | 178 |
|
| |
| Sibylline Leaves— | |
| On Homer's Poetry | 179 |
| On Virgil | 180 |
| The Ghost of Abel | 181 |
| A Vision of the Last Judgment | 185 |
|
| |
| Note upon Blake's Engraved Designs | 203 |
| Illustrations of the Book of Job | |
| Songs of Innocence and of Experience. |
ANNOTATED CATALOGUE OF BLAKE'S PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS.
| Introductory Note | 205 |
| PAGE | |
| List I. Works in Colour. | |
| Section a. Dated Works | 207 |
| Section b. Undated Works, Biblical and Sacred | 235 |
| DittoDittoPoetic and Miscellaneous | 245 |
| List II. Uncoloured Works. | |
| Section a. Dated Works | 255 |
| Section b. Undated Works. Biblical and Sacred | 264 |
| DittoDittoPoetic and Miscellaneous | 267 |
| List III. Works of Unascertained Method. | |
| Biblical and Sacred | 275 |
| Poetic and Miscellaneous | 275 |
| Items from the Sale Catalogues of Mr. George Smith | 276 |
| Items from the Catalogue of an Exhibition of Blake's Works in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, U.S.A. | 276 |
| Account between Blake and Mr. Butts | 278 |
| Lists of Engravings. | |
| Works designed as well as engraved by Blake | 279 |
| Works engraved, but not designed by Blake | 281 |
| Works designed, but not engraved by Blake | 283 |
| List of Writings | 283 |
| Prospectus by Blake issued in 1793 | 285 |
| Descriptive Notes of the Designs to Young's "Night Thoughts," by Frederic James Shields | 289 |
| Essay on Blake by James Smetham | 309 |
| In Memoriam F. O. Finch, by Samuel Palmer | 353 |
| Memoir of Alexander Gilchrist, by Anne Gilchrist | 357 |
![alt-text=WILLIAM BLAKE [title design] SELECTIONS](../I/Life_of_William_Blake_(1880)%252C_volume_1%252C_title_design_2~.png.webp)
VOL. II.
![I give you the end of a golden string: / Only wind it into a ball. / It will lead you in at Heaven's gate, / Built in Jerusalem wall [text underlined by illustration].](../I/Life_of_William_Blake_(1880)%252C_volume_1%252C_title_design_3.png.webp)
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