William Blake

Front Cover
Sterling Publishing Company, 2007 - Juvenile Nonfiction - 48 pages
William Blake's exuberant poems are easy to read and understand but full of profound thought and rich imagery. This beautifully illustrated edition contains all of Blake's best known and best loved works, including "The Tyger," "Little Boy Lost," and other selections from his Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience, as well as samples of his later, even more powerful visionary poetry. Together they reveal an amazing insight into human nature that has captivated the hearts and minds of readers young and old for generations. --Sterling Publishing Co.

From inside the book

Contents

The Shepherd
10
The Ecchoing Green
11
The Lamb
12
The Chimney Sweeper
14
The Little Boy Lost
15
The Little Boy Found
16
The Divine Image
17
Night
18
The Sick Rose
32
The Angel
33
The Tyger
34
Ah SunFlower
35
The Garden of Love
36
Infant Sorrow
37
A Poison Tree
38
A Little Boy Lost
39

Nurses Song
20
A Dream
21
On Anothers Sorrow
22
The Clod the Pebble
24
Holy Thursday
25
from The Little Girl Lost
26
The Little Girl Found
28
The Chimney Sweeper
30
Nurses Song
31
The School Boy
40
from The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
42
The Emanation of the Giant Albion
44
from Auguries of Innocence
45
from Milton
46
from To Thomas Butts October 2 1800
47
Index
48
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

William Blake's poems, prophecies, and engravings represent his strong vision and voice for rebellion against orthodoxy and all forms of repression. Born in London in November 1757; his father, a hosier of limited means, could do little for the boy's education. However, when the young Blake's talent for design became apparent, his wise father sent him to drawing school at the age of 10. In 1771 Blake was apprenticed to an engraver. Blake went on to develop his own technique, a method he claimed that came to him in a vision of his deceased younger brother. In this, as in so many other areas of his life, Blake was an iconoclast; his blend of printing and engraving gave his works a unique and striking illumination. Blake joined with other young men in support of the Revolutions in France and America. He also lived his own revolt against established rules of conduct, even in his own home. One of his first acts after marrying his lifetime companion, Catherine Boucher, was to teach her to read and write, rare for a woman at that time. Blake's writings were increasingly styled after the Hebrew prophets. His engravings and poetry give form and substance to the conflicts and passions of the elemental human heart, made real as actual characters in his later work. Although he was ignored by the British literary community through most of his life, interest and study of his work has never waned. Blake's creativity and original thinking mark him as one of the earliest Romantic poets, best known for his Songs of Innocence (1789) and Songs of Experience (1794) and The Tiger. Blake died in London in 1827.

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