Windows of the Morning: A Critical Study of William Blake's Poetical Sketches, 1783Yale University Press, 1940 - 249 pages |
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Page 102
... imagination . If the interpretation were just that the fourteen - year - old Blake symbolized marriage by the golden cage in the song , " How sweet I roam'd , " she adds : " This would mean the su- perfluous insertion of a second little ...
... imagination . If the interpretation were just that the fourteen - year - old Blake symbolized marriage by the golden cage in the song , " How sweet I roam'd , " she adds : " This would mean the su- perfluous insertion of a second little ...
Page 156
... Imagination is the world of Eternity . " Akenside's interpretation of poetry as the one of the arts that uses language as an instrument of imitation to express objects of the imagination would have interested Blake . In the General ...
... Imagination is the world of Eternity . " Akenside's interpretation of poetry as the one of the arts that uses language as an instrument of imitation to express objects of the imagination would have interested Blake . In the General ...
Page 169
... imaginative energy was great enough to have fired Blake's own imagination . The musical notes , the bright images , the potent ideas which came to him from the best in his century quick- ened the quality of genuine poetry . One may ...
... imaginative energy was great enough to have fired Blake's own imagination . The musical notes , the bright images , the potent ideas which came to him from the best in his century quick- ened the quality of genuine poetry . One may ...
Contents
THE YOUTHFUL BLAKE | 1 |
THE PRODUCTION OF UNTUTORED YOUTH | 29 |
THE INfluence of MILTON and the Bible | 59 |
Copyright | |
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Windows of the Morning: A Critical Study of William Blake's Poetical ... Margaret Ruth Lowery No preview available - 2013 |
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appears battle Bible called character Chatterton close clouds Complete copy critics death described drawing early edition Edward the Third effect engraving example experience expressed eyes fact Fair father fear figures Flaxman force gave Gilchrist give given hand Henry hill Ibid idea imagination Imitation influence interest James John kindly granted King Edward known later letter light lines live London lyrical Magazine Malkin manner meaning Milton mind Morning nature never night original Ossian passage Permission phrase picture play poems Poetical Sketches Poetry and Prose poets Press Printed publisher Queene quote this text reason record referred Samson scene seems seen Shakespeare shows Songs sources speech Spenser spirit suggestion sweet things Thomas Thomson thou thought tion turn verse vision William Blake writing written wrote youth