The Portable William Blake

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The Portable William Blake Page 51

by Blake, William

Hirsch, E. D., Jr. Innocence and Experience: An Introduction to Blake. New Haven, Conn., and London, 1964.

  Hirst, Désirée. Hidden Riches. Traditional Symbolism from the Renaissance to Blake. London, 1964.

  Lowery, Margaret Ruth. Windows of the Morning. New Haven, 1940. A study of the Poetical Sketches.

  Margoliouth, H. M. William Blake. London, 1951. A good brief introduction.

  Murry, John Middleton. William Blake. London, 1933.

  Nurmi, Martin K. Blake’s “Marriage of Heaven and Hell.” Kent, Ohio, 1957.

  Ostriker, Alicia. Vision and Verse in William Blake. Madison, Wise., 1965; London, 1966.

  Percival, Milton O. William Blake’s Circle of Destiny. New York, 1938. A study of occult traditions in Blake.

  Pinto, Vivian de Sola, ed. The Divine Vision, London, 1957. A collection of important critical essays.

  Raine, Kathleen. “Blake’s Debt to Antiquity,” Sewanee Reciew, LXXI (1963), 352-450. ,

  Saurat, Denis. Blake and Modern Thought. London, 1929.

  Schorer, Mark. William Blake. The Politics of Vision. New York, 1946. A valuable study of Blake’s radical background.

  Swinburne, Algernon Charles. William Blake. London, 1868.

  White, Helen C. The Mysticism of William Blake. Madison, Wise., 1927.

  Wicksteed, Joseph H. Blake’s Innocence and Experience. London, 1928.

  AILEEN WARD

  INDEX

  OF TITLES AND FIRST LINES OF POEMS

  A Cradle Song

  A Divine Image

  A Dream

  A fairy leapt upon my knee

  A flower was offer’d to me

  A little black thing among the snow

  A Little Boy Lost

  A little Flower grew in a lonely Vale.

  A Little Girl Lost

  A murderous Providence! A Creation that groans, living on Death

  A Pair of Stays to mend the Shape

  A petty Sneaking Knave I knew

  A Pitiful Case

  A Poison Tree

  A Pretty Epigram

  Abstinence sows sand all over

  Ah, Sun-flower! weary of time

  Ah! weak & wide astray ! Ah! shut in narrow doleful form!

  Alas!—The time will come when a man’s worst enemies

  All Pictures that’s Painted with Sense & with Thought

  All the night in woe

  All things acted on Earth are seen in the bright Sculptures of

  An Ancient Proverb

  An Answer. to the Parson

  An old maid early—e’er. I knew

  And all Nations wept in affliction, Family by Family

  And did those feet in ancient time

  And he said: “Wherefore do I feel such love & pity?

  And I beheld the Twenty-four Cities of Albion

  And in the North Gate, in the West of the North, toward Beulah

  And it is thus Created. Lo, the Eternal Great Humanity

  And Los beheld his Sons and he beheld his Daughters

  And Los prayed and said, “0 Divine Saviour, arise

  And Los stood & cried to the Labourers of the Vintage in voice of awe

  And this is the manner of the Sons of Albion in their strength

  And This is the Song sung at The Feast of Los & Enitharmon

  And thus began the binding of Urizen; day & night in fear

  And Urizen Read in his book of brass in sounding tones

  And where Luther ends Adam begins the Eternal Circle

  Anger & Wrath my bosom rends

  Another

  Are not the joys of morning sweeter

  Around the Springs of Gray my wild root weaves

  As I wander’d the forest

  As the Ignorant Savage will sell his own Wife

  As the Pilgrim passes while the Country permanent remains

  Auguries of Innocence

  Awake, awake, my little Boy!

  Behold, in the Visions of Elohim Jehovah, behold Joseph & Mary

  Blake’s Apology for His Catalogue

  But turning toward Ololon in terrible majesty Milton

  Call that the Public Voice which is their Error

  Can I see another’s woe

  Can there be any thing more mean

  Children of the future Age

  Come hither, my boy, tell me what thou seest there.

  Come hither my sparrows

  Comethou Lamb of God, and take away the remembrance of Sin

  Cosway, Frazer & Baldwin of Egypt’s Lake

  C[romek] loves artists, as he loves his Meat

  Cromek Speaks

  Cruelty has a Human Heart

  Darkness & sorrow cover’d all flesh. Eternity was darken’d

  Daughters of Beulah! Muses who inspire the Poet’s Song

  Day

  Dear Mother, dear Mother, the church is cold

  Dedication of the Illustrations to Blair’s Grave

  Degrade first the Arts if you’d Mankind Degrade

  Does the Eagle know what is in the pit?

  Dryden in Rhyme cries, “Milton only Planned.”

  Each Man is in his Spectre’s power

  Earth rais’d up her head

  Earth’s Answer

  England! awake! awake! awake!

  English Encouragement of Art

  Enion brooded o’er the rocks; the rough rocks groaning vegetate

  Enion said: “Thy fear has made me tremble, thy terrors have surrounded me

  Eno, aged Mother

  Enslav d, the Daughters of Albion weep; a trembling lamentation

  Epitaph

  Eternity

  Father! father! where are you going?

  Five windows light the cavern’ d Man: thro’ one he breathes the air

  Florentine Ingratitude

  For all are Men in Eternity, Rivers, Mountains, Cities, Villages

  For this is being a Friend just in the nick

  Fresh from the dewy hill, the merry year

  From every-one of the Four Regions of Human Majesty

  Fuzon on a chariot iron-wing’ d

  Give Pensions to the Learned Pig

  Great things are done with Men & Mountains meet

  Grown old in Love from Seven till Seven times Seven

  Having given great offence by writing in Prose

  He has observ’d the Golden Rule

  He makes the Lame to walk we all agree

  He’s a Blockhead who wants a proof of what he can’t Perceive

  He who binds to himself a joy

  Hear the voice of the Bard!

  Her whole Life is an Epigram, smart, smooth, & neatly pen’d&

  Here lies John Trot, the Friend of all mankind

  His limbs bound down mock at his chains, for over them a flame

  Hoarse turn’d the Starry Wheels rending a way in Albion’s Loins

  Holy Thursday

  How are the Wars of man, which in Great Eternity

  How sweet I roam’d from field to field

  How sweet is the Shepherd’s sweet lot!

  I also stood in Satan’s bosom & beheld its desolations

  I always take my judgment from a Fool

  I am made to sow the thistle for wheat, the nettle for a nourishing dainty

  I am no Homer’s Hero, you all know

  I am that Shadowy Prophet who Six Thousand Years ago

  I am your Rational Power Albion & that Human Form

  I asked a thief to steal me a peach

  I bless theeFather of Heaven & Earth, that ever I saw Flaxman’s face.

  I call them by their English names: English, the rough basement

  “I diediet” the Mother said

  I dreamt a Dream ! what can it mean?

  I fear’d the fury of my wind

  I found them blind: I taught them how to see

  I give you the end of a golden string

  I have no name

  I hear the screech of Childbirth loud pealing, & the groans

  I he
ard an Angel singing

  I laid me down upon a bank

  I love the jocund dance

  I love to rise in a summer mom

  I loved Theotormon

  I mock thee not, tho’ I by thee am Mocked

  I must Create a System or be enslav’d by another Man’s

  I rose up at the dawn of day

  I, Rubens, am a Statesman & a Saint

  I saw a chapel all of gold

  I saw a Monk of Charlemaine

  I seize the sphery harp. I strike the strings.

  I stood among my valleys of the south

  I travel’d thro’ a Land of Men

  I walked abroad in a snowy day

  I wander thro’ each charter’ d street

  I was angry with my friend

  I was buried near this Dike

  I wash’d them out & wash’d them in

  I went to the Garden of Love

  I will sing you a song of Los, the Eternal Prophet

  I wonder whether the Girls are mad

  I write the Rascal Thanks till he & I

  If I e’er Grow to Man’s Estate

  If it is True, what the Prophets write

  If Moral Virtue was Christianity

  If Perceptive Organs vary, Objects of Perception seem to vary

  If you account it Wisdom when you are angry to be silent and

  If you have form’d a Circle to go into

  If you mean to Please Every body you willof

  If you play a Game of Chance, know, before you begin

  If you trap the moment before it’s ripe

  In a Mirtle Shade

  In a wife I would desire

  In every Nation of the Earth, till the Twelve Sons of Albion

  In futurity

  Infant Joy

  Infant Sorrow

  Is this a holy thing to see

  It is easier to forgive an Enemy than to forgive a Friend

  Jerusalem! Jerusalem! why why wilt thou turn away?

  Lacedemonian Instruction

  Laughing Song

  Let the Brothels of Paris be opened

  Lines for the Illustrations to Gray’s Poems

  Little Fly

  Little Lamb, who made thee?

  Little Mary Bell had a Fairy in a Nut

  Lo, a shadow of horror is risen

  London

  Long John Brown and Little Mary Bell

  Los answer’d furious: “Art thou one of those who when most complacent

  Los grew furious, raging: “Why stand we here trembling around

  Los in his wrath curs’d heaven & earth; he rent up Nations

  Los is by mortals nam’d Time, Enitharmon is nam’d Space

  Los thus spoke: “O noble Sons, be patient yet a littlel

  Loud sounds the Hammer of Los & loud his Bellows is heard

  Love and harmony combine

  Love seeketh not Itself to please

  Love to faults is always blind

  “Madman” I have been call’d: “Fool” they call thee

  Mary

  Memory, hither come

  Merlin’s Prophecy

  Merry, Merry Sparrow!

  Milton entering my Foot saw in the nether

  Milton’s Religion is the cause: there is no end to destruction

  Mock on, Mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau

  Morning

  Motto to the Songs of Innocence &´ Experience

  Mutual Forgiveness of each Vice

  My mother bore me in the southern wild

  My mother groan’d! my father wept (Songs of Experience)

  My mother groan’d, my father wept (Verses and Fragments)

  My Pretty Rose-Tree

  My silks and fine array

  My Spectre around me night & day

  My title as a Genius thus is prov’d

  Nail his neck to the Cross: nail it with a nail

  Nature & Art in this together Suit

  Never seek to tell thy love

  Night

  Nought loves another as itself

  Now Albion’s sleeping Humanity began to turn upon his Couch

  Now Art has lost its mental Charms

  Nurse’s Song

  O Autumn, laden with fruit, and stained

  O holy virgin! clad in purest white

  O lapwing, thou fliest around the heath

  O Reader, behold the Philosopher’s Gravel

  O rose, thou art sick!

  “0 thou poor Human Form!” said she. “0 thou poor child of woel

  O thou, who passest thro’ our vallies in

  O thou with dewy locks, who lookest down

  O what is Life & what is Man? O what is Death? Wherefore

  O why was I born with a different face?

  O Winter! bar thine adamantine doors

  Of H[ayleyl’s birth this was the happy lot

  Of the primeval Priest’s as-sum’ d power

  Of the Sleep of Ulro! and of the passage through

  On Another’s Sorrow

  On F(laxman] and S[rothard]

  On H[ayley] the Pick Thank

  On S[tothard]

  On the Great Encouragement

  On the Virginity of the Virgin Mary & Johanna Southcott

  Once a dream did weave a shade

  Once Man was occupied in intellectual pleasures & energies

  Our wars are wars of life, & wounds of love

  P[hillips] loved me not as he lov’d his Friends

  Piping down the valleys wild

  Pity would be no more

  Rafael Sublime, Majestic, Graceful, Wise

  Reader! lover of books! lover of heaven

  Remove away that black ’ning church

  Riches

  Rintrah roars & shakes his fires in the burden’d air

  Scotland pours out his Sons to labour at the Furnaces

  Silence remain’d & every one resum’d his Human Majesty

  Silent, Silent Night

  Since all the Riches of this World

  Sir Joshua Praises Michael Angelo

  Sir Joshua sent his own Portrait to

  Sleep, Sleep, beauty bright

  Some look to see the sweet Outlines

  Some Men, created for destruction, come

  Some people admire the work of a Fool

  Soft Snow

  Songs

  Songs of Experience, Introduction

  Songs of Innocence, Introduction

  Sound the Flute!

  Spring

  Sweet dreams, form a shade

  Sweet Mary, the first time she ever was there

  Terror in the house does roar

  That God is Colouring Newton does shew

  The Angel

  The Angel that presided o’er my birth

  The Blossom

  The blow of his Hammer is Justice, the swing of his Hammer Mercy

  The Breath Divine went forth upon the morning hills. Albion mov’d

  The Caterpillar on the Leaf

  The Caverns of the Grave I’ve seen

  The Chimney Sweeper

  The Clod and the Pebble

  The countless gold of a merry heart

  The Crystal Cabinet

  The daughters of the Seraphim led round their sunny flocks

  The deep of winter came

  The Divine Image

  The Door of Death is made of Gold

  The Ecchoing Green

  The Errors of a Wise Man make your Rule

  The fields from Islington to Marybone

  The Fly

  The Garden of Love

  The Golden Net

  The Good are attracted by Men’s perceptions

  The Grey Monk

  The Guardian Prince of Albion bums in his nightly tent

  The harvest shall flourish in wintry weather

  The Human Abstract

  The inhabitants are sick to death: they labour to divide into Days

  The Kings of Asia heard

  The Lamb

  The
Land of Dreams

  The Lilly

  The Little Black Boy

  The Little Boy Found

  The Little Boy Lost

  The little boy lost in the lonely fen

  The Little Girl Found

  The Little Girl Lost

  The Little Vagabond

  The look of love alarms

  The Maiden caught me in the Wild

  The Male is a Furnace of beryll; the Female is a golden Loom

  The Marriage Ring

  The Mental Traveler

  The modest Rose puts forth a thorn

  The morning dawn’d. Urizen rose, & in his hand the Flail

  The Mundane Shell’is a vast Concave Earth, an immense

  The nameless shadowy female rose from out the breast of Orc

  The nature of infinity is this: That every thing has its

  The only Man that e’er I knew

  The Question Answered

  The Schoolboy

  The shadowy Daughter of Urthona stood before red Orc

  The Shepherd

  The Sick Rose

  The Smile

  The Song of the Aged Mother which shook the heavens with wrath

  The Sons of Ozoth within the Optic Nerve stand fiery glowing

  The Spectre is the Reasoning Power in Man, & when separated

  The Spectre, like a hoar frost & a Mildew, rose over Albion

  The Sun arises in the East

  The sun descending in the west

  The Sun does arise

  The Sun has left his blackness & has found a fresher morning

  The sword sung on the barren heath

  The Tyger

  The Vegetative Universe opens like a flower from the Earth’s center

  The Villain at the Gallows tree

  The Voice of the Ancient Bard

  The Washerwoman’s Song

  The Wild Flower’s Song

  The wild winds weep

  The Wine-press of Los is eastward of Golgonooza before the Seat

  The Woes of Urizen shut up in the deep dens of Urthona

  Thel’s Motto

  Then Jesus appeared standing by Albion as the Good Shepherd

  Then left the sons of Urizen the plow & harrow, the loom

  Then Milton rose up from the heavens of Albion ardorous

  There is a Smile of Love

  These are the Idiot’s chiefest arts

  These are the Sons of Los, & these the Labourers of the Vintage

  These are the starry voids of night & the depths & caverns of earth

 

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