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1757–1827. http://www.blakearchive.org/blake/ World History Archive / Alamy Stock Photo. Poet, painter, engraver, and visionary William Blake worked to bring about a change both in the social order and in the minds of men.
10 de ene. de 2017 · The greatest poems by William Blake selected by Dr Oliver Tearle. William Blake (1757-1827) is one of the key figures of English Romanticism, and a handful of his poems are universally known thanks to their memorable phrases and opening lines.
William Blake was a poet and printmaker born in London in the mid-1700s during the Romantic era. Blake lived and worked at a time of great social and political changes, including the American Revolution in 1775 and the French Revolution in 1789, that profoundly influenced his writing.
Best known in his time as a painter and engraver, William Blake is now known as a major visionary poet whose expansive style influenced 20th-century writers and musicians as varied as T.S. Eliot, Allen Ginsberg, and Bob Dylan.
Many of these deleted passages are printed here for the first time and allow us a comprehensive view of Blake as a reviser of his own poetry. Readers and students of Blake, with this text before them, confront an accurate and well-nigh complete collection--some erasures continue to defy transcription--of the writings of one of the greatest of ...
Auguries of Innocence. By William Blake. To see a World in a Grain of Sand. And a Heaven in a Wild Flower. Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand. And Eternity in an hour. A Robin Red breast in a Cage. Puts all Heaven in a Rage. A Dove house filld with Doves & Pigeons.
The Garden of Love. By William Blake. I went to the Garden of Love, And saw what I never had seen: A Chapel was built in the midst, Where I used to play on the green. And the gates of this Chapel were shut, And 'Thou shalt not' writ over the door; So I turn'd to the Garden of Love, That so many sweet flowers bore.