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Storytime Tapestry Newsletter
The newsletter devoted to
spreading love and cultural awareness around the world.
Famous People Column – An
open Column for all writers
January 17, 2007
William Blake(1757 - 1827)
By Gautami Tripahy
A
Cradle Song
Sweet dreams form a shade,
O'er my lovely infants head.
Sweet dreams of pleasant streams,
By happy silent moony beams
Sweet sleep with soft down.
Weave thy brows an infant crown.
Sweet sleep Angel mild,
Hover o'er my happy child.
Sweet smiles in the night,
Hover over my delight.
Sweet smiles Mothers smiles,
All the livelong night beguiles.
Sweet moans, dovelike sighs,
Chase not slumber from thy eyes,
Sweet moans, sweeter smiles,
All the dovelike moans beguiles.
Sleep sleep happy child,
All creation slept and smil'd.
Sleep sleep, happy sleep.
While o'er thee thy mother weep
Sweet babe in thy face,
Holy image I can trace.
Sweet babe once like thee.
Thy maker lay and wept for me
Wept for me for thee for all,
When he was an infant small.
Thou his image ever see.
Heavenly face that smiles on thee,
Smiles on thee on me on all,
Who became an infant small,
Infant smiles are His own smiles,
Heaven & earth to peace beguiles.
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Biography of William
Blake

William Blake William Blake and his works have been
extensively discussed and criticised over the twentieth and now this century,
however previous to that he was barely known. He first became known in 1863
with Alexander Gilchrist's biography "Life" and only fully
appreciated and recognised at the beginning of the twentieth century. It seems
his art had been too adventurous and unconventional for the late eighteenth and
early nineteenth century, maybe you could even say he was ahead of his time?
Either way, today he is a hugely famous figure of Romantic literature, whose
work is open to various interpretations, which has been known to take a
lifetime to establish. As well as his works being difficult to interpret, him
as a person has also provoked much debate. Henry Crabb Robinson, who was a
diarist and friend of Blake's at the end of his life asked the question many
students of Blake are still unable to conclusively answer:
"Shall I call him artist or genius – or mystic –
or madman?" (Lucas, 1998 p. 1)
Born on 28th November 1757 in Soho in London, he had a grounded and happy upbringing. Although always
a well read and intelligent man, Blake left school at the early age of ten to
attend the Henry Pars Drawing Academy for five years. The artists he admired as a child
included Raphael, Michelangelo, Giulio, Romano and D?rer. He started writing
poetry at the age of twelve and in 1783 his friends paid for his first
collection of verses to be printed, which was entitled "Poetical
Sketches" and is now seen as a major poetical event of the 18th century.
Despite his obvious talents as a poet, his official profession was as an
engraver because he could not afford to do a painter's apprenticeship and
therefore began his apprenticeship with the engraver James Basire in 1772.
After completing his apprenticeship six years later, he joined the Royal Academy of Art. At this point his art and engraving remained
separate – he wrote and drew for pleasure and simply engraved to earn a living.
In 1784 he opened his own shop and in the same year completed "Island in the Moon", which ridiculed his contemporaries of
the art and literature social circles he mixed with. Two years previous to
this, he married Catherine Boucher.
Now Blake was an established engraver, he began
experimenting with printing techniques and it was not long before he compiled
his first illuminated book, 'Songs of Innocence' in 1788. Blake wanted to take
his poetry beyond being just words on a page and felt they needed to be
illustrated to create his desired effect. Shortly after he completed 'The Book
of Thel' and from 1790-3, 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell', which followed on
from his significant Prophetic books. These books were a collection of writings
on his philosophical ideas and although they have nothing to do with his
poetry, it was a sign of his increasing awareness of the social injustices of
his time, which led to the completion of his 'Songs of Experience' in 1794.
One of Blake's main influences was the society in which
he lived. He lived during revolutionary times and witnessed the downfall of London during Britain's war with republican France. His disgust with society grew as he matured and 'The
Songs of Innocence and Experience' depict this transition. As well as having
radical religious ideas for the time (he did not believe in "religion of
nature or reason, but thought man's nature was imaginative and mystical"
(Lister 1968, p.27)), he also had radical political ideas due to the day-to-day
poverty he was forced to witness.
"Living near the end of a century, born in a
period of imperialistic wars, coming to maturity during the American Revolution
and to the full bloom of his genius during the French Revolution, aware of
impending economic change and sick to the bone of ruling hypocrisy, he viewed
the evnts of his own days as the fulfilment of prophecy…" (Hagstrum 1964,
p. 97-98)
Blake's preoccupation with good and evil as well as his
strong philosophical and religious beliefs remained throughout his life and he
never stopped depicting them in his poetry and engravings. He died at the age
of sixty-nine in 1827 and although the Blake family name died with him, his
legacy as a fascinating, complex man of many artistic talents will no doubt
remain strong well into this century. Other famous works include 'Europe', 'America', 'Visions of the Daughters of Albion' and 'The Book of Urizen'.
Although Blake is not well known for being a
specifically grotesque artist, it is his experiences and disgust with London society in the late eighteenth century that clearly
emulates elements of the grotesque. As it would be impossible to discuss all of
Blake's works, this study will focus on 'Songs of Innocence and Experience',
particularly 'Songs of Experience' to learn how he portrayed his views on
society and how the grotesque falls into that.
http://www.poemhunter.com/william-blake/
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