Songs of Innocence

Front Cover
Courier Corporation, 1971 M01 1 - 55 pages

William Blake's innovations in engraving techniques brought about his brilliant synthesis of visual and poetic art and signaled the beginning of his famous "Illuminated Books," of which the Songs of Innocence was the first and most popular. Unfortunately, Blake's vision is generally known to the world in amputated form: because of the difficulty and expense of reproducing his original conception, most editions of Blake's work offer only the printed text, with no trace of the visual counterpart so essential to his "System."
This new, facsimile edition of the Songs of Innocence reproduces Blake's color plates in a fashion which the artist himself would have approved. The 31 plates ? printed on facing pages which are the same size of Blake's own first edition ? offer one of the more brightly colored versions of this significant volume, no two copies of which are the same. As a special aid to readers, a typographical reprint of the text of poems follows the plates. Such classic "songs" as "The Lamb" and "The Chimney Sweeper" are now accessible to all in the symbiotic union of poem and picture that is crucial to a total understating of Blake's mind and art.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Introduction
34
The Shepherd
35
On Anothers Sorrow
36
The School Boy
37
Holy Thursday
38
Nurses Song
39
Laughing Song
40
The Voice of the Ancient Bard
41
The Divine Image
44
The Little Girl Lost
45
The Little Girl Found
47
The Little Boy Lost
49
The Little Boy Found
50
Spring
51
The Blossom
52
The Lamb
53

The Echoing Green
42
The Chimney Sweeper
43
Night
54
Copyright

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About the author (1971)

Painter, printer, and poet, William Blake (1757-1827) was a master at expressing great literature through his art. Perhaps the finest engraver in English history, Blake's illuminated books -- filled with sketches and watercolors that boggle the mind with their beauty and detail -- are as sought after today as they were over a hundred years ago.

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