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William Blake, an English poet, painter, and printmaker, wrote a sequence of poems titled "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell" that mimicked biblical prophesy. Blake, who was mostly ignored during his lifetime, is now regarded as a key influence in the development of Romantic-era poetry and visual art. Blake's deeply held Romantic and revolutionary views are expressed throughout the text.
The theme for the work, which Blake borrowed from Milton's Paradise Lost and Dantes's Inferno, is the narrator's trip to Hell. The entire book is written in prose, with the exception of the Song of Liberty and the Introductory Argument.
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Subjects
Criticism and interpretation, English Illumination of books and manuscripts, English Manuscripts, English Philosophy, Facsimiles, Heaven, Hell, Illustrations, Manuscripts, Manuscripts Facsimiles, open_syllabus_project, Marriage of Heaven and Hell (Blake, William), Poetry (poetic works by one author), English poetry, English literaturePeople
William Blake (1757-1827)Times
18th century, FacsimilesShowing 6 featured editions. View all 34 editions?
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The marriage of Heaven and Hell: in full color
1994, Dover Publications
in English
0486281221 9780486281223
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Book Details
Edition Notes
This is copy M (G.E. Bentley's Blake books) of William Blake's The marriage of heaven and hell. It consists of three plates (25-27) printed on two integral leaves (one folded half-sheet) for a total of four pages, one of which is blank.
Each page is 20 x 12 cm.
This part of Blake's work has the caption title: A song of liberty.
Bentley, G.E., Blake books, 98
Bentley, G.E., Blake books, Postscript (2000), p. 3.
Gift to Victoria University Library. Bentley, G.E., Jr. 2005/10/01.
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- Created December 19, 2008
- 2 revisions
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