William BlakeBook Tree, 2000 M01 20 - 384 páginas Blake was a great painter, poet, and mystic who rejected science and reason and preferred using the powers of imagination in his quest for truth. Because of his psychological and visionary views, he was considered a forerunner to Freud and Jung. The visions he experienced came to him spontaneously, and much of his poetry was dictated from the spiritual realm. He grew up influenced by the mystic Swedenborg and his church. Some thought Blake to be utterly mad; others considered him a genius. One thing is certainthis biography will enrich those with an interest in the adventures of a unique man who spent his life as a spiritual pioneer. |
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Contenido
BLAKES SECRET | 25 |
BLAKES CONCEPTION OF LOVE | 38 |
BLAKES MADNESS | 56 |
BLAKES THEORY OF THE IMAGINATION | 69 |
THE RATIO OF THE FIVE SENSES | 102 |
BLAKES THEORIES OF HIS ART | 112 |
SYMBOLISM IN POETRY AND ART THE PRO PHETIC BOOKS | 148 |
THE CONFINES OF POETRY AND PAINTING | 170 |
BLAKE THE ARTIST | 211 |
THE MYSTIC VISION | 273 |
291 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Albion angels appears Arthur Conan Doyle artistic assert beauty believed Blake Blake's mind Blake's theory Book of Job British Museum called clear colour complete conceived conception course criticism delight divine drawing effect engraving eternal experience expression exquisite fact feeling Felpham figures Fresco genius give Graham Robertson hand heaven human idea ideal illustration imagination impulse Innocence inspiration instinct invention Jerusalem kind lines living Mark Twain MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT material meaning method Milton Mount Ephraim MUSEUM To face mystic natural Nebuchadnezzar never painter painting passion peculiar perception perfect picture poem poet poetic poetry principle printed problem Prophetic Books qualities reality recognise relation revealed Reynolds seems sense side Sir Charles Dilke Songs Songs of Innocence soul spiritual spontaneity symbol thee theme things thistle thought tion Titian touch tree true truth understand vision whole William Blake words