William Blake

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Standard Name: Blake, William

Connections

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Textual Production Kathleen Raine
In 1972 KR published Yeats , the Tarot, and the Golden Dawn, an essay discussing the work of Yeats and Blake , as New Yeats Papers volume 2. She followed this in 1974 with...
Textual Production Marina Warner
MW 's Into the Dangerous World: Some Reflections on Childhood and its Costs (in the Chatto Counterblasts Series) lambasted the British government for failing to provide an adequate standard of living for children.
The...
Textual Production Eva Figes
EF explicitly addressed to grandparents her Tales of Innocence and Experience. An Exploration, which is both a memoir and a collection of revisions of fairy-tales.
By its allusion to Blake , the title evokes...
Textual Production Penelope Lively
Once more the titles provoke curiosity. They include Venice, Now and Then, Grow Old Along with Me, the Best Is Yet to Be (opening line of a poem by Robert Browning ), Yellow...
Textual Production Marie Belloc Lowndes
For Mary King Patterson of the New York Daily News (a personal friend), MBL wrote It Is Happening Now, about England at war (an imaginary war, since the story was complete some months before...
Textual Production Kathleen Raine
In 1979 she published From Blake to A Vision, an essay arguing that both Yeats and Blake fall within the central and primary tradition of British Poetry.
Stanford, Donald E., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 20. Gale Research.
20: 291
This publication was volume 17...
Textual Production Mary Butts
This account of her life from childhood to the age of twenty takes its title from a poem by William Blake . The poem's speaker is caught by a Maiden while dancing in the wild...
Textual Production Margaret Gatty
Juliana Ewing called MG 's collection of three stories, The Human Face Divine and Other Tales (titled from Paradise Lost), 1859, a very characteristic volume.
Ewing, Juliana Horatia. “Margaret Gatty, 1885”. A Celebration of Women Writers, edited by Mary Mark Ockerbloom.
xvi
The Athenaeum Index of Reviews and Reviewers: 1830-1870. http://replay.web.archive.org/20070714065452/http://www.soi.city.ac.uk/~asp/v2/home.html.
1677 (1859): 812
To most readers today the...
Textual Production Edna Lyall
Her general practice was to suggest half a dozen titles and let her publisher choose. With this book she reverted to a three-volume format and to Hurst and Blackett .
Payne, George A. "Edna Lyall:" an Appreciation. John Heywood.
21
OCLC WorldCat. http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.
In the year before...
Textual Production Dorothy Richardson
In her correspondence Richardson addresses a great range of topics, including her own varied reading. She comments on women writers from Julian of Norwich through Jane Austen , Emily and Charlotte Brontë , George Eliot
Textual Production Jennifer Johnston
JJ published another novel through Sinclair-Stevenson , The Invisible Worm, which is titled from Blake 's poem The Sick Rose.
Blackwell’s Online Bookshop. http://Bookshop.Blackwell.co.uk.
Textual Production E. B. C. Jones
EBCJ dedicated her final novel, Morning and Cloud, to Phyllis Hamerton , with quotations from Edwin Muir and William Blake .
Dated by the Bodleian Library acquisition stamp.
Solo: Search Oxford University Libraries Online. http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?vid=OXVU1&fromLogin=true&reset_config=true.
Textual Production Kathleen Raine
KR published William Blake, the first of her many critical studies of Blake .
British Book News. British Council.
(1951): 559
Stanford, Donald E., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 20. Gale Research.
20: 288
TLS Centenary Archive Centenary Archive [1902-2012]. http://www.gale.com/c/the-times-literary-supplement-historical-archive.
2565 (30 March 1951): 202
Textual Production Kathleen Raine
KR gave a Founders' Memorial Lecture at Girton College , Cambridge, entitled Blake and England.
Raine, Kathleen. Blake and England. W. Heffer and Son.
title page
Textual Features Ann Batten Cristall
The preface expresses admiration for both Burns and George Dyer . ABC stresses her lack of education (which, critic Richard C. Sha argues, associates herself with lower-class writers like William Blake and Henry Kirke White

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