Page:Life of William Blake 2, Gilchrist.djvu/16
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CONTENTS OF VOLUME II.
| PAGE | |
| Scoffers. Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau | 121 |
| The Agony of Faith. "I see, I see," the mother said | 123 |
| Daybreak. To find the western path | 124 |
| Thames and Ohio. Why should I care for the men of Thames? | 124 |
| Young Love. Are not the joys of morning sweeter | 125 |
| Riches. Since all the riches of this world | 125 |
| Opportunity. He who bends to himself a joy | 126 |
| Seed Sowing. Thou hast a lapful of seed | 126 |
| Barren Blossom. I feared the fury of my wind | 127 |
| Night and Day. Silent, silent night | 127 |
| Love and Deceit. Love to faults is always blind | 128 |
| Couplets and Fragments | 129 |
| Epigrams and Satirical Pieces on Art and Artists | 132 |
| Introductory Note | 137 |
| Descriptive Catalogue | 139 |
| Public Address | 164 |
| Memoranda by Blake of his mode of Engraving | 178 |
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| Sibylline Leaves— | |
| On Homer's Poetry | 179 |
| On Virgil | 180 |
| The Ghost of Abel | 181 |
| A Vision of the Last Judgment | 185 |
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| Note upon Blake's Engraved Designs | 203 |
| Illustrations of the Book of Job | |
| Songs of Innocence and of Experience. |
ANNOTATED CATALOGUE OF BLAKE'S PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS.
| Introductory Note | 205 |