Page:Poetical works of William Blake (Sampson, 1913).djvu/14

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The Wild Flower's Song 121
Day 121
The Fairy 122
Motto to the Songs of Innocence and of Experience . . . 123
Lafayette . . . . . . . . . .123
Appendix to I
A Fairy leapt upon my knee 127
II. Later Poems
My Spectre around me night and day . . . . . .128
When Klopstock England defied ....... 132
Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau ..... 133
I saw a Monk of Charlemaine . . ..... 134
Morning ........... 137
The Birds 138
You don't believe— I won't attempt to make ye ... 138
If it is true what the Prophets write ...... 139
I will tell you what Joseph of Arimathea . 139
Why was Cupid a boy ......... 140
Now Art has lost its mental charms ...... 141
I rose up at the dawn of day . . . . . . .142
The Caverns of the Grave I've seen ... ... 144
Addendum to II
To the Queen 145
III. The Everlasting Gospel ........ 146
The Pickering Manuscript
The Smile . . . . . . . . . . 16 r
The Golden Net 161
— - The Mental Traveller . . . . . . . . .162
The Land of Dreams . . . . . . . . .166
Mary 166
The Crystal Cabinet 168
The Grey Monk . 169
Auguries of Innocence ......... 171
Long John Brown and Little Mary Bell ..... 178
William Bond 179
Poems from Letters
To my Dearest Friend, John Flaxman, these lines
To my dear Friend, Mrs. Anna Flaxman