Page:William Blake (Symons).djvu/78

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54
WILLIAM BLAKE

Fuseli, Stothard, and Flaxman[1] seem to have been his chief friends, and it is probable that he also knew Cosway, who practised magic, and Cosway may have told him about Paracelsus, or lent him Law's translation of Behmen, while Flaxman, who was a Swedenborgian, may have brought him still more closely under the influence of Swedenborg.

In any case, he soon tired of the coterie of the Matthews, and we are told that it soon ceased to relish his 'manly firmness of opinion.' What he really thought of it we may know with some certainty from the extravaganza, An Island in the Moon, which seems to belong to 1784, and which is a light-hearted and incoherent satire, derived, no doubt, from Sterne, and

  1. Compare the lines written in 1800:

    'I bless thee, Father of Heaven and Earth, that ever I saw Flaxman's face.
    Angels stand round my spirit in Heaven, the blessed of Heaven are my friends upon Earth.
    When Flaxman was taken to Italy, Fuseli was given to me for a season ...
    And my Angels have told me that seeing such visions, I could not subsist on the Earth,
    But by my conjunction with Flaxman, who knows to forgive nervous fear.'