Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Perspectives
- 2 William Blake and his circle
- 3 Illuminated printing
- 4 Blake's language in poetic form
- 5 Blake as a painter
- 6 The political aesthetic of Blake's images
- 7 Blake's politics in history
- 8 Blake and religion
- 9 Blake and Romanticism
- Part II Blake's works
- A glossary of terms, names and concepts in Blake
- Guide to further reading
- Seeing Blake's art in person
- Index
- Series List
4 - Blake's language in poetic form
from Part I - Perspectives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Perspectives
- 2 William Blake and his circle
- 3 Illuminated printing
- 4 Blake's language in poetic form
- 5 Blake as a painter
- 6 The political aesthetic of Blake's images
- 7 Blake's politics in history
- 8 Blake and religion
- 9 Blake and Romanticism
- Part II Blake's works
- A glossary of terms, names and concepts in Blake
- Guide to further reading
- Seeing Blake's art in person
- Index
- Series List
Summary
In the Fifth chamber were Unnam’d forms, which
cast the metals into the expanse.
There they were reciev’d by Men who occupied
the sixth chamber, and took the forms of books &
were arranged in libraries
(“A Memorable Fancy,” The Marriage of Heaven and Hell)0026From Unnam’d forms to the forms of books
Is “Blake's language” and “poetic form” an un-Blakean conjunction? In the wake of eighteenth-century political revolutions, Blake broadcast a revolutionary poetics, seemingly anti-formalist in its determination:
To cast aside from Poetry, all that is not Inspiration
That it no longer shall dare to mock with the aspersion of Madness
Cast on the Inspired, by the tame high finisher of paltry Blots,
Indefinite, or paltry Rhymes; or paltry Harmonies.
As these inspired lines from Milton (pl. 41 [48], E 142) demonstrate, the sneer at poetic finishing includes not just rhymes but even blank-verse harmonies, the measure Milton advertised in his note on “The Verse” to Paradise Lost as “ancient liberty” recovered from the “modern bondage” of having to rhyme heroic verse. But if Milton tropes blank verse as political liberation, Blake saw him still constrained by the “uniform systems of execution owned by the culture, or by poetic tradition.”
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to William Blake , pp. 63 - 84Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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