Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- SELECTIONS: EDITED BY DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI
- POETICAL SKETCHES
- SONGS OF INNOCENCE
- SONGS OF EXPERIENCE
- THE BOOK OF THEL
- IDEAS OF GOOD AND EVIL
- PROSE WRITINGS
- NOTE UPON BLAKE'S ENGRAVED DESIGNS
- ANNOTATED CATALOGUE OF BLAKE'S PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
- DESCRIPTIVE NOTES OF THE DESIGNS TO YOUNG'S “NIGHT THOUGHTS,”
- ESSAY ON BLAKE
- IN MEMORIAM F. O. FINCH
- MEMOIR OF ALEXANDER GILCHRIST
- INDEX TO VOLUME I
- Plate section
ANNOTATED CATALOGUE OF BLAKE'S PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- SELECTIONS: EDITED BY DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI
- POETICAL SKETCHES
- SONGS OF INNOCENCE
- SONGS OF EXPERIENCE
- THE BOOK OF THEL
- IDEAS OF GOOD AND EVIL
- PROSE WRITINGS
- NOTE UPON BLAKE'S ENGRAVED DESIGNS
- ANNOTATED CATALOGUE OF BLAKE'S PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
- DESCRIPTIVE NOTES OF THE DESIGNS TO YOUNG'S “NIGHT THOUGHTS,”
- ESSAY ON BLAKE
- IN MEMORIAM F. O. FINCH
- MEMOIR OF ALEXANDER GILCHRIST
- INDEX TO VOLUME I
- Plate section
Summary
[The ensuing Descriptive Catalogue—a humble tribute to the soaring genius of the author of the ‘Descriptive Catalogue’—is a complete list, as far as it was found practicable to compile one, of all Blake's original works. It was drawn up for the first edition of this book, 1863: it has now been carried on up to the present date, though with less particularity of research. This Catalogue takes no count of engravings; though it does include the works issued as separate designs in Blake's peculiar method of colour-printing. The term ‘ colour-printed’ indicates these works ; enough has been said on this curious question in other parts of the book to absolve me from discussing it here.
The Catalogue was compiled by me, in the very great majority of instances, from immediate personal inspection of the works referred to; to the owners of which, uniformly courteous and accommodating to the utmost, my thanks are most sincerely tendered. In other instances, I have been indebted to Mr. Gilchrist's notes, or to other sources of information. The works which have not been thus seen, and some which, from one circumstance or another, have been seen hurriedly or imperfectly, are, as an unavoidable consequence, referred to in less detail than their relative importance might be found to deserve.
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- Information
- Life of William BlakeWith Selections from his Poems and Other Writings, pp. 205 - 286Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1880