William Blake

William Blake Poems

  1. A Divine Image
  2. A Dream
  3. A Little Boy Lost
  4. A Poison Tree
  5. A War Song to Englishmen
  6. Ah! Sunflower
  7. An Imitation of Spenser
  8. Auguries of Innocence
  9. Blind Man’s Buff
  10. Broken Love
  11. Day
  12. Earth’s Answer
  13. England! awake! awake! awake!
  14. Eternity
  15. Fair Elanor
  16. Gwin King of Norway
  17. But in the Wine-presses the Human Grapes Sing not nor Dance:
  18. A Cradle Song
  19. Holy Thursday (Experience)
  20. Holy Thursday (Innocence)
  21. How Sweet I Roam’d
  22. I Heard an Angel
  23. I Rose Up at the Dawn of Day
  24. I Saw a Chapel
  25. I see the Four-fold Man
  26. If It Is True What the Prophets Write
  27. Infant Joy
  28. Infant Sorrow
  29. Jerusalem
  30. Laughing Song
  31. London
  32. Love and Harmony
  33. Love’s Secret
  34. Mad Song
  35. Milton: The Sky is an Immortal Tent Built by the Sons of Los
  36. Mock On, Mock On, Voltaire, Rousseau
  37. My Pretty Rose Tree
  38. My Spectre Around Me Night and Day
  39. Never Seek to Tell thy Love
  40. Night
  41. Now Art Has Lost Its Mental Charms
  42. Nurse’s Song (Innocence)
  43. Nurses Song (Experience)
  44. On Anothers Sorrow
  45. Piping Down the Valleys Wild
  46. Preludium to America
  47. Preludium to Europe
  48. Proverbs of Hell (Excerpt from The Marriage of Heaven and H
  49. Several Questions Answered
  50. Silent, Silent Night
  51. Song for the Rainy Season
  52. Song: Memory, hither come
  53. Songs Of Experience: Introduction
  54. Spring
  55. The Angel
  56. The Angel that presided o’er my birth
  57. The Birds
  58. The Blossom
  59. The Book of Thel
  60. The Book of Urizen: Chapter I
  61. The Book of Urizen: Chapter II
  62. The Book of Urizen: Chapter III
  63. The Book of Urizen: Chapter IV
  64. The Book of Urizen: Chapter IX
  65. The Book of Urizen: Chapter V
  66. The Book of Urizen: Chapter VI
  67. The Book of Urizen: Chapter VII
  68. The Book of Urizen: Chapter VIII
  69. The Book of Urizen: Preludium
  70. The Caverns of the Grave I’ve Seen
  71. The Chimney -sweeper
  72. The Chimney Sweeper
  73. The Clod and the Pebble
  74. The Crystal Cabinet
  75. The Divine Image
  76. The Echoing Green
  77. The Everlasting Gospel
  78. The Fly
  79. The Four Zoas (excerpt)
  80. The French Revolution (excerpt)
  81. The Garden of Love
  82. The Grey Monk (excerpts)
  83. The Human Abstract
  84. The lamb
  85. The Land of Dreams
  86. The Lily
  87. The Little Black Boy
  88. The Little Boy Found
  89. The Little Boy Lost
  90. The Little Girl Found
  91. The Little Girl Lost
  92. The Little Vagabond
  93. The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (excerpt)
  94. The New Jerusalem
  95. The Question Answered
  96. The School Boy
  97. The Shepherd
  98. The Sick Rose
  99. The Sky is an Immortal Tent Built by the Sons of Los
  100. The Song of Los
  101. The Two Songs
  102. The Tyger
  103. The Voice of the Ancient Bard
  104. The Wild Flower’s Song
  105. Three Things to Remember
  106. To Autum
  107. To Morning
  108. To Nobodaddy
  109. To Spring
  110. To Summer
  111. To The Accuser Who is The God of This World
  112. To the Evening Star
  113. To the Muses
  114. To Thomas Butts
  115. To Tirzah
  116. To Winter
  117. When Klopstock England Defied
  118. Why Should I Care for the Men of Thames
  119. Why Was Cupid a Boy
  120. You Don’t Believe

William Blake Biography

By turns whimsical and apocalyptic, brilliant and yet somehow simple, British poet William Blake (1757-1827) expanded the boundaries of poetry both with language and visuals to create a body of work that has become among the most beloved in the English language.

Known more for his visual arts than his poetry in his lifetime, Blake’s poetry was often illustrated by his own drawings and woodcuts. While illustrated books of poetry and prose were hardly unheard of in Blake’s time, Blake, dissatisfied with current methods of printing, began experimenting with the process itself, eventually creating new forms altogether.

One such example was called “illuminated printing.” According to the Royal Academy of Art, Blake’s illuminated printing process began with pages printed on copper plates that contained text within an image. After the page was printed, the illustrations were then colored with paint.

One of the most popular of Blake’s poems, “The Tyger,” can be seen below in an illuminated printing:

The text of “The Tyger” follows:

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Blake, who despite his artistic and poetic talents, had little formal education and lived most of his life in abject poverty, broke other artistic molds, as well. He wrote of the plight of the poor from the perspective of a person living in poverty, and wrote in language that those with little or no education could understand. In the English literature of the late 1700s and early 1800s, this was almost unheard of.

A Christian keenly attuned to the suffering of others, particularly children, Blake’s Songs of Innocence was written largely from a child’s viewpoint. “The Chimney Sweeper” is an example:

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Sometime later, Blake revisited Songs of Innocence, and the poems that were included in that book became Songs of Experience. See how “The Chimney Sweeper” has changed with experience:

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The hope the chimney sweeps have in Songs of Innocence is now gone. And the Father Almighty little Tom Dacre looked for has “made up a heaven of our misery.”

Blake’s poems run the gamut of subjects, from the dire lives of chimney sweeps in London, to the beauty of tigers in the wild, to the religious subjects he wrote about in “Jerusalem” and “The Marriage of Heaven and Hell.” Largely ignored during his lifetime, or considered insane for his mystical Christian writings, Blake was buried in an unmarked grave.