--- Once you begin to read Blakes original works (text and images together - as Blake intended), you'll wonder why you ever read text-only versions. This book is stunning. The quality of the prints is extremely good. Amazon's blurred preview pages do the book no justice. A minority of pages are faint or difficult to read, but this is no fault of the current publishers - blame William Blake! Transcripts of all the texts are included to clarify any illegibility, but are not usually needed as most of the pages are clear and bright.The editor's introduction to each illuminated book is brief. This allows the reader to dive straight into Blake's visionary world. Never mind if much of the text (especially of the later works) seems at first incomprehensible, Blake's illustrations are so vibrant and powerful on their own that they will keep you fascinated for a long time, and will help to cultivate a hungry curiosity that will eventually offer a way into his mysterious later texts. So what if you don't 'get it' ! Let go and just enter the mystery. Having said this, many of Blake's earlier texts are much more easily accessible; 'All Religions Are One', 'There is no Natural Religion', 'Songs of Innocence and of Experience' 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell', 'The Gates of Paradise'. There is plenty here to offer a rich introduction to Blake's mythology and also to help prepare you for his later works. This is Blake's 'Bible of Hell' and no household should be without a copy. Here is a list of the illuminated book included: * All Religions are One, (Plate 1 Keynes Collection, Fitzwilliam Museum,. Plates 2-10 Huntington Library) * There is no Natural Religion, (Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, copies G and I and L) * Songs of Innocence and of Experience, (Kings College, Cambridge, copy W) * The Book of Thel, (Houghton Library, Harvard University, copy J) * The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, (Pierpont Morgan Library, Copy F) * The Gates of Paradise, (British Library) * Visions of the Daughters of Albion, (Houghton Library, copy G) * America a Prophecy, (The British Museum, Copy H) * Europe a Prophecy, (Glasgow University Library, copy B) * The Song of Los, (The British Museum, Copy A) * The First Book of Urizen, (The British Museum, copy D) * The Book of Ahania, (Rosenmald Collection, Library of Congress, Wash.D.C., and Fitzwilliam Museum, copy A) * The Book of Los, (The British Museum, copy A) * Milton a Poem, (New York Public Library, copy C) * Jerusalem The Emanation of the Giant Albion, (Yale Center for British Art, copy E) * The Ghost of Abel, (Rosenwald Collection, copy A) * On Homers Poetry [and] on Virgil, (Rosenwald Collection, Copy A) * Laocoon, (Collection Robert N. Essick, Altadena, Calif., copy B)
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