Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Book of Urizen (Illuminated Manuscript with the Original Illustrations of William Blake) - Exploring Creation Religion and Human Existence through Symbolism - cover

The Book of Urizen (Illuminated Manuscript with the Original Illustrations of William Blake) - Exploring Creation Religion and Human Existence through Symbolism

William Blake

Publisher: Good Press

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

William Blake's "The Book of Urizen" stands as a profound exploration of creation, the human condition, and the dichotomy between reason and imagination, interweaving poetic narrative with striking illuminated illustrations. Written in 1794, this work exemplifies Blake's innovative literary style, characterized by rhythmic verse and symbolic language that elevates philosophical themes to a mythical realm. Contextually, it emerges from the tumultuous social and political landscapes of the late 18th century, reflecting Blake's response to the Enlightenment's rationalism and advocating for a return to a more mystical, intuitive understanding of existence. Blake, an engraver and poet, was deeply influenced by his experiences in a radically changing world, shaped by his fervent interest in spirituality and the metaphysical. His unique artistic vision converged with his desire to convey complex philosophical ideas, leading him to create a narrative that critiques the constrictive notions of reason embodied by Urizen, a figure representing law and order. This work serves as a testament to Blake's revolutionary thoughts, often challenging the status quo of both religion and politics. Readers drawn to visionary literature and poetic exploration will find "The Book of Urizen" to be a compelling journey through Blake's imaginative landscape. Engaging with this illuminated manuscript invites a deeper understanding of the interplay between reason and creativity, making it a crucial addition to the libraries of those intrigued by the complexities of human existence.
Available since: 12/20/2023.
Print length: 48 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Boy Parts - cover

    Boy Parts

    Eliza Clark

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    'I wonder what I have to do for people to recognise me as a threat. Do I have to smash a glass over the head of every single man I come into contact with, just so I leave a mark?'
    Irina takes erotic photos of average-looking men. Always behind the lens, she watches, she moulds, and she stalks. These boys are putty in her hands, just the way she likes it.
    When the opportunity to show her photographs in a fashionable London gallery coincides with a new boy to obsess over, cracks begin to appear. How far can she push her new prey for the perfect shot, or has she already gone too far?
    Based on the critically acclaimed debut novel by Eliza Clark, which was a finalist for the Women's Prize Futures Award, Boy Parts is a pitch-black psychological thriller that subverts the erotic gaze and asks what happens when our need for connection gets twisted.
    This stage adaptation for one actor by Gillian Greer was premiered in 2023 at Soho Theatre, London, in a co-production between Metal Rabbit Productions and Soho Theatre, and directed by Sara Joyce.
    Praise for Eliza Clark's novel:
    'Hilariously sardonic… Will make most readers howl with laughter and/or shut their eyes in horror'Guardian
    'A carnival funhouse ride: terrifying, feverish, hilarious' Julia Armfield
    'Boundaries are for breaking and if anyone can crash through and reinterpret the fear of our time, Eliza Clark can'Mslexia
    'Hallucinogenic, electric and sharp' Jessica Andrews
    'Delightfully and deviously rooted in the now with its delectable internet and culture references and evocative and real-feeling portrait of women'Dazed
    'Smart, stylish, and very funny' Lara Williams
    'Explores the darkest corners of artistic practice, sexuality and violence with bold wit and fearlessness. A dazzling, horrifying debut'Irish Times
    Show book
  • The Top 10 Poets – The Irish - Five poems each from some of the best poets ever born in Ireland - cover

    The Top 10 Poets – The Irish -...

    W B Yeats, Oscar Wilde, James...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The language of Poetry is an art that most of us attempt at some point in our lives.  Although its commonplace exposure has been somewhat marginalised in today’s often fast-paced lives we all recognise good verse that can empathise with our thoughts or open us up to experience new things in new ways, to better understand and to enjoy the many strands of our lives. 
    But finding a starting point can be overwhelming, even off-putting, so in this series we offer up our Top 10 classic poets, who brim with talent and verse, on a range of subjects and themes that we can all enjoy. 
    The Irish are known the world over as friendly and engaging talkers with a word here and a few words there to each and every soul they meet.  Their poets dazzle with talent and verse that few other nations dare compete with.  What follows demonstrates why.
    Show book
  • Museum of My Soul: Redux - The Time It Took - cover

    Museum of My Soul: Redux - The...

    Dornel Phillips AKA D-Nice Keoma

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Redux has 30 more poems, reshaping the narrative created in the first book. This version tells a longer and more heartfelt story. Museum of The Soul is a collection of poems that tell a love story. These poems cover the real dynamics of romantic relationships, seen through my eyes. The title The Time IT Took originates from the time it took to put together a body such as this. The title also loosely represents my romantic relationship history. Museum of My Soul in that sense is a collection of artifacts (poems) from different periods of my life and relationships. The book still obliges to three exhibits set forth in the first book: Exhibit A: Falling, Exhibit B: Being broken, and Exhibit C: Ending
    Show book
  • Poets of the Early 20th Century The - Volume 1 - Find beauty and hope in a period ravaged worldwide by war - cover

    Poets of the Early 20th Century...

    James Joyce, Sara Teasdale,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In England the Victorian Age was about to become the past and a new age of worldwide wars of horror and slaughter would envelop and decimate generations, forever staining mankind.   
     
    The Century would see the World discover strengths. The Democracies would stand firm against Fascism and later Communism yet still keep its own elite and privileged in power and the rest of us underfoot. 
     
    The World was more connected than ever before.  Culture accelerated its kaleidoscopic and interwoven journey. Transport delivered people by car and train and then aeroplane to far flung corners of the globe.  Empires were at their zenith and ready to fragment with new nations, many troubled, rising from their decay. 
     
    The natural world continued to be plundered and pillaged for its resources by industries who pledged ‘more’ and ‘better’ and would clothe and feed a growing world yet sow the seeds now ready to devastate us in our current times. 
     
    The globe was as vibrant and violent as troubled and tarnished as it ever was.  But new ideas, new political systems, new times changed everything once again. 
     1 - The Poets of the Early 20th Century  - Volume 1 - An Introduction 
    2 - At the Grave of the Forgotten by Effie Waller Smith 
    3 - Preparation by Effie Waller Smith 
    4 - A Rajput Love Song by Sarojini Naidu 
    5 - My Dead Dream by Sarojini Naidu 
    6 - The Poet's Love Song by Sarojini Naidu 
    7 - The Royal Tombs of Golconda by Sarojini Naidu 
    8 - Real Property by Harold Monro 
    9 - Midnight Lamentation by Harold Monro 
    10 - Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird by Wallace Stevens 
    11 - The Emperor of Ice Cream by Wallace Stevens 
    12 - The Snow Man by Wallace Stevens 
    13 - Disillusionment of Ten O'Clock by Wallace Stevens 
    14 - The Wayfarer by Patrick Pearse 
    15 - The Mother by Patrick Pearse 
    16 - To My Daughter Betty, The Gift of God by Tom Kettle 
    17 - On Leaving Ireland, July 14th 1916 by Tom Kettle 
    18 - Tenebris by Angelina Weld Grimké 
    19 - The Eyes of My Regret by Angelina Weld Grimké 
    20 - Image by Edward Storer 
    21 - The Blind Ploughman by Radclyffe Hall 
    22 - Ode To Sappho by Radclyffe Hall 
    23 - Ardour by Radclyffe Hall 
    24 - Palace by Guillaume Apollinaire 
    25 - One Evening by Guillaume Apollinaire 
    26 - The White Snow by Guillaume Apollinaire 
    27 - The Heart of A Woman by Georgia Douglas Johnson 
    28 - When I Rise Up by Georgia Douglas Johnson 
    29 - Sunlight and the Sea by Alfred Noyes 
    30 - The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes 
    31 - The Rose by John Cournos 
    32 - Among the Rodins by John Cournos 
    33 - The Volunteer by Herbert Asquith 
    34 - Autumn, 1914 by Mary Webb 
    35 - Fallen by Alice Corbin 
    36 - Two Voices by Alice Corbin 
    37 - The Joy of a Dog by Edgar Albert Guest 
    38 - See It Through by Edgar Albert Guest 
    39 - It Couldn't Be Done by Edgar Albert Guest 
    40 - An Old Woman of the Roads by Padraic Colum 
    41 - A Prayer by James Joyce 
    42 - Tilly by James Joyce 
    43 - Sleep Now, O Sleep Now by James Joyce 
    44 - Night Piece by James Joyce 
    45 - Translation by Anne Spencer 
    46 - White Things by Anne Spencer 
    47 - Deirdre by James Stephens 
    48 - Midnight by James Stephens 
    49 - La Vie C'est La Vie by Jessie Fauset 
    50 - Dead Fires by Jessie Fauset 
    51 - Spectral by John Drinkwater 
    52 - The Life of Love - Spring by Khalil Gibran 
    53 - On Pain by Khalil Gibran 
    54 - Autumn by Khalil Gibran 
    55 - Song of the Flower by Khalil Gibran 
    56 - Proof of Immortality by William Carlos Williams 
    57 - This Is Just To Say by William Carlos Williams 
    58 - The Crowd at the Ball Game by William
    Show book
  • The Unfolding - An Invitation to Come Home to Yourself - cover

    The Unfolding - An Invitation to...

    Arielle Estoria

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Arielle Estoria is known for her moving and empowering words that encourage women and all people to be confident in who they are, compassionate about where they’ve been, and loving about who they are becoming. In this stunning collection of essays, poems, and meditations, Estoria tenderly reveals the places in her life where she has been broken open, mended back together in new ways, and shows us how this process of “unfolding” helps us discover and return home to the person we were always meant to be.   
    In order to let something in, 
    you have to let some things go 
    In order to heal, you must hurt, 
    In order to grow, you will experience discomfort 
    and all of this is to make more room for hope 
    less room for perfectionism and more room for simply being. 
    This is the Unfolding
    Show book
  • Born in England – Exploring English Poetry - London - A celebration of English poems - cover

    Born in England – Exploring...

    Geoffrey Chaucer, William Blake,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Poetry. A form of words that seems so elegantly simple in one verse and so cleverly complex in another.  Each poet has a particular style, an individual and unique way with words and yet each of us seems to recognise the path and destination of where the verses lead, even if sometimes the full comprehension may be a little beyond us. 
     
    Through the centuries every culture has produced verse to symbolize and to describe everything from everyday life, natural wonders, the human condition and even in its more hubristic moments, the crushing triumph of an enemy. 
     
    In the volumes of this series, we take a look at poetry through the prism of individual regions of England, or sometimes more quaintly known as ‘Albion’, or ‘Blighty’, through the centuries of its gloried history. 
     
    England, despite its perception of reserve and under-statement has, in reality, strode the global stage at various time in many things, both good and bad, from Empire to long distance running. Here our focus in on its literature.  Famed for its fiction and dramas, it is equally admired for its plethora of gifted poets and the dazzling verse which has added so much to its artistic legacy.  These classic poets are wonders of their age and of their art.  Genius is written in their names. 
     
    In this volume the instantly globally recognisable city of London has, for century after century, dominated the country.  Its rich history of art, culture and commerce interweave with generation after generation of poets to produce a supremely rich tapestry of undimmed brilliance.  Our poets include Alexander Pope, Amy Levy, Edmund Spenser, John Keats, G K Chesterton and a host of others.  Genius has many names.
    Show book