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1[[quoteright:1000:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/william_blake_by_thomas_phillips_9.jpg]]
2 [[caption-width-right:1000:Portrait by Thomas Philips, 1807]]
3
4->''"I found them blind: I taught them to see\
5And now they know neither themselves nor me\
6'Tis excellent to turn a thorn to a pin\
7A fool to a bolt, a knave to a glass of gin."''
8-->-- '''William Blake''', ''On F————— & S—————''
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11William Blake (28 November 1757 - 12 August 1827) was an English poet, painter, and printmaker. His work is notable for being both highly religious and critical of established churches and traditions, and he is considered one of the major figures of Romanticism.
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13Many of his poems take place in a {{Verse}} of Blake's own invention, peopled with [[{{Mythopoeia}} original mythological characters]].
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15By most accounts, he had frequent visions which often served as inspiration for his work. It's also been suggested that he had what is known as a bicameral mind, wherein information is exchanged between the subconscious and conscious mind in the form of visions of gods and spirits, supposedly more common in ancient peoples, rather than the more linear thought processes most peoples' brains have evolved. This could have been the result of a mental illness or brain defect of some kind.
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17Blake is also generally regarded as one of the earliest {{UsefulNotes/Anarchis|m}}ts (e.g. by Peter Marshall in ''William Blake: Visionary Anarchist''), and is also noted for [[ValuesResonance opposing slavery and championing free love]] decades or even centuries before either became particularly common. The lines from the Preface to his long poem ''Milton'' beginning ''And did those feet in Ancient Time'', set to music by Hubert Parry, is a strong contender for England's national anthem and is indeed sung in this capacity at international sporting events. [[note]] Israeli and evangelical Christian believers in the other UsefulNotes/{{Jerusalem}} wouldn't like the words, though.[[/note]]
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19Blake came in at #38 in ''Series/OneHundredGreatestBritons''.
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21His poems include:
22* ''Literature/SongsOfInnocenceAndOfExperience''
23** ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tyger The Tyger]]''
24** ''[[http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/172929 London]]''
25* ''The Marriage of Heaven and Hell''
26* ''The Four Zoas'' (his longest, about 100 pages)
27* The "Bible of Hell" sequence, which aimed to retell the creation story in the terms of Blake's {{Mythopoeia}}:
28** ''The Book of Urizen''
29** ''The Book of Ahania''
30** ''The Book of Los''
31* ''Milton, a Poem''
32** The preface to ''Milton'' includes the short poem "And did those feet in ancient time", adapted into the hymn "Jerusalem" (not to be confused with Blake's epic poem ''Jerusalem'', as seen below) by Sir Hubert Parry in 1916. This hymn is now considered one of England's greatest candidates to a national anthem, and is a staple at the Last Night of the Proms. Music/EmersonLakeAndPalmer opens their album ''Brain Salad Surgery'' with a CoverVersion.
33*** The hymn was also used in the opening of the London 2012 Olympic opening ceremony.
34* ''Jerusalem: The Emanation of the Giant Albion''
35----
36!!Tropes found in the Poems:
37
38* AlienGeometries: Tons of these. Morphing spheres, interdimensional vortexes, and intersecting planes of existence abound.
39* ApocalypseHow: One hinted at at the end of ''Milton'', which finally happens in ''Jerusalem''. A Class X - 5, bordering on a class Z. But this is a ''good'' thing, allowing us to return to our eternal, non-physical states of being. YMMV on how literally this should be interpreted.
40%%* {{Arcadia}}: "The Shepherd" is set in one.
41%%* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: Ideally.
42%%* AssimilationPlot: In the attempt to resurrect Albion.
43* AudioAdaptation: His poetry has been revisioned by artistes including Music/VanMorrison and Music/{{Ulver}} (the latter of whom adapted ''The Marriage of Heaven and Hell'' in its entirety). Part of the Preface to ''Milton'' has been set to music and is a serious contender for National Anthem, if England ever becomes a republic.
44* BreakingTheFourthWall: Depends how much of one you consider there to be. Blake is very conscious that you're holding a book.
45* ComicBooks: Blake's combination of narrative and visual storytelling going above simple illustration has led some (including Creator/AlanMoore) to cite Blake's work as a proto-example of the Graphic Novel.
46* DemiurgeArchetype: Urizen serves as both a fallen satanic figure and the representative of law and reason. Urizen, believing himself to be holy, was exiled from the divine and created a universe in which his law ruled above all else. He represents uniformity, stifles creativity, and is the origin of both religious dogmatism and enlightenment rationalism.
47* DesignStudentsOrgasm: Every page of his illuminated books.
48* FullCircleRevolution: This happens in ''The Book of Urizen'': Los overthrows the oppressive lawmaker deity Urizen, but later begins to similarly lose his creativity, with Orc appearing after that to overthrow him.
49* GainaxEnding: Downplayed. The rest of his narrative is so mind-screwy that the apocalyptic endings are rather comprehensible. Still bizarre though.
50* AGodAmI: Urizen certainly thinks so, being (in some versions) the first consciousness to emerge from eternity.
51* GodIsEvil: A worry usually articulated through the Demiurge figure of Urizen.
52%%* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: Urizen does this to Fuzon.
53%%* LongList: All over the place.
54%%* MindScrew: This too.
55%%* {{Mythopoeia}}: A rare non fantasy/sci-fi example.
56* TheOldGods: The Four Zoas are this not only to Blake's eternals, but to all human gods, angels and demons, [[CrossoverCosmology a few of whom cameo.]]
57* OurNudityIsDifferent: Expect illustrations of the characters to be uniformly starkers. May cross over with AuthorAppeal considering Blake was a practicing nudist.
58* PantheraAwesome: "Tiger, Tiger, burning bright in the forest of the night..."
59* PunnyName: With his "eternals", usually with some indication of their [[{{MeaningfulName}} symbolic role]] within the story. Urizen = Horizon/Your Reason; Luvah = Lover; etc.
60* RedShirt: Thulloh is killed by Satan less than ten lines after his introduction.
61* ReligionIsWrong: Played with in a highly idiosyncratic manner. The ''Book of Urizen'' has Urizen create "The Net of Religion" to [[BeliefMakesYouStupid entrap man's minds]], while ''The Four Zoas'' ends with the words "The dark Religions are departed & sweet Science reigns". However, Blake was a devout, yet ''extremely'' unorthodox Anglican, so he was critical of how religious institutions stifled free thought and natural human desires, disliked the growing scientific materialism of the time, and had his idiosyncratic interpretation of Christian doctrine. Thus, his work reflects this trope as it does [[ReligionIsRight its opposite]].
62%%* RealityWarper: Many characters, but particularly Urizen.
63* {{Romanticism}}: One of the Big Six of the English school, along with Creator/WilliamWordsworth, Creator/SamuelTaylorColeridge, Creator/LordByron, Creator/JohnKeats and Creator/PercyByssheShelley. However, whereas Wordsworth and Coleridge were at one point close friends, and Byron met both of them and was friendly with both Shelley and Blake, the only one of them that Blake ever met was Coleridge, with whom he got on quite well.
64* {{Satan}}: As [[TheCameo we know him]], and also as an independent character of Blake's cosmology, as Urizen's time-bound form.
65%%* TimeyWimeyBall: A literal example in Milton.
66%%* TheVerse: Good luck on trying to find out what it all means.

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