GPChildren; E33| 12 Does thy God O Priest take such vengeance as this? t138
GPChildren; E33| 13 Fear & Hope are--Vision t139
GPChildren; E33| 14 The traveller hasteth in the Evening t140
GPChildren; E33| 15 Death's Door t141
GPChildren; E33| 16 I have said to the Worm, Thou art my mother & my sister t142
PA-N63; E57| [Public Address] PAGE 63
PA-N63; E57| Whoever looks at any of the Great & Expensive Works <of
PA-N63; E57| Engraving> that have been Publishd by English Traders must feel a
PA-N63; E57| Loathing & Disgust & accordingly most Englishmen have a Contempt
PA-N63; E57| for Art which is the Greatest Curse that can fall upon a Nation
PA-N63; E57| He who could represent Christ uniformly like a Drayman must
PA-N63; E57| have Queer Conceptions consequently his Executi[o]n must have
PA-N63; E57| been as Queer & those must be Queer fellows who give great sums
PA-N63; E57| for such nonsense & think it fine Art
PA-N63; E57| The <Modern Chalcographic> Connoisseurs & Amateurs admire
PA-N63; E57| only the work of the journeyman Picking out of whites & blacks in
PA-N63; E57| what is calld Tints they despise drawing which despises them in
PA-N63; E57| return. They see only whether every thing is coverd down but one
PA-N63; E57| spot of light
PA-N63; E57| Mr B submits to a more severe tribunal be invites the
PA-N63; E57| admirers of old English Portraits to look at his Print
PA-N66; E57| [Public Address] PAGE 66
PA-N66; E57| It is Nonsense for Noblemen & Gentlemen to offer Premiums
PA-N66; E57| for the Encouragement of Art when such Pictures as these can be
PA-N66; E57| done without Premiums let them Encourage what Exists Already &
PA-N66; E57| not endeavour to counteract by tricks[.] let it no more be said
PA-N66; E57| that Empires Encourage Arts for it is Arts that Encourage Empires
PA-N66; E57| Arts & Artists are Spiritual & laugh at Mortal Contingencies[.]
PA-N66; E57| It is in their Power to hinder Instruction but not to Instruct
PA-N66; E57| just as it is in their Power to Murder a Man but not to make a
PA-N66; E57| Man
PA-N66; E57| Let us teach Buonaparte & whomsoever else it may concern
PA-N66; E57| That it is not Arts that follow & attend upon Empire[s] but
PA-N66; E57| Empire[s] that attends upon & follows [wherever Art
PA-N66; E57| leads] The Arts
PA-N64; E57| [Public Address] PAGE 64
PA-N64; E57| I do not know whether Homer is a Liar & that there is no
PA-N64; E57| such thing as Generous Contention[.] I know that all those with
PA-N64; E57| whom I have Contended in Art have strove not to Excel] but to
PA-N64; E57| Starve me out by Calumny & the Arts of Trading Combination
PA-N67; E57| [Public Address] PAGE 67
PA-N67; E57| No Man of Sense can think that an Imitation of the Objects
PA-N67; E57| of Nature is The Art of Painting or that such Imitation which any
PA-N67; E57| one may easily perform is worthy of Notice much less that such an
PA-N67; E57| Art should be the Glory & Pride of a Nation [&that the man
PA-N67; E57| who does this is] The Italians laugh at English Connoisseurs
PA-N67; E57| who are [All] <most of them> such silly Fellows as to
PA-N67; E57| believe this
PA-N67; E57| A Man sets himself down with Colours & with all the Articles
PA-N67; E57| of Painting he puts a Model before him & he copies that so neat
PA-N67; E57| as to make it a Deception now let any Man of Sense ask himself
PA-N67; E57| one Question Is this Art. can it be worthy of admiration to any
PA-N67; E57| body of Understanding.
SongLOS7.39; E70| In rivers rush & shout & dance,
SongLOS7.40; E70| On mountain, dale and plain.
SongLOS7.41; E70| The SONG of LOS is Ended.
SongLOS7.42; E70| Urizen Wept.
L22.3Butts11'02; E71| otherwise.
L46.1Hayley6'04; E75| will be at least worth 30, & that the inferior ones cannot be