Of divinity, Frye writes: "Man is All Imagination. God is Man & exists in us & we in him. The Eternal Body of Man is The Imagination, that is, God himself" (Frye 30).
The "divine image" is described as follows: "The universal perception of the general is the 'divine image' of the Songs of Innocence; the egocentric perception of the general is the 'human abstract' of the Songs of Experience" (Frye 32).
Of the divine as an abstract, Frye asserts: "If this idea of 'pure perfection' is pressed a little further it dissolves in negatives, as all abstract ideas do. God is infinite, inscrutable, incomprehensible-all negative words, and a negative communion with some undefined ineffability is its highest development" (Frye 37).