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William Blake
in a sentence

show 19 more with this conextual meaning
  • She started singing her William Blake song.†   (source)
  • You might know about William Blake but you know nothing about what ordinary people do.†   (source)
  • "William Blake used to faint sometimes," said Mina.†   (source)
  • "And where would William Blake fit in?" said Mina.†   (source)
  • My mother was William Blake's rose.†   (source)
  • And I've told him about William Blake.†   (source)
  • The kind of thing William Blake saw.†   (source)
  • We read William Blake and we wrote stories about adventures in old houses and journeys to far-off imaginary places.†   (source)
  • William Blake?†   (source)
  • William Blake again.†   (source)
  • And about William Blake.†   (source)
  • William Blake.†   (source)
  • --William Blake.†   (source)
  • --William Blake.†   (source)
  • He would register at hotels as "Robert Herrick," "John Donne," "George Peele," "William Blake," and "John Milton."†   (source)
  • And in the end you could not tell Anne Stanton from Lois Seager, for they were alike, and though the mad poet William Blake wrote a poem to tell the Adversary who is Prince of This World that He could not ever change Kate into Nan, the mad poet was quite wrong, for anybody can change Kate into Nan, or if indeed the Prince couldn't change Kate into Nan it was only because Kate and Nan were exactly alike to begin with and were, in fact, the same with only the illusory difference of name,…†   (source)
  • And that is why our scriptures and other art works, when they deal with love, turn from honest attempts at science in physics to romantic nonsense, erotic ecstasy, or the stern asceticism of satiety ("the road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom" said William Blake; for "you never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough").†   (source)
  • Goethe's Faust and Mozart's Don Juan were the last words of the XVIII century on the subject; and by the time the polite critics of the XIX century, ignoring William Blake as superficially as the XVIII had ignored Hogarth or the XVII Bunyan, had got past the Dickens-Macaulay Dumas-Guizot stage and the Stendhal-Meredith-Turgenieff stage, and were confronted with philosophic fiction by such pens as Ibsen's and Tolstoy's, Don Juan had changed his sex and become Dona Juana, breaking out of…†   (source)
  • WILLIAM BLAKE: Songs of Innocence.†   (source)
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