Page:The letters of William Blake (1906).djvu/243

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LETTERS OF WILLIAM BLAKE.
177

finished plate, I consider thirty guineas as its price, and the "Pliny" fifteen guineas.

Our dear friend Hawkins[1] is out of town, and will not return till April. I have sent to him, by a parcel from Col. Sibthorpe's, your desirable poetical present for Mrs. Hawkins. His address is this: To John Hawkins, Esq., Dallington, near Northampton. Mr. Edwards is out of town likewise.

I am very far from showing the portrait of Romney as a finished proof. Be assured that with our good Flaxman's good help, and with your remarks on it in addition, I hope to make it a "supernaculum." "The Shipwreck," also, will be infinitely better the next proof. I feel very much gratified at your approval of my "Queen Catherine":[2] beg to observe that the print of "Romeo and the Apothecary"[2] annexed to your copy is a shamefully worn-out impression, but it was the only one I could get at Johnson's. I left a good impression of it when I left Felpham last in one of Heath's Shakespeare: you will see that it is not like the same plate with the worn-out impression. My wife joins me in love and in rejoicing in Miss Poole's continued health.—I am, dear Sir, yours sincerely,

Will. Blake.
  1. See pp. 52 and 169.
  2. 2.0 2.1 The two prints engraved by Blake after Fuseli for Chalmers' Shakespeare.