Page:The poetical works of William Blake; a new and verbatim text from the manuscript engraved and letterpress originals (1905).djvu/189

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Rossetti MS.
147
p. 67.  Prose.— The originality of this production . . . whitloes on their fingers. [Advt.]
Prose. — No man of sense ... as to believe this. [Advt.]
Note. — 23 May 1810 found the Word Golden.
Prose. A man sets himself . . . yourselves to be disgraced. [Advt.]
p. 68.  Sketch. — For Gates of Paradise — (frontispiece).
Prose. — The Last Judgment is not Fable . . . [Cat. 1810.]
Prose. — Note here that Fable or allegory . . . [Cat. 1810.]
p. 69.  Sketch. For Gates of Paradise — At last for hatching ripe.
Prose.— [Cat. 1810.]
p. 70.  Prose.— For the year 1810 Addition to Blake's Catalogue of Pictures &c. [Title for Cat. 1810.]
Some people admire the work of a Fool. [MS. Book cxxiii.]
Prose. — [Cat. 1810.]
p. 71.  {A quarter of this leaf has been cut out.)
Sketch.— Tot Gates of Paradise — Death's Door.
Prose.— The—when they assert that Jupiter . . . [Cat. 1810.]
Note.— A jockey that is anything of a jockey will never buy a horse by the colour & a man who has got any brains will never buy a picture by the colour.
Note. — When I tell any truth it is not for the sake of convincing those who do not know it, but for the sake of defending those who do.
p. 72.  Prose.— And heal Visions ... the golden Age. [Cat. 1810.]
p. 73.  Sketches.— [See WMR. (m).]
To God. [MS. Book cxxviii.]
Since all the Riches of this World. [MS. Book cxxiv.]
p. 74.  Sketches.
p. 75.  Sketches.— [See WMR. (d).]
p. 76.  Prose.— No Man of Sense ... a Male & Female chain'd [Cat, iBic]
p. 77.  Prose. — together by the feet ... a Cruel Church. [Cat. 1810.]
p. 78.  Prose. — The greatest part of what are call'd . . . cord in his hand. [Cat. 1810.]
To Chloe's breast young Cupid slily stole. [MS. Book cxxvi.]
p. 79.  Now Art has lost its mental Charms. [MS. Book cxxvii.]
Prose. — In Eternity one Thing . . . vegetable Nature also. [Cat. 1810.]
Nail his neck to the Cross, nail it with a nail. [MS. Bock cxxviii.]
p. 80.  Prose. — Between the Figures ... on the brink of [Cat. 1810.]
p. 81.  Prose. — perdition . . . of the Hebrew. [Cat. 1810.]
p. 82.  Prose. — Just above ... & Intentions. [Cat. 1810.]
p. 83.  Prose. — The Characters . . . removing the [Cat. 1810.]
p. 84.  Prose. — old heavens . . . Art in proportion to his means. [Cat. 1810.]
Prose. — (continued from p. 83.) [Cat. 1810.]
Sketch— [See WMR (n).]
p. 85.  Prose. — Over the head ... for a Protection. [Cat. 1810.]
p. 86.  Prose. — The painter hopes that his Friends Amytus Melitus & Lycon will perceive . . . begs public protection and all will be well. [Cat. 1810.]
Prose. — The Combats of Good & Evil . . . Knowledge of good & evil. L 2,