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WILLIAM BLAKE.

We have not now of course much chance of knowing at all what manner of angel she was; but the few things we do know of her, no form of words can fitly express. To praise such people is merely to waste words in saying that divine things are praiseworthy. No doubt, if we knew how to praise them, they would deserve that we should try.[1]

The notes bearing in any way upon this daily life of Blake's are few and exceptional. In the mass of

  1. A strange and rather beautiful, if grotesque, evidence of the unity of faith and feeling to which Blake and his wife had come by dint of living and thinking so long together, is given by one of the stray notes in this same book: which we transcribe at full on account of its great biographical value as a study of character. Space might have been found for it in the Life, if only to prove once again how curiously the nature and spiritual habits of a great man leave their mark or dye upon the mind nearest to his own.
    "South Moulton Street.

    "Sunday, August, 1807.—My wife was told by a spirit to look for her fortune by opening by chance a book which she had in her hand; it was Bysshe's 'Art Poetry.' She opened the following:—

    'I saw 'em kindle with desire,

    While with soft sighs they blew the fire;
    Saw the approaches of their joy,
    He growing more fierce and she less coy;
    Saw how they mingled melting rays,
    Exchanging love a thousand ways.
    Kind was the force on every side;
    Her new desire she could not hide,
    Nor would the shepherd be denied.
    The blessed minute he pursued,
    Till she, transported in his arms,
    Yields to the conqueror all her charms.
    His panting breast to hers now joined,
    They feast on raptures unconfined,
    Vast and luxuriant; such as prove
    The immortality of love.
    For who but a Divinity
    Could mingle souls to that degree
    And melt them into ecstasy?