The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 5: Colinet: 'My piteous plight in yonder naked tree,/ which bears the thunder-scar too plain, I see:'
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Or blasting winds o'er blossom'd hedge-rows pass
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 7: Thenot: 'Nor fox, nor wolf, nor rot among our sheep:/ from these good shepherd's care his flock may keep/ against ill luck,'
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 9: Colinet: 'A fond desire strange lands and swains to know./ Ah me! that ever I should covet wo.'
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 10: Thenot: 'A rolling stone is ever bare of moss;/ and, to their cost, green years old proverbs cross.'
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 13: Thenot: 'for him our yearly wakes and feasts we hold,/ and choose the fairest firstlings from the fold;'
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 14: Thenot: 'This night thy care with me forget, and fold/ thy flock with mine, to ward th' injurious cold.'
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 15: Thenot: 'New milk, and clouted cream, mild cheese and curd,/ with some remaining fruit of last year's hoard,/ shall be our ev'ning fare.'
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 17: Thenot: '
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Pl. 13: `Psyche Repents'
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Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 18 (page 17): [The Vision of God]
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Pl. 12: 'Psyche Disobeys'
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Pl. 14: `Venus Councels Cupid'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 15: `The Conjugal Union of Cupid'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 16: `Cupid & Psyche'
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Pl. 18: `Iron Age'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 19: `Aristophanes Clouds. Scene I'
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Pl. 23: `Anacreon Ode LII'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 12: `Psyche Disobeys.'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 13: `Psyche Repents.'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 15: `The Conjugal Union of Cupid'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 19: `Aristophanes Clouds. Scene I'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 23: `Anacreon Ode LII'
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Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 1 (Title Page): 'Illustrations of/ the/ Book/ of/ Job'
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Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 4 (page 3): [The Destruction of Job's Sons]
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 2 (page 1): [Job and his Family]
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Illustrations of the Book of Job, p. 5 (page 4): [The Messengers tell Job of the Misfortunes that have Befallen Him]
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Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 13 (page 12): [The Wrath of Elihu]
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 14 (page 13): [The Lord answering Job out of the Whirlwind]
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William Blake, 1757–1827
The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 1: Frontispiece: Thenot: 'Is it not Colinet I lonesome see,/ leaning with folded arms against the tree?'
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 3: Thenot: 'Yet though with years my body downward tend,/ as trees beneath their fruit in autumn bend,'
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 8: Colinet: 'Ah silly I! more silly than my sheep,/ which on thy flow'ry banks I wont to keep.'
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My sheep quite spent through travel and ill fare
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The Wood Engravings of William Blake for Thorton's Virgil 1821. London, 1977. Plate 12: Colinet: 'In vain, O Colinet, thy pipe, so shrill,/ charms every vale, and gladdens every hill:'
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And now behold the sun's departing ray
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Pl. 14: `Venus Counsels Cupid'
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 16: `Cupid & Psyche'
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Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 9 (page 8): [Job's Despair]
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Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 12 (page 11): [Job's Evil Dreams]
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 17 (page 16): [The Fall of Satan]
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 19 (page 18): [Job's Sacrifice]
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William Blake, 1757–1827
Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 20 (page 19): [Job Accepting Charity]
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Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 21 (page 20): [Job and his Daughters]
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Illustrations of the Book of Job, pl. 22 (page 21): [Job and his Wife restored to Prosperity]
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The Pastorals of Virgil, London, 1821
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Pl. 4: The Six-Footed Serpent Attacking Agnolo Brunelleschi ['...lo! a serpent with six feet/ Springs forth on one,' Hell; Canto xxv. line 45.]
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Pl. 5: A Serpent Attacking Buoso Donata ['...He ey'd the serpent and the serpent him.' Hell; Canto xxv. line 82.]
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Pl. 6: The Pit of Disease ['...Then two I mark'd that sat Propp'd 'gainst each other,' Hell; Canto xxix. line 71.]