Plate 26 (page 49): 'As if the sun could envy, check'd his beam'
1797
76
William Blake, 1757–1827
Plate 27 (page 54): 'The vale of death! that hush'd cimmerian vale'
1797
77
William Blake, 1757–1827
Plate 28 (page 55): 'Ungrateful, shall we grieve their hovering shades'
1797
78
William Blake, 1757–1827
Plate 30 (page 63): 'This KING OF TERRORS is the PRINCE OF PEACE'
1797
79
William Blake, 1757–1827
Plate 32 (page 70): 'Till death, that mighty hunter, earths them all'
1797
80
William Blake, 1757–1827
Plate 35 (page 75): 'The Sun beheld it -- No, the shocking Scene Drove back his chariot'
1797
81
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 1, Job and His Family
1825
82
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 5, Satan Going Forth from the Presence of the Lord and Job's Charity
1825
83
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 8, Job's Despair
1825
84
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 15, Behemoth and Leviathan
1825
85
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 16, The Fall of Satan
1825
86
William Blake, 1757–1827
Visions of the Daughters of Albion, Plate 4, "Visions | Enslav'd the Daughters . . . . "
1793
87
William Blake, 1757–1827
Plate 8 (page 13): 'The present moment terminates our sight'
1797
88
William Blake, 1757–1827
Plate 11 (page 17): 'NIGHT the SECOND/ ON/ TIME,/DEATH/ AND FRIENDSHIP'
1797
89
William Blake, 1757–1827
Songs of Innocence and of Experience, Plate 47, "My Pretty Rose Tree" (Bentley 43)
1794
90
William Blake, 1757–1827
Visions of the Daughters of Albion, Plate 2, Title Page
1793
91
William Blake, 1757–1827
Visions of the Daughters of Albion, Plate 10, "In happy copulation . . . . "
1793
92
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 14, When the Morning Stars Sang Together
1825
93
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 18, Job's Sacrifice
1825
94
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 20, Job and His Daughters
1825
95
William Blake, 1757–1827
Book of Job, Plate 21, Job and His Family Restored to Prosperity
1825
96
William Blake, 1757–1827
Beggar's Opera, Act III
1790
97
William Blake, 1757–1827
pl. 1: The Circle of the Lustful [' ...and like a corpse fell to the ground' Hell; Canto v. line 137.]
1827
98
William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 2: Ciampolo Tormented by the Devils ['...seiz'd on his arm, / And mangled bore away the sinewy part.' Hell; Canto xxii. line 70.]
1827
99
William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 6: The Pit of Disease ['...Then two I mark'd that sat Propp'd 'gainst each other,' Hell; Canto xxix. line 71.]
1827
100
William Blake, 1757–1827
Pl. 7: The Circle of Traitors: Dante Striking Against Bocca degli Abati ['...'Wherefore dost bruise me?' weeping he/ exclaim'd.' Hell; Canto xxxii. line 79.]