William Blake was born in London, England, on
November 28, 1757. His father was a successful London hosier and attracted by
the Religious teachings of Emmanuel Swedenborg. He was the second son of a
men’s clothing merchant.
At age ten Blake started at the well-known
Park's drawing school, and at age fourteen he began a seven-year
apprenticeship (studying and practicing under someone
skilled) to an engraver. Blake was first educated at home, chiefly by his
mother. Blake remained very close to his mother and wrote much poetry
about her.
The
Bible had an early, profound influence on Blake, and it would remain a lifetime
source of inspiration, coloring his life and works with intense spirituality.
In 1779, at age 21, Blake completed his seven-year apprenticeship and became a
journeyman copy engraver, working on projects for book and print publishers.
Also preparing himself for a career as a painter, that same year, he was
admitted to the Royal Academy of Art's Schools of Design, where he began
exhibiting his own works in 1780.
When
he was twenty-six, he wrote a collection entitled Poetical Sketches.
In August 1782, Blake married Catherine Sophia Boucher, who was illiterate.
Blake taught her how to read, write, draw and color (his designs and prints).
He also helped her to experience visions, as he did. Catherine believed
explicitly in her husband's visions and his genius, and supported him in
everything he did, right up to his death 45 years later.
After his father died in
1784, Blake set up a print shop next door to the family shop. In 1787 his
beloved brother Robert died; thereafter William claimed that Robert
communicated with him in visions. In 1787 Blake
produced Songs of Innocence (1789) as the first major work in
his new process, followed by Songs of Experience (1794). Blake spent the years 1800
to 1803 in Sussex working with William Hayley, a minor poet and man of letters.
In 1804, Blake began to write and
illustrate Jerusalem (1804-20), his most ambitious work to date.
He also began showing more work at exhibitions (including Chaucer's
Canterbury Pilgrims and Satan Calling Up His Legions), but
these works were met with silence, and the one published review was absurdly
negative; the reviewer called the exhibit a display of "nonsense,
unintelligibleness and egregious vanity," and referred to Blake as
"an unfortunate lunatic."
Blake died on August 12
1827, he was buried in an unmarked grave in a public cemetery and Bunhill
Fields. After his death his influence steadily grew through the Pre-Raphaelites
and later noted poets such as T. S. Eliot and W. B. Yeats.
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