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Letter dated 12 July 1967 from G. R. Blake to Lorenzo A. Richards
Letter dated 12 July 1967 from G. R. Blake at the Institute of Agriculture in Saint Paul, Minnesota, to Lorenzo A. Richards at the USDA Soil Salinity Laboratory in Riverside, California, about Richards\u27 recent article in "Methods of Soil Analysis" journal, with handwritten notes by RichardsUNIVERSITY O\u27F ^Minnesota INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT OF SOIL SCIENCE • ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA 55101 July 12, 1967 P. 3. /Ht>C&*~i» Dr. L. A. Richards U. S. Department of Agriculture Soil Salinity Laboratory Riverside, California Dear Ren, A f ^ytyyjfj Professor Soil Science J^GRB/cak Enc. f&lsZ**dAA+*yiy *7f -AytAs eUy^*-t^y^7L^J -&-+J J**J«. ^ j-q ^ - 4 / V U o^lxP -*~y**1 *yU*~ (A-tr^Ct J +«.> tS<#r£ (/BtfJ+jJ/)**
William Blake The Critical Heritage
The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling students and researchers to read for themselves, for example, comments on early performances of Shakespeare's plays, or reactions to the first publication of Jane Austen's novels. The carefully selected sources range from landmark essays in the history of criticism to journalism and contemporary opinion, and little published documentary material such as letters and diaries. Significant pieces of criticism from later periods are also included, in order to demonstrate the fluctuations in an author's reputation. Each volume contains an introduction to the writer's published works, a selected bibliography, and an index of works, authors and subjects. The Collected Critical Heritage set will be available as a set of 68 volumes and the series will also be available in mini sets selected by period (in slipcase boxes) and as individual volumes.Cover -- WILLIAM BLAKE: THE CRITICAL HERITAGE -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Note on the Text -- Preface -- Introduction: BLAKE'S CRITICAL REPUTATION 1780-1863 -- PART I BLAKE'S LIFE -- 1. General comments: 1826, 1827, 1855 -- (a) Crabb Robinson, 1826 -- (b) John Linnell, 1827 -- (c) Samuel Palmer, 1855 -- 2. External events: 1757-1812 -- 3. Politics: 1804, 1805 -- (a) Samuel Greatheed, 1804 -- (b) William Hayley, 1805 -- 4. Visions: 1761-1825 -- (a) Blake, 1761-1800 -- (b) Thomas Phillips, 1807 -- (c) Blake, 1819-25 -- 5. Madness: 1841, 1805, 1830 -- (a) W.C.Dendy, 1841 -- (b) Lady Hesketh, 1805 -- (c) Caroline Bowles, 1830 -- (d) Robert Southey, 1830 -- (e) James Ward, Edward Calvert, F.O.Finch, Cornelius Varley -- (f) Seymour KirKup -- 6. 'He is always in Paradise': 1825-60 -- (a) Crabb Robinson, 1825 -- (b) Samuel Palmer -- (c) Thomas Woolner, 1860 -- (d) Seymour Kirkup -- (e) Crabb Robinson, 1826 -- (f) Frederick Tatham, 1832 -- PART II WRITINGS -- 7. Reviews of Malkin's account of Blake (1806): 1806, 1807 -- (a) Literary Journal, 1806 -- (b) British Critic, 1806 -- (c) Monthly Review, 1806 -- (d) Monthly Magazine, 1807 -- (e) Annual Review, 1807 -- 8. General comments: 1807-38 -- (a) George Cumberland, 1808 -- (b) Blake, 1808 -- (c) Wordsworth, 1807 -- (d) Crabb Robinson, 1812, 1813, 1838 -- (e) W.S.Landor -- 9. Poetical Sketches (1783): 1828, 1784 -- (a) J.T.Smith, 1828 -- (b) John Flaxman, 1784 -- 10. The Book of Thel (1789): 1839 -- J.J.G.Willinson's, 1839 -- 11. The French Revolution (1791) -- Samuel Palmer, 1827 -- 12. Songs of Innocence and of Experience (1789, 1794): 1811-63 -- (a) J.T.Smith, 1828 -- (b) Crabb Robinson, 1811 -- (c) William Hazlitt, 1826 -- (d) Coleridge, 1818 -- (e) Gilchrist, 1863 -- (f) Blake, 1827 -- (g) Edward FitzGerald, 1833 -- (h) J.J.G.Wilkinson, 1839(i) Edward Quillinan, 1848 -- (j) John Ruskin -- 13. America (1793) and Europe (1794): 1828 -- Richard Thomson, 1828 -- 14. Descriptive Catalogue (1809): 1809-47 -- (a) Blake, 1809 -- (b) Crabb Robinson, 1810 -- (c) Robert Southey, 1847 -- (d) George Cumberland, Jr, 1809 -- (e) George Cumberland, 1809 -- (f) Robert Hunt in the Examiner, 1809 -- (g) Blake -- 15. Jerusalem (1804-?20): 1811-28 -- (a) Crabb Robinson, 1811 -- (b) T.G.Wainewright, 1820 -- (c) J.T.Smith, 1828 -- PART III DRAWINGS -- 16. General comments: 1780-1865 -- (a) Crabb Robinson, 1825 -- (b) Blake, ?1820 -- (c) Gilchrist, 1863 -- (d) J.T.Smith, 1828 -- (e) Blake -- (f) Fuseli -- (g) George Richmond -- (h) Allan Cunningham, 1830 -- (i) Isaac D'Israeli, 1836 -- (j) William Hayley, 1803 -- (k) Gilchrist, 1863 -- (l) J.T.Smith, 1828 -- (m) Frederick Tatham, ?1832 -- (n) John Linnell, 1863 -- (o) Blake -- (p) George Cumberland, 1780 -- (q) John Flaxman, 1783 -- (r) Dr Trusler, 1799 -- (s) John Flaxman, 1800 -- (t) Blake, 1802 -- (u) T.F.Dibdin, 1836 -- (v) William Hayley, 1801 -- (w) Blake, 1801 -- (x) Nancy Flaxman, 1805 -- (y) Blake, 1808 -- (z) Ozias Humphry, 1808 -- (aa) George Cumberland, Jr, 1815 -- (bb) J.T.Smith, 1828 -- (cc) C.H.B.Ker, 1810 -- (dd) Seymour KirKup, 1865 -- (ee) George Cumberland, 1808 -- (ff) J.J.G.Wilkinson, 1838 -- (gg) John Ruskin, 1849 -- PART IV ENGRAVED DESIGNS -- 17. General comments -- (a) Blake, 1804 -- (b) Gilchrist, 1863 -- (c) John Flaxman, 1805 -- (d) Joseph Johnson, 1791 -- (e) John Flaxman, 1804, 1808, 1814 -- 18. Salzmann, Elements of Morality (1791): 1791 -- Analytical Review, 1791 -- 19. Burger, Leonora (1796): 1796 -- (a) British Critic, 1796 -- (b) Analytical Review, 1796 87 -- 20. Cumberland, Thoughts on Outline (1796): 1796 -- Reference to Blake in the text, 1796 -- 21. Stuart and Revett, Antiquities of Athens, 1794: 1803John Flaxman, 1803 -- 22. Young, Night Thoughts (1797): 1796-1830 -- (a) J.T.Smith, 1828 -- (b) Joseph Farington 1796-7 -- (c) Advertising flyer, 1797 -- (d) Advertisement in Night Thoughts, 1797 -- (e) T.F.Dibdin, 1824 -- (f) Bulwer Lytton, 1830 -- (g) Auction catalogue, 1821 -- (h) Auction catalogue, 1826 -- (i) Auction catalogue, 1828 -- 23. Hayley, Essay on Sculpture (1800): 1800 -- (a) William Hayley"s, 1800 -- (b) Blake, 1800 -- (c) William Hayley, 1800 -- 24. Hayley, Designs to a Series of Ballads (1802): 1802 -- (a) William Hayley, 1802 -- (b) Lady Hesketh, 1802 -- (c) John Flaxman, 1802 -- (d) Charlotte Collins, 1802 -- (e) Lady Hesketh, 1802 -- (f) Blake -- (g) John Johnson, 1802 -- (h) Lady Hesketh, 1802 -- (i) William Hayley, 1802 -- (j) Lady Hesketh, 1802 -- 25. Hayley, Life…of William Cowper (1803): 1801-4 -- (a) William Hayley, 1801 -- (b) Lady Hesketh, 1801 -- (c) William Hayley, 1801-2 -- (d) John Flaxman, 1802 -- (e) William Hayley, 1802 -- (f) Lady Hesketh, 1802-3 -- (g) Blake, 1803 -- (h) Lady Hesketh, 1803 -- (i) Samuel Greatheed, 1804 -- 26. Hayley, Triumphs of Temper (1803): 1803 -- John Flaxman, 1803 -- 27. Hoare, Academic Correspondence, 1803 (1804): 1804 -- Literary Journal, 1804 -- 28. Hayley, Ballads (1805): 1805, 1806 -- (a) William Hayley, 1805 -- (b) Lady Hesketh, 1805 -- (c) Samuel Greatheed, 1805 -- (d) Samuel Greatheed review, 1805 -- (e) Robert Southey review, 1806 -- 29. Blair, The Grave (1808): 1805-63 -- General comments, 1805-63 -- (a) John Flaxman, 1805 -- (b) Blake, 1805 -- (c) Prospectus, 1805 -- (d) R.T.Stothard, 1863 -- (e) John Flaxman, 1805 -- (f) R.H.Cromek, 1807 -- (g) Louis Schiavonetti, 1807 -- (h) John Hoppner, 1808 -- (i) Advertisement, 1808 -- (j) W.Walker, 1808 -- (k) William Bell Scott -- (l) David Scott, 1844 -- (m) James Montgomery -- Reviews -- (n) Review by Robert Hunt in the Examiner, 1808(o) Blake's reply in his Descriptive Catalogue, 1809 -- (p) Antijacobin Review, 1808 -- (q) Monthly Magazine, 1808 -- General comments, 1810-26 -- (r) W.P.Carey, 1817 -- (s) Repository of Arts, 1810 -- (t) C.H.B.Ker, 1810 -- (u) Quarterly Review, 1826 -- (v) J.J.de Mora, 1826 -- (w) Sir Edward Denny, 1826 -- 30. The Prologue and Characters of Chaucer's Pilgrims (1812): 1812 -- (a) Introduction -- (b) Gentleman's Magazine, 1812 -- 31. Virgil, Pastorals (1821): 1821-63 -- (a) Henry Cole, 1843 -- (b) Gilchrist, 1863 -- (c) Virgil, Pastorals, 1821 -- (d) Edward Calvert -- (e) Samuel Palmer -- 32. Remember Me! (1825, 1826): 1825 -- Introduction -- 33. Illustrations of The Book of Job (1826): 1826-45 -- (a) J.T.Smith, 1828 -- (b) E.T.Daniell, 1826 -- (c) Robert Balmanno, 1826 -- (d) Sir Edward Denny, 1826 -- (e) H.S.C.Shorts, 1827 -- (f) George Cumberland, 1827 -- (g) H.Dumaresq, 1828 -- (h) Bernard Barton, 1830, 1838 -- (i) F.T.Palgrave, 1845 -- 34. Blake's Illustrations of Dante (?1838): 1824-?32 -- (a) Samuel Palmer, 1824 -- (b) T.G.Wainewright, 1827 -- (c) Crabb Robinson, 1827 -- (d) Bernard Barton, 1830 -- (e) Frederick Tatham's, ?1832 -- PART V GENERAL ESSAYS ON BLAKE -- 35. B.H.Malkin, A Father's Memoirs of his Child: 1806 -- 36. H.C.Robinson, 'William Blake, artist, poet and religious mystic': 1811 -- 37. Obituary in Literary Gazette: 1827 -- 38. Obituary in Literary Chronicle: 1827 -- 39. Allan Cunningham Lives of. British Painters: 1830 -- 40. Anon., 'The inventions of William Blake, painter and poet': 1830 -- 41. Anon., 'The last of the supernaturalists': 1830 -- 42. Frederick Tatham, 'Life of Blake': ?1832 -- PART VI FORGOTTEN YEARS REFERENCES TO WILLIAM BLAKE: 1831-62 -- Bibliography -- Annotated index of namesThe Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling students and researchers to read for themselves, for example, comments on early performances of Shakespeare's plays, or reactions to the first publication of Jane Austen's novels. The carefully selected sources range from landmark essays in the history of criticism to journalism and contemporary opinion, and little published documentary material such as letters and diaries. Significant pieces of criticism from later periods are also included, in order to demonstrate the fluctuations in an author's reputation. Each volume contains an introduction to the writer's published works, a selected bibliography, and an index of works, authors and subjects. The Collected Critical Heritage set will be available as a set of 68 volumes and the series will also be available in mini sets selected by period (in slipcase boxes) and as individual volumes.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
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The twelve large colour prints of William Blake: a study on techniques, materials and context
The aim of this thesis is to study in entirety the group of large colour prints which William Blake made between 1795 and 1805. The series of prints represents the single most important and complete development of Blake’s skill as an innovative printmaker. Although they include some of Blake’s best-known images, they have not been studied before in their entirety or from the point of view of analysing the techniques and methods Blake had used. My study will show how Blake executed these truly impressive prints in terms of materials, method and motives. The first half of the thesis deals with the materialistic aspects of Blake’s colour printing. In chapter one tracing the controversial two-pull discussion to the root, I will make clear the focus points as well as revealing the early tradition of experimental criticism on Blake’s colour printing method. Focusing on two important critics, W. Graham Robertson and Ruthven Todd, and the periods they lived, I attempt to reveal the role they played in a wider context. Also I show how the tradition of Blake’s art was inherited directly through the Ancients to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, which leads to Robertson and Todd. In the second chapter I deal with the development of Blake’s colour printing experiments. It is obvious that the Twelve Large Colour Prints were produced as a result of Blake’s series of colour printing experiments, starting with monocolour simple prints, going through the illuminated books progressing with more colours and higher skills
Blake and Kierkegaard Creation and Anxiety
This study applies Kierkegaardian anxiety to Blake's creation myths to explain how Romantic era creation narratives are a reaction to Enlightenment models of personality.Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 Blake and Kierkegaard: Shared Contexts -- The Sources of Kierkegaardian Anxiety and Creation Anxiety -- Denmark's and England's Shared Histories -- Denmark's and England's Cultural Anxieties -- Blake, Kierkegaard, and the Cultural Tensions -- 2 Blake, Kierkegaard, and the Socratic Tradition -- Human Personality and the Socratic Tradition -- Kierkegaard and the Socratic Tradition -- Blake and the Socratic Tradition -- 3 Blake, Kierkegaard, and the Classical Model of Personality -- Kierkegaard's Aesthetic Stage and Blake's Innocence -- Kierkegaard's Ethical Stage and Blake's Experience -- Kierkegaard's Religiousness A and B and Blake's Visionary Personality -- 4 Innocence, Generation, and the Fall in Blake and Kierkegaard -- Kierkegaard and the Problem of Generation -- Generation in Blake -- Urizen the Reflective-Aesthetic King -- Reason and Imagination in Blake and Kierkegaard -- 5 Creation Anxiety and The [First] Book of Urizen -- Urizen the Creator-Monarch -- Science and Religion in the Urizen Books -- Haufniensis, the Demonic, and Spiritlessness -- Conclusion: Nature, Artifice, and Creation Anxiety in William Blake -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- YThis study applies Kierkegaardian anxiety to Blake's creation myths to explain how Romantic era creation narratives are a reaction to Enlightenment models of personality.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
William Blake and the visionary poetry of the law.
PhDThis dissertation examines the meaning of law in Blake's work. I argue that Blake's poetry
intersects with contemporaneous challenges to the traditional model of the ancient constitution,
a debate which I present as a conflict between custom and code. Blake's support for the French
Revolution's overthrow of the customary systems of the ancien regime is countered by his
nervousness about the rights-based discourse advanced by leading radical intellectuals such as
Thomas Paine, a belief that the new systems which they proposed merely re-stated those which
they sought to replace within an even narrower compass.
Law is also a contested ground within radical political discourse of this period; although the
dominant proposals advocated the enshrinement of fundamental rights and the codification of
law, there was also a tendency towards a more enthusiastic radicalism These millenarian
groups, emerging from antinomian heresy, rejected the notion of life being framed within a set
of moral laws. I argue that Blake cannot easily be placed in either group; his work exhibits a
fidelity to the redemptive potential of law, coupled with a real concern that to define freedoms
in legal terms serves to limit rather than to liberate.
Blake's work thus engages with a problem of the period: how to understand the new
discourses of law. The customary account of the ancient English conunon law is predicated on
the idea that it is codified, yet not written down; secular, though grounded in divine principle.
These ambivalences are exploited by Blake in his poetic exploration of the law in the 1790s. In
his nineteenth-century epics, Blake finds increasing help in dissenting religion's reconstruction
of a radicalized Jesus. Through this radical prophetic voice, Blake is able to construct a
redemptive legality founded on a deinstitutio-nalized Christianity, a constitutionalism that is
also recovered from the conventional customary account
Letter dated 26 June 1967 from G. R. Blake to colleagues in the Soil Science Society of America
Letter dated 26 June 1967 from G. R. Blake to colleagues in the Soil Science Society of America, including Lorenzo A. Richards, on the decision by the editorial boards of the society to use the metric system exclusively in its publications, and seeking opinion on the use of a table of conversion factorsUNIVERSITY O^Fi rmesotcL INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT OF SOIL SCIENCE • ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA 55101 June 26, 1967 TO: Various Colleagues in SSSA FROM: G.R. Blake RE: Agronomy Journal Editorial Boards of the Soil Science Society of America have chosen to use the metric system exclusively in our publications. The question was considered in the last meeting of the Agronomy Journal Editorial Board whether or not for some of our readers it would be wise to include a compact conversion table to be printed in the Journal (perhaps on the inside cover page). I was asked to make suggestions for further consideration by the board. I have enclosed a possible table of conversion factors. I would greatly appreciate your suggestions on it. Specifically I would appreciate your comments on the following questions: (You can write on this sheet and return it if you wish.) 1. Is the list too long or too short? 2. Do you have other conversion factors to suggest? 3. Do you feel that some of those on the enclosed table could be omitted? 4. Do you have suggestions for the format of such a table? 5. Do you consider it necessary or desirable to categorize units of length, units of area, units of volume, etc.? If not, it would perhaps be best to arrange the metric units alphabetically. 6. Any other comments or suggestions you may wish to make on the value or need of such a readers guide will be appreciated. They will then be presented to the Agronomy Journal.editorial board for consideration. / 6 Jb^c^cc-, CP 7 With best personal regards CONVERSION FACTORS To convert column 1 into column 2 multiply by Column 1 To convert column Column 2 2 into column 1 multiply by Length 0.621 1.094 0.394 0.039 0.386 247.1 100.0 2.471 0.00973 2.838 0.0284 1.057 kilometer, meter, m centimeter, millimeter, 2 kilometer , 2 kilometer^, kilometer , hetare, ha 3 3 meter , m hectoliter, liter, 1 liter, 1 km cm mm Area km km2 km2 Volume hi mile, mi yard, yd inch, in inch, in 2 2 mile , mi haeccrtea,r aec,r hea acre, acre acre-inch bushel, bu bushel, bu quart (liqu: 1.609 0.914 2.54 25.4 2.590 0.00405 0.010 0.405 102.8 0.352 35.24 0.946 Mass 1.102 2.205 0.035 ton (metric) kilogram, kg gram, g ton (english) 0.9072 pound, lb 0.454 ounce (avdp), oz 28.35 Pressure 14.22 0.968 0.9807 kgs/cm2 kgs/cm kgs/cm^ lbs/inch , psi 0.0703 atmospheres, atmos 1.033 bar * 1.0197 Yield 0.446 0.891 264.2 0.87 2.119 ton (metric)/ha kg/ha kiloliters/min, kl/min hectoliters/ha hl/ha liters/sec 1/sec ton (english)/acre 2.240 lb/acre 1.12 gallons/minute, gpm 0.00379 bu/acre 1.15 ft /min 0.472 Temperatures C + 32 Centigrade, --17.8° 0° 20° 37° 100° C Fahrenheit, F 0° 32° 68° 98.6° 212° (F-32
Job’s Gethsemane: tradition and imagination in William Blake’s illustrations for the book of job
Blake created two versions of his Illustrations of the Book of Job, and it is now agreed that about twenty years separates his first watercolour series and the final engraved set of plates. The first chapter is biographical and technical: it establishes that the Butts series of water-colours was the product of the tumultuous and creative years 1805-10, following a time wh6n Blake experienced a strong sense of vision and Christian regeneration; whereas the engraved set was produced 1821-1826, at the end of his life. It also reviews all Blake's treatments of the Job theme. The friends-turned-accusers seem to have been a central pre-occupation. Blake's illustrations contain important elements which are not found in the Old Testament text. I have followed Bo Lindberg's principle that explanation should be sought in the artistic tradition, and in the work itself The second chapter concentrates on the tradition available to Blake, following and supplementing Lindberg's examination of the influence of the apocryphal Testament of Job, and of the artistic tradition of seeing Job as alter Christus and as Christian. Chapters three to five, interpreting Blake's imaginative use of this material, are new both in focussing on the Butts set, and in exploring the importance to Blake of St.Teresa, Fenelon, Mme. Guyon, Hervey and other people of prayer. Also discussed are Joseph Hallett's radical biblical commentary, of which Blake owned a copy, variant proofs discovered by Robert Essick of the first and last engraved plates, and the thirteenth century Job wall- paintings discovered in 1800 in St. Stephen's Chapel, Westminster. Blake's Job was unique in the corpus of his work. Previous studies have followed Wicksteed in concentrating on the engraved set, and no one has explored the implications of the earlier dating now agreed for the watercolour series. The thesis is essentially concerned with Blake's Christocentric theme, and Job's inner journey of prayer, in these illustrations. Conclusions drawn differ substantially from Wicksteed's
Blake Law Center
Law school Professor John J. O\u27Connor (3rd from right) gives donors to the S. Prestley Blake Law Center building a tour of the facility during a special reception held in January, 1979. Professor O\u27Connor describes the jury room to (L to R) Atty. Peter G. Ellis; S. Prestley Blake, donor; Atty. Archer B. Battista; Mrs. Herbert P. Blake (back to camera); and Mrs. Peter G. Ellis, at the Law Center reception.https://digitalcommons.law.wne.edu/ua_buildings/1063/thumbnail.jp
Planning for irrigation in Minnesota
24 pages; includes photographs, plans and drawings. This archival publication may not reflect current scientific knowledge or recommendations. Current information available from the University of Minnesota Extension: https://www.extension.umn.edu.Allred, E. R.; Blake, G. R.; Larson, C. L.. (1958). Planning for irrigation in Minnesota. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/168773
Blake Law Center
(L to R) Howard I. Kalodner, Dean, School of Law; Atty. Peter G. Ellis; and Mrs. Ellis chat during the Blake Law Center open house and reception.https://digitalcommons.law.wne.edu/ua_buildings/1054/thumbnail.jp
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