William Blake Meaning Of Life

737 Words2 Pages

What is the meaning of life? Is a question far beyond anyone can answer. But everyday people try to breakdown the meaning of it in their everyday life. This question that people try to answer ranges from religion to philosophy. Everyday there is new theories propose to something simple, to something out of this world. This question has been asked so many times through music, literature, fiction, poetry and art. It doesn’t matter what time period and style the people, also known as artists and philosophers, are from as long as they can find the basic meaning of this question they will do and believe anything.
One of the artists is William Blake. William Blake is a well-known artist of the 18th and 19th centuries. He was a poet, a painter, an engraver and many more. But he is most famous for his beliefs. William Blake was born on November 28, 1757 in the Soho district of London, England, during a time when Romanticism was on the rise. He was born to a poor Hosier’s family; he was a one out of five child of James and Catherine Wright Armitage Blake. As a child the Bible had a huge impacted on his life. William Blake was one of those unique beings that live above this actual world, in the high places of imagination. At four years old he saw his first vision, he saw God's head appear in a window. He also allegedly saw the prophet Ezekiel under a tree and had a vision of "a tree filled with angels.

Being born in a poor family, Blake only briefly attended school, in his early years; he continued his education by being homeschooled by his mother, Ellen. At age ten he attended the Henry Pars Drawing Academy in 1767, for five years because he had an artistic talent. At Henry Pars Drawing Academy, Blake sketched the human figure by co...

... middle of paper ...

...the living model, and profited by it to a certain limited extent. But he always had an aversion to it, declaring that to his whimsical nature it “smelt of mortality.” Blake believed that to draw from the typical forms seen by him in vision was his true purpose and aim, and the study of individual human forms filled his eye with confusion, for, as he was for ever asserting, Nature seemed to him but a faint and garbled version of the grand originals seen in imagination, that is, in truth.
In 1780, Blake's artistic energies branched out at this point. While Blake was educating himself in art, he had to earn his livelihood by engraver’s work, and between 1779 and 1782 one or two booksellers employed him to engrave designs after various artists. He also privately published his Poetical Sketches (1783), a collection of poems that he had written over the previous 14 years.

Open Document