To forgive Enemies H does pretend
Appearance
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TO forgive enemies H—— does pretend,
Who never in his life forgave a friend,
And when he could not act upon my wife
Hired a villain to bereave my life.[2]
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To forgive Enemies H . does pretend
Who never in his Life forgave a friend
Notes
[edit]- ↑ The Poetical Works of William Blake, including the unpublished French Revolution together with the Minor Prophetic Books and Selections from The Four Zoas, Milton & Jerusalem; edited with an introduction and textual notes by John Sampson, Hon. D.Litt. Oxon., 1862–1931. London, New York: Oxford University Press, 1908.
- ↑ 1. V 4 This line, as well as any other, may serve as an illustration of Blake’s habit of embodying old phrases, passages, or even entire stanzas in pieces written sometimes after an interval of years. Cp. with the above, composed circa 1809, the lines from ‘Fair Elenor’:
He seeks thy love; who, coward in the night,
Hirèd a villain to bereave my life,
probably one of the earliest poems included in the Poetical Sketches printed in 1783, and, according to the ‘Advertisement’, written at least six years earlier. - ↑ "The Complete Poetry & Prose of William Blake", ed. by David V. Erdman, Anchor Books, 1988, p. 505.
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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