The Little Girl Found, from "The Songs of Innocence and of Experience"
William Blake, English, 1757 - 1827
print about 1831
Etching on wove paper
copy o, plate 36
Sheet: 11 1/16 × 7 3/8 in. (28.1 × 18.7 cm)
Plate: 4 1/2 × 2 3/4 in. (11.4 × 7 cm)
Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Gift of Dr. Franz H. Hirschland, Class of 1935P and 1939P
PR.948.16.1
Geography
Place Made: England, United Kingdom, Europe
Period
19th century
Object Name
Research Area
Not on view
Inscriptions
Inscribed, in plate, center: Famished, weeping, weak / With hollow piteous shriek / Rising from unrest, / The trembling woman prest. / With feet of weary woe; / She could no further go. / In his arms he bore, Her arm'd with sorrow sore: / Till before their way. A couching lion lay. / Turning back was vain, / Soon his heavy mane, / Bore them to the ground, / Then he stalk'd around. / Smelling to his prey, / But their fears allay, / When he licks their hands: / And silent by them stands. / They look upon his eyes / Fill'd with deep surprise: / And wondering behold, / A spirit arm'd in gold. / On his head a crown / On his shoulders down, / Flow'd his golden hair, / Gone was their care. / Follow me he said, / Weep not for the maid: / In my palace deep / Lyca lies asleep. / Then they followed, / Where the vision led: / And saw their sleeping child, / Among tygers wild. / To this day they dwell / in a lonely dell, / Nor fear the wolvish howl / Nor the lions growl.; inscribed, in graphite, lower center: [from old mount] Page from Blake's Songs of Experience printed about 1831 Chas. Eliot Norton Coll. / fragment of the poem The Little Girl Found.
Provenance
Dr. Franz H. Hirschland (1880-1973), New York, New York; given to present collection, 1948.
Catalogue Raisonne
Bindman 1978.255; Binyon 1926.215
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