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  1. Songs of Innocence was the first of Blake's illuminated books published in 1789. The poems and artwork were reproduced by copperplate engraving and colored with washes by hand. In 1794 he expanded the book to include Songs of Experience. The spellings, punctuation and capitalizations are those of the original Blake manuscripts.

  2. Piping songs of pleasant glee, On a cloud I saw a child, And he laughing said to me: 'Pipe a song about a Lamb!' So I piped with merry cheer. 'Piper, pipe that song again.' So I piped: he wept to hear. 'Drop thy pipe, thy happy pipe; Sing thy songs of happy cheer!' So I sung the same again, While he wept with joy to hear. 'Piper, sit thee down ...

  3. This is on Red House Records RHR14. This is a great and rare LP Greg Brown Songs Of Innocence And Of Experience. Infant Joy. The vinyl is EX with nice gloss. The Echoing Green.

  4. Folk musician Greg Brown recorded 16 of the poems on his 1987 album Songs of Innocence and of Experience and by Finn Coren in his Blake Project. Poet Allen Ginsberg believed the poems were originally intended to be sung, and that through study of the rhyme and meter of the works, a Blakean performance could be approximately replicated.

  5. El músico folk Greg Brown grabó dieciséis de los poemas de su álbum de 1987 Songs of Innocence and of Experience y de Finn Coren en su Blake Project. El poeta Allen Ginsberg creía que los poemas originalmente estaban pensados para ser cantados y que, mediante el estudio de la rima y la métrica de las obras, se podía replicar aproximadamente una interpretación de Blake.

  6. The first copies of the combined Songs were B, C, and D, formed in 1794 from copies of Innocence printed in 1789 and copies of the complete Experience printed in 1794. Combined Songs Copy E also consists mostly of impressions from these print runs, but appears to have been assembled or at least recolored c. 1806 for Blake's patron Thomas Butts.