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Encyclopedia > Blakely

Blakely may refer to:

Blakely was born Roy Blake on July 21, 1867. He was known for his excellent fighting tactics and strategies. He was able to conquer much of Europe with his love that he had for woman. His love was known to be free for both sexes. He later died on October 5, 1890 as he was found in bed with another male. He was hung in Milan Italy. To this day he is known as a martyr for gays everywhere. Blakely is a city located in Early County, Georgia. ... Blakely is a borough located in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania. ...


His legacy is remembered through the fashion school of O'LaLa Institute located in New York for up and cuming gay fashion designers.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Blake. Eliot, T. S. 1920. The Sacred Wood (1546 words)
Blake, on the other hand, knew what interested him, and he therefore presents only the essential, only, in fact, what can be presented, and need not be explained.
Blake was endowed with a capacity for considerable understanding of human nature, with a remarkable and original sense of language and the music of language, and a gift of hallucinated vision.
The fault is perhaps not with Blake himself, but with the environment which failed to provide what such a poet needed; perhaps the circumstances compelled him to fabricate, perhaps the poet required the philosopher and mythologist; although the conscious Blake may have been quite unconscious of the motives.
Blake, William. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05 (732 words)
Blake’s life, except for three years at Felpham where he prepared illustrations for an edition of Cowper, was spent in London.
Blake’s paintings and engravings, notably his illustrations of his own works, works by Milton, and of the Book of Job, are painstakingly realistic in their representation of human anatomy and other natural forms.
Blake exalted love and pure liberty, and abhorred the reductive, rationalist philosophy that served to justify the political and economic inequities attendant upon the Industrial Revolution.
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