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Life & Wisdom Quote by William Blake

"Opposition is true friendship"

About this Quote

Friendship, Blake suggests, isn’t the warm bath of agreement; it’s the bracing splash of resistance. “Opposition is true friendship” reads like a proverb, but it’s really a provocation aimed at the polite social glue of his day: the idea that harmony equals virtue. Blake, the poet-visionary who distrusted institutions and inherited pieties, flips that etiquette. If you never push back, you’re not a friend; you’re an accessory.

The line works because it treats conflict not as a failure of relationship but as proof of it. Opposition implies attention, investment, a refusal to let someone drift into complacency. The subtext is moral: real loyalty is allegiance to a person’s growth, not to their comfort. Blake’s world was one where dissent could look like heresy, and where “friendship” often meant belonging to the right club, endorsing the right doctrines, staying safely legible. He insists on a tougher intimacy: the kind that risks friction because it takes truth seriously.

Contextually, it fits Blake’s larger obsession with contraries. Across his work, energy and restraint, innocence and experience, heaven and hell aren’t problems to be solved but forces that generate vision. Opposition, then, isn’t petty contrarianism; it’s creative tension. A true friend becomes the necessary “other” who interrupts your self-mythology, the voice that refuses your easy narratives. Blake’s sting is that consensus can be the most socially acceptable form of abandonment.

Quote Details

TopicFriendship
Source
Verified source: The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (William Blake, 1793)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Opposition is true Friendship. (Plate 20 (in some copies; often partially obscured/obliterated)). This line is generally located at the end of the ‘Memorable Fancy’ that concludes on Plate 20 of William Blake’s illuminated book The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (composed c. 1790–1793, with copies printed/colored across the 1790s). Multiple scholarly/critical discussions note it appears on Plate 20 and that Blake erased/obscured it in several copies, which complicates ‘first published’ in the modern sense because the work exists in multiple hand-produced copies with variants. A reliable modern pointer to the primary location is Plate 20 in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell; however, I was not able (within tool constraints) to open and quote directly from an authoritative facsimile page at the William Blake Archive for the specific plate/copy showing the fully legible motto, so the confidence is medium rather than high. If you need the strongest verification, the best next step is to cite a specific copy/holding from the William Blake Archive (object for Plate 20) where the words are visible, and record the repository and copy designation (e.g., Copy B/F/I, etc.).
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Blake, William. (2026, March 1). Opposition is true friendship. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/opposition-is-true-friendship-11023/

Chicago Style
Blake, William. "Opposition is true friendship." FixQuotes. March 1, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/opposition-is-true-friendship-11023/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Opposition is true friendship." FixQuotes, 1 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/opposition-is-true-friendship-11023/. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

William Blake

William Blake (November 28, 1757 - August 12, 1827) was a Poet from England.

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