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Life & Wisdom Quote by William Blake

"To see the world in a grain of sand, and to see heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hands, and eternity in an hour"

About this Quote

Blake’s line is a dare dressed up as a lullaby: stop treating meaning like it lives only in cathedrals, empires, or “great” events. The audacity is scale. He shrinks the cosmos into a grain of sand and then, with the same breath, expands your attention until a wildflower becomes a portal. That whiplash isn’t decorative; it’s polemic. Blake is arguing that perception is a moral and political act. If you can’t read the infinite in the ordinary, you’re primed to accept a world where only the powerful count as real.

The subtext is a quiet rebellion against Enlightenment rationalism and industrial-era reductionism. Late-18th-century Britain is busy measuring, classifying, extracting: nature becomes resource, people become labor, imagination becomes childish. Blake counters with a kind of visionary empiricism. He doesn’t reject seeing; he radicalizes it. “Hold infinity in the palm of your hands” turns the body into an instrument of revelation, not a machine. “Eternity in an hour” collapses clock time, the very time discipline that factories will soon enforce, into something elastic, interior, almost insurgent.

It works because it’s not abstract mysticism; it’s tactile. Sand, flower, palm, hour: four concrete nouns that smuggle in a metaphysics. Blake’s intent isn’t to soothe you with wonder. It’s to re-train your eyesight until the world can’t be flattened into utility, and the soul can’t be outsourced to institutions.

Quote Details

TopicPoetry
Source
Unverified source: Life of William Blake (selections edited by D. G. Rossetti) (William Blake, 1880)
Text match: 93.23%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
To see a world in a grain of sand And a Heaven in a wild flower, Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand And Eternity in an hour. (Section: “Ideas of good and evil”; poem heading “AUGURIES OF INNOCENCE” (the quatrain appears as the opening lines of the poem)). Primary-source attribution: these lin...
Other candidates (1)
The Myanmar Maneuver (Ruth A. Manieri, 2006) compilation97.2%
... William Blake that said; to see the world in a grain of sand, and to see heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity i...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Blake, William. (2026, January 15). To see the world in a grain of sand, and to see heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hands, and eternity in an hour. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-see-the-world-in-a-grain-of-sand-and-to-see-11038/

Chicago Style
Blake, William. "To see the world in a grain of sand, and to see heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hands, and eternity in an hour." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-see-the-world-in-a-grain-of-sand-and-to-see-11038/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"To see the world in a grain of sand, and to see heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hands, and eternity in an hour." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-see-the-world-in-a-grain-of-sand-and-to-see-11038/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.

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See the world in a grain of sand, heaven in a wild flower
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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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