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Songs of Innocence and Experience William Blake
Analysis
Blake's Songs of Innocence and Experience (1794) juxtapose the innocent,
pastoral world of childhood against an adult world of corruption and
repression; while such poems as "The Lamb" represent a meek virtue,
poems like "The Tyger" exhibit opposing, darker forces. Thus the
collection as a whole explores the value and limitations of two different
perspectives on the world. Many of the poems fall into pairs, so that the
same situation or problem is seen through the lens of innocence first and then
experience. Blake does not identify himself wholly with either view; most of
the poems are dramatic--that is, in the voice of a speaker other than the poet
himself. Blake stands outside innocence and experience, in a distanced
position from which he hopes to be able to recognize and correct the fallacies
of both. In particular, he pits himself against despotic authority,
restrictive morality, sexual repression, and institutionalized religion; his
great insight is into the way these separate modes of control work together to
squelch what is most holy in human beings.
The Songs of Innocence dramatize the naive hopes and fears that inform
the lives of children and trace their transformation as the child grows into
adulthood. Some of the poems are written from the perspective of children,
while others are about children as seen from an adult perspective. Many of the
poems draw attention to the positive aspects of natural human understanding
prior to the corruption and distortion of experience. Others take a more
critical stance toward innocent purity: for example, while Blake draws touching
portraits of the emotional power of rudimentary Christian values, he also
exposes--over the heads, as it were, of the innocent--Christianity's capacity
for promoting injustice and cruelty.
The Songs of Experience work via parallels and contrasts to lament the
ways in which the harsh experiences of adult life destroy what is good in
innocence, while also articulating the weaknesses of the innocent perspective
("The Tyger," for example, attempts to account for real, negative
forces in the universe, which innocence fails to confront). These latter
poems
treat sexual morality in terms of the repressive effects of jealousy, shame,
and secrecy, all of which corrupt the ingenuousness of innocent love. With
regard to religion, they are less concerned with the character of individual
faith than with the institution of the Church, its role in politics, and its
effects on society and the individual mind. Experience thus adds a layer to
innocence that darkens its hopeful vision while compensating for some of its
blindness.
The style of the Songs of Innocence and Experience is simple and direct,
but the language and the rhythms are painstakingly crafted, and the ideas
they
explore are often deceptively complex. Many of the poems are narrative in
style; others, like "The Sick Rose" and "The Divine
Image," make their arguments through symbolism or by means of
abstract concepts. Some of Blake's favorite rhetorical techniques are
personification and the reworking of Biblical symbolism and language. Blake
frequently employs the familiar meters of ballads, nursery rhymes, and hymns,
applying them to his own, often unorthodox conceptions. This combination of
the traditional with the unfamiliar is consonant with Blake's perpetual
interest in reconsidering and reframing the assumptions of human thought and
social behavior.
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