Literature Analysis POETRY NOVEL DRAMA ESSAY PROSE BIOGRAPHY AMERICAN LITERATURE “
Home » Songs of nnacenes
Songs of Innocence by William Blake -
Summary & Analysis
“O99
Seach Yeu oeine
‘+ > ron idioms Provides by Songs of Innocence Toward Experience
+> Importance of Introductory poems in Songs of Innocence and Experience
‘+> Transiton from Songs of Innocence to Songs of Experionco
+> undetined
Summary on frags
Senoneey
Blake Songs of Innocence (as well as Experience) is collection of poems united all the grand
combinations of art and mind, poetry, music and painting, copying none, but breathing spirit
‘and life inte his work and shaping forms from the world of his creative and sportive
imagination. His work is the fanciful product of rich imagination, drawing, colouring, poetry
‘which he united to form a beautiful whole. The poems in the section of Innocence are
particularly remarkable for the transparent depth of thought which constitutes true simplicity -
they give us glimpse of all that is holy in the childhood of the world and the individual they
abound in the sweetest touches of that pastoral life by which the Golden Age may still be visibly
represented to the Iron Age. It was when Blake was a little over thirty that he collected and
published one of his sweetest and most original works. the Songs of Innocence, engraving the
poems in a unique way with picturesque designs on copper. These copper plates are somewhat
crude. deep-cut casts from engraved wood blocks. He managed to get these designs remain in
relief by some technical and chemical means. These he printed with his own hands, in various
tones of brown, blue and grey tinting them afterwards by hand into a sort of rainbow-coloured
page, in which the thrilling music of the verse and the gentle bedazzlement of the lines and.
colours intermingle.
Search Your Study Material
Search
Postry
Dover Bese Gionje
Hymn To ntalactual Beauty Hyperio
IrYou Cal Ma In Mes
Peat Posty Poe
‘Songs of nn se
Sweeney Erect The Battle of Maldor
The Orn
The Wanderer The Was
Novels
AFarowell To Arms sage 0
Tele ofTwo Cites ATger for Malg
Adam Bede Coole “Literature Analysis POETRY NOVEL DRAMA ESSAY PROSE BIOGRAPHY AMERICAN LITERATURE “
Songs of Innocence and Experienco
The Generel Theme :
1m Songs of Innocence Blake deals with the pure innocence of children and the heavenly,
secure and gleeful pastoral world of sport and merry-making, In this section we see the children
enjoying unbridled freedom, they play until they are satisfied, they speak to animals like lambs
and sheep which are as innocent as themselves. It is a heaven that lies about their infancy. The
unstained world of innocence also provides them guardian angels for ensuring their security. In
this section Blake is not exclusively unconcerned with the evil practices in the society against
children. The litle black boy and the chimney sweeper lament their lots, But what differentiates
them from the world of Experience is that, at the end of all such poems that give expression to
‘the hostility ofthe society Blake brings the children out of the fold ofthis vicious circle and
restores them to the heavenly abode of God. In this section Blake also brings in his theory of
od-God as child and lamb. Thus God, lamb and child form a trinity. He fills the scenes of
Innocence with angels who talk to children and mingle with them. In Innocence we hear the
vwren-like warblings echoing in the green fields and gardens. The pastoral settings is sunny, full,
of flying and warbling birds and ringing sonorous bells. The problem of these songs lies in their
peculiar naivety. This is not the simplicity of childhood, of incomplete experience; this
simplicity has its origin in no experience at all. Blake's condemnation of the perishing Vegetable
Memory as a substitute for inspiration, and his preference of the ‘Eternal Image’ to the actual,
object are both relevant here. The images of the Songs of Innocence are seen in a vision. within
‘|a moment, aPulsation of Artery
Syne:
Im Songs of Innocence Blake weaves the texture of the poems with the warp and woof of
symbolism and pictorial beauty. In his poems the lamb is a symbol of ‘The Lamb’ of God that
taketh away the sin ofthe world. The Echoing Green’ is not merely the depiction of a merry day:
itis @ symbolic presentation of the "Day of Innocence” from sunrise to sunset. “Infant Joy’, The
Little Black Boy’ and “Laughing Songs’ symbolize the three ages of Innocence infancy, childhood
and youth, ‘A Cradle Song’, ‘Nurse's Song’ and 'Holy Thursday’ are symbolic of the same three
ages of man, this time in relation to society, and the remaining poems, which image the human
soul in its quest of sel-realization, are all of even deeper symbolic import. Reading them in the
categorical order in which Blake once decided they should be arranged, we pass through,
consecutive stages of development from infancy to self-consciousness.
The use of symbolism in Blake's poems is not to be neglected. Without symbols, these poems
could not have been rendered, Blake's state of innocence set forth in symbols of pastoral life
akin to those of the twenty-third psalm seems at frst sight to have something in common with
what Vaughan, Traherne and Wordsworth say in their different ways about the vision of
childhood which is st in later life, Fo: him childhood is both itself and a symbol ofa state of soul
which may exist in maturity. His subject is the childlike vision of existence. For him all human
beings are in some sense, and at some time, the children of a i vine father. (What he describes
are not actual events as ordinary men see and understand them, but spiritual events which have
tobe stated symbolically in order that they may be intelligible. In the songs of Innocence Blake's
symbols are largely drawn from the Bible, and since he makes use of such familiar figures as the
Good Shepherd and the Lamb of God, there is not much difficulty in seeing what he means,
Indeed some poems of innocence are fully understandable only by reference to symbols which
Blake uses in his prophetic books; and sinee the meaning of most symbols tends to be
Aventures of Huckebe
he Mar-Eatr of Malgad
Vendor of Sweets
Waverley Novele
ne Werk Tom Jon
ritam Shandy Ulysses
Drama
AsYouLke Candi
Samson AgonistesLiterature Analysis POETRY NOVEL DRAMA ESSAY PROSE BIOGRAPHY AMERICAN LITERATURE “
Religious Elamercts in irnocence:
In the Songs of Innocence the symbols convey a special kind of existence or state of soul In
‘this state human beings have the same kind of security and assurance as belongs to lambs
under a wise shepherd or to children with loving parents. Nor is it untrue to say that both the
shepherd and the father of Blake's poems is God. It is He who is Himself a lamb and becomes a
litle child, who watches over sleeping children and gives his love to chimney sweepers and
litle black boys. In the fatherhood of God, Blake's characters have equal rights and privileges.
But by it he means not quite what the orthodox Christians do. Blake, despite his deeply religious
nature, did not believe that God exists apart from man, but says expressly
Man is all Imagination-God is Man and exists in us and we in Him
{imagination or the Human Eternal Body in
Every Man... Imagination is the Divine Body in Every Man.
For Blake, God and the imagination are one; that is God is the creative and spiritual power in
‘man, and apart from man the idea of God has no meaning When Blake speaks of the divine itis
with reference to this power and not to any extemal or independent godhead. So when his songs
tell of God's love and care we ought to think of them as qualities which men themselves display
and in so doing realize their full divine nature,
‘Sweet and pure though the ‘Songs of Innocence’ are, they do not possess or need the
compelling passion of the 'Songs of Experience’ In dealing with innocence Blake seems
Geliberately to have set his tone in a quiet key to show what innocence really means in his full,
scheme of spiritual development. He was careful to exclude from the first part of his book
anything which might sound a disturbing note or suggest that Innocence is anything but happy.
Frals and Merits:
Blake, when he began to write the Songs had a clear perspective of the Golden Age in his
‘mind. When we go through his works, transient glimpses of our past childhood unfold before
our eyes and we are brought to face @ new spiritual light. Objects which are familiar to us are
‘treated in a different light. In their unfamiliar transfigured aspects, simple expressions hide
Geep meanings organized as types and antitypes. In his works there are many irregularities,
such as lapse of grammar and metrical improprieties: but the sweet melody and eloquent
rhythm are remarkable. Their visible spontaneity and rare charm are comparable tothe old
English ballads. The form of these poems is a transparent medium of the spiritual thought, not
‘an opaque body of philosophical jargon.
‘Some Typical Specimens from innocence :
Closely related to the necessity of reading each song in terms ofits state is the vital
importance of point of view. Often itis unobtrusive, but many a time upon a correct
etermination of speaker and perspective depends a faithful interpretation of the poem. Blake
himself suggests this by his organization of the songs into series, Innocence introduced and
sung by the piper, Experience by the Bard, Superfically there seems to be little to distinguish one
from the other since the piper clearly exhibits imaginative vision and the Bard Present. Past, and
Future sees. Yet for each. the past, present and future are different. For the piper the past can
only be the primal unity, for the present is innocence and the immediate future is experience; for
‘the Bard the past is innocence, the present experience, the future a higher innocence. Itis
natural, then, that the piper's point of view is prevailingly happy, he is conscious of the child's
essential divinity and assured of his present protection. But into that joyous context the
elements of experience constantly insinuate themselves so that the note of sorrow is never
completely absent from the piper’ pipe
The Playboy of T
Post Ofte
The Spanish Ta
Literary Write
Albert Camus
Catles Lamb
DH. awe
Dramatist €
Edgar Allan Poe
Emily eonte
Shosmaler's Hobday
ody
Aldous Huxley
Daniel Defoe
M Forster
Eémund Burke
Emily
EmestHomingway — Essayist
Eugene 0
GM. Hopkins
Jane Austen
Jorn Dryden
Jenn Keats
John Ruskin
Jonathan Swift
Joseph Conrad
Kamala Dae
ushwant Sing
Ctver Gotssmith
PB. Sholey
RK Narayan
RejaRas
Richard Stee
Robert owning
Rudyard Kipling
‘Samuel Johnson
Shakespeare
Francs Bacon
George Bemaré
John Donne
Joho Galswody
Joh Lyly Joh Mt
John Webster
Joseph Aston
terne Mansfeld
ae
Maugham Mak Raj Anand
Osea
Philp Sisney Pow
Rabindranath Tagore
famWohan Roy
ert ridges
Rober ros
Rupert Brook
Sloghied Sas.Literature Analysis POETRY NOVEL DRAMA ESSAY PROSE BIOGRAPHY AMERICAN LITERATURE “
“The Echoing Green’ describe nature as a part ofthe whole setting
The Lite Back Eog: The Society for the Abolition ofthe Slave Trade was formed in 1787 and
‘many artists and writers were involved in this movement. Blake too opposed slavery, ut the
ple ofthis poem is more fundamentally against doctrines of racial and religious superiority.
Immediate targets may have been Watts's lyrics Praise for Birth and Education ina Christian
Land and Praise forthe Gospel, in both of which alittle English boy thanks God for letting him
bbeborn a Christian and pties the heathen, Blake's, humanity and philanthropism are reflected
in'The Little Black Boy! Reminiscences of Watts are again brought inthe ines;"And we are
put... grove" (Stanza 4, ines 19 to 16). Watts's Grace Shining and Nature Fainting’ (Horae Lyricae,
1709) gives us the following lines ofthe same idea: 'Nor is my soul refined enough / To bear the
beaming of his love, / And feel his warmer smiles. / When shall lest this érooping head /Ilove,
Tove the sun, and yet I want the shade!” In his poem (Stanza 4, Lines 15 to 16) Blake compares
the human body to a cloud and this comparison can be traced to Dante's Purgatory’ or (Ch. XX
\VIILL.90). Again in the last stanza the little black boy says "I shade him from the heat...ove me
‘The two boys will be free of their bodies yet one is still darker, one whiter and needing
assistance. Why? The paradox is adumbrated by Job: though after my skin worms destroy this
body, yet in my flesh shall I see God”
The Chinney Sweeper: This poem can be read in two contrary ways, One ways to see it as an
indictment ofa society which enslaves children both physically and spiritually, promising
heaven hereafter in exchange for obedient suffering here; its conclusion in favour of ‘éuty' is
bitterly ionic as in ‘Answer to the Parson. Blake writes:
‘Why of the sheep do you not learn peace
Because I don't want you to shear my fleece.
The other way (the opposite) in which we can read this poem is as a celebration of the boy's,
imagination. Read in this way, the concluding line of the poem is positive; the happiness and
‘warmth are not delusive but real, and duty’ means seeing and feeling the delightful reality of
spiritual lif. This is further clarified and emphasized in Blake's letter to Hayley in which he
says now I have lamented over the dead horse let me laugh and be merry... for as Man liveth not
by bread alone I shall live altho 'I should want bread -nothing is necessary to me but to do my
Duty and to rejoice in the exceeding joy that is always poured on my Spirit.
Alexander Gilchrist says: For a nobler depth of religious beauty, with accordant grandeur of
sentiment an¢ language, know no parallel or hint elsewhere of such a poem as The Little Black
Boy’. We may read these poems again and again and they continue fresh as at first. There is
something unsating in them, a perfume as of growing violet, which renews itself as fast as itis,
inhaled. ‘The Chimney Sweeper’ still calls for special notice. This and ‘Holy Thursday’ are
remarkable as an anticipation of the daring choice of a homely subject, ofthe yet more daringly
familiar manner, may, of the very metre and trick of style adopted by Wordsworth in a portion of
those memorable ‘experiments in poetry’ - the Lyrical Ballads..The little sweep's dream has the
spiritual touch peculiar to Blake's hand:
Other Foams:
Except in some of the 'wren-like warblings’ of Innocence almost all the greatest works are
harmonies, a theme with a deeper and sometimes several deeper meanings reverberating below,
or perhaps one should say within. "The Blossom’ for instance is a pretty litle song of the garden
on the surface, but itis also (fairly obviously) a lullaby or cradle song. Closely examined it turns
tobe a unique and exquisite love-song, conveyed in symbols and closely associated with the
exquisite inner theme of ‘Infant Joy’. Deepest of all, it reveals itself in conjunction with the
illustration as an essay on bodily love its beauty and its course in human life, not omitting also
its expression in Art. All his is condensed into forty-four words, including the ttle twenty-
re Virgina Woot
Prose & Essay
1 Pigrin’s Progress The Post Of
ne Spectator Um Burial Utop
Also Searched for
KABULINALA,
‘Kabutiwala | Rabind
Tagore | Full Story i
English
crraNuaus
Where The Mind is
Without Fear: Sumn
Analysis,
Nove
‘Sarasa: Character,
‘Analysis in The Nov
Talkative Man
corrawsaut
Gitanjali Poem no. 4
‘Summary and Analy
essay
Periodical Essay: 01
Growth & Definition
‘18th Century
EMILY DICKINSON
Because | Could No
For Death: Summan
Analysis
Nove.Literature Analysis POETRY NOVEL DRAMA ESSAY PROSE BIOGRAPHY AMERICAN LITERATURE “
nine ues, UF a CINALINE aUSeHICE OF LEUCELCY, UF caine ie Joyo OnAyMAEL, AHN OF
childlike indifference to being understood. Only in a few of those faultless fragments of childish
rhyme which float without name or form upon the memories of men shall we find such pure
clear cadence of verse, such rapid ring and flow of lyrical laughter, such sweet and direct choice
of the just word and figure, such an impeccable simplicity: nowhere but here such a tender
‘wisdom of holiness, such a light and perfume of innocence. Nothing like this was ever written,
on that text of the lion and the lamb; no such heaven of sinless animal life was ever conceived
so intensely and sweetly: "And there the lion's... weep’ (last two stanzas of the poem ‘Night’
Lines 33 to 48),
‘The leap and fall ofthe verse is so perfect as to make ita fit garment and covering for the
profound tenderness of faith and soft strength of innocent impulses embodied init, but the
‘whole of the hymn of 'Night’is beautiful, being perhaps one of the two poems of lotiest
loveliness among all the songs of innocence.
Conclasion:
Blake's poems in Songs of Innocence and Experience allude to the Bible ina large scale. He
can also be noted as indebted to Watts in many aspects of his poems. For instance ‘A Cradle
Song is in part a reaction to Wat's metrically similar Cradle Hymn! where the mother
congratulates her infant on being materially beter off than the infant Jesus : How much better
‘thou'rt attended / Than the Son of God could be...Here's no ox anear thy bed’, and so on. Blake's
mother sings of spiritual rather than material grace, and perceives the closeness of infant and
Creator rather than the distinction, Blake's "A Dream and Watts's song The Aat or Emmet are
metrically similar. As for Blake's indebtedness to the Bible we can easily quote many examples,
‘The life's river'of ‘Night’ refers to the sentence of Revelation running: And he showed me a pure
river of water of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb. Again,
in ‘Infant Joy’ the repetition of ! am (Lines 2 to $0 in connection with the query "what shall call,
‘thee? Suggests Moses first encounter with the God who identifies Himself as. 1 AM" By
implication the infantis divine and divinity is joy’ In On Another's Sorrow’ the 22nd line in the
sixth stanza refers to the words of Revelation and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.
5: Songs of Innocence
<< f suo w 7a
Novel
> Posty
> Drama
> American Literature
> Shor Story
» Biography
> Prose
> Vetorian Era
» Old Englsh Period
> Mile Engtsh Period
> Romani
> Essay
> Anglo-Saxon
> Medemism
> Composition
> Eleabethan Era
> Renalesance
> Loan-wora
> Age of Johnson
> Dryden Age
> Age of Miton
> Grammar
About Me
Jackley Ash
View ny compel aoe