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The Art and Poetry of William Blake

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'The Lamb' from Songs of Innocence is typical of one of the plates Blake produced. ... Neither the speaker from innocence nor the one from experience has the 'truth' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Art and Poetry of William Blake


1
The Art and Poetry of William Blake
2
The Lamb p. 870
3
The Lamb
  • The Lamb from Songs of Innocence is typical of
    one of the plates Blake produced. Notice the
    embedding of the words within the branches and
    vines (which often seem to be dying or
    oppressive, pressing on the words themselves as
    in this poem).

4
The Tyger p. 874
5
  • Most of the plates in Songs of Innocence are
    meant to be balanced or read against the
    contrasting poem in Songs of Experience (one of
    the central concepts in Blake is the idea of the
    contraries, innocence and experience being two
    contrary states of being, two partial views of
    the world. He believed that contraries were
    necessary for any sort of progress but that both
    were flawed, only partial ways of seeing.) In
    this case The Tyger is the contrary to The
    Lamb. Note how

6
  • the poem asks basically the same questionwho
    made you? Its an easy question with a creature
    such as The Lamb, associated with goodness and
    helplessness, but a much more difficult question
    for a creature such as The Tyger, known as a
    dangerous predator. In this case, though, the
    tiger isnt portrayed as the words of the poem
    might lead us to expect. This tiger isnt
    crouching, ready to attack it appears to be
    almost smiling, a larger version of a benevolent
    house cat. Perhaps the central line of this poem
    is Did He who made the Lamb make thee? In
    other words, did the same God who could create
    something good such as a lamb also create
    something dangerous and bad like a tiger? But
    from whose perception is the tiger bad? From the
    fallen view of experience, only able to see the
    part and not the whole? In Blake, only God is
    able to see the whole and is not limited by one
    view or the other.

7
Chimney SweeperInnocence, p. 871
8
  • In this version of The Chimney Sweeper from
    Innocence, the boy himself (the small chimney
    sweeper) is comforted by his belief system. Tho
    the morning was cold, Tom was happy and warm.
    But we, the readers, can only read from
    experience. We can only read the final line
    ironically the view from innocence is no longer
    available to us once we have fallen from it.

9
Chimney SweeperExperience, p. 874
10
  • In this version of The Chimney Sweeper from
    Songs of Experience, note how the chimney sweeper
    has been objectified, turned into a little black
    thing among the snow. Note also the inversion
    of the stereotypical way of using black and
    white. Here the little black thing is innocent
    and good, while the snow, which is white, is cold
    and cruel. The speakers voice here is that of
    the chimney sweeper who has fallen from innocence
    into experience and sees his own misery the kind
    of comfort still available to the chimney sweeper
    in Songs of Innocence is not possible for this
    speaker. Neither the speaker from innocence nor
    the one from experience has the truthboth are
    only partial versions of the truth. By balancing
    us between the two, making us look at the
    contrast, Blake tries to let us see from both
    perspectives at once.

11
Little Black Boy p. 870
12
  • This is an excellent example of how the engraved
    images subtly change the meaning of the poem.
    This poem appeared on two plates in Songs of
    Innocence. The speaker is a little black boy
    born in Africa (the southern wild) explaining
    to himself, and recalling his mothers
    explanation, of his lot in life as a slave. Just
    as the two poems The Lamb and The Tyger
    together ask the question, could the same good
    loving God who would create a lamb also create a
    tiger (with the answer being, of course, yes),
    this poem also deals with the Problem of Evil.
    The boy speaks from innocence and is comforted by
    his answer to his question, that there is a
    reason God gave the black boy a harder lot in
    life, that he has a mission to shade the English
    boy from the harsh rays

13
  • of the sun. We, however, read from experience.
    We read how the little black boy has internalized
    conventional messages about black and white (in
    the second line, for instance, the little black
    boy says my soul is white, indicating that he
    has learned societys message that white means
    good and innocence). Note how the illustration
    from the first plate shows the African mother
    explaining to her son, presumably already a
    slave. The illustration from the second plate
    shows the little black boys idea of heaven, in
    which he and the English boy will be free of the
    shade or shadow of color and will both equally
    enjoy Gods presence. In the illustration,
    though, in contrast to the boys words, the
    little white boy seems to have all of Gods
    attention, while the little black boy is once
    again off to the side looking on, in a secondary
    or serving position. The words of the poem, too,
    must be read by us (since we must read through
    experience, the only lens available to us)
    ironically. The last two lines of

14
  • boy are free of the shade of color) the little
    black boy will the poem say that then (in heaven,
    when he and the English stand and stroke his
    silver hair / And be like him and he will then
    love me. Does he mean God, or the little
    English boy, or both? And dont these lines
    present a picture of Gods love as conditional
    (he will love me when Im like him, I.e. white)
    rather than unconditional? And what of the fact
    that the illustration seems to contrast with the
    words of the poem (the two boys seem to have
    different color even in Heaven, and only the
    white boy seems close enough to be able to stroke
    Gods hair)?
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