Blake: Songs of Innocence and of Experience Massolit Lectures Notes
- Created by: kristenr0searn
- Created on: 01-08-23 13:15
Lecture 1: context
William Blake born in 1757 and died in 1827
He is part of the 6 major romance poets along with Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley and Keats
● However Blake is marginal in respects to the mainstream of Romanticism
● He didn't know any of the other romantic poets
● His poetry was different to the other romantic poets
Blake was inspired by lots of things that happened at his time and he addressed a number of concerns that were vital when he was alive
Blake was one of the early critics of the industrial revolution and the effects of different kinds of labour on the human body
● Similar views to that of Karl marx who was also concerned about the effects of labour on the body
He's also interested in empire, revolution and resistance to the Empire
● He wrote prophecies on America and the War of Independence
● He lived through the french revolution, the Songs of Innocence was published in the year of the French Revolution
● Blake was troubled by the reactionary powers that Europe had to it (french revolution) which has a presence within his poetry
Blake is also interested in education and cultivation of the young which was prominent in the 18th century
● In some respects the songs of innocence and experience are for children. The poems are interested in the formation and development of the mind
Blake was also a painter, engraver, illuminator and illustrator
● His poems are also illustrated and they are therefore artistic works
Blake had a very distinctive vision of what Christianity should be
● Blake's family was dissenting (they weren't religious) so he wasn't part of the state religion and the Church of England
● Blake developed his own singular version of the Christian religion
● He uses the bible as crucial poetic inspiration
Critical about what he says about nature
Lecture 2: Opposites
The songs of innocence and experience show the contrasting states of the human soul
Within Blake's poetry he emphasises opposition
● Heaven and hell
● Attraction and repulsion
● Reason and energy
● Love and hate
● Opposition is true friendship
○ All of the above are quotes from William Blake- The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (1793)
Blake thinks that oppositions are important aspects of human existence and we are dependant on them for progression and for friendship
A Poison Tree, lines 1-4:
I was angry with my friend:
I told my wrath, my wrath did end.
I was angry with my foe:
I told it not, my wrath did grow.
● The poem is about the necessity of expressing emotions and acting upon the feelings and desires that one can have
● It also acknowledges that opposition and negativity can enter into friendships
The idea of opposition and contrary is a structural idea for…
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