Exhibiting Transition Through Poetry
Keywords:
Introduction, Comparison of Songs Based on Discourse, Detailed study of Songs of Innocence, Detailed Study of Songs of Experience, Summing, BibliographySynopsis
Blake's songs of Innocence and Experience make it clear that the innocent in the world of youth are prone to man in a world of corruption and oppression; while poems such as "The Lamb" create a gentle beauty, poems like "The Tiger" show off their opposing, dark forces. In the end the perfect combination looks for money and the barriers to good ideas on the field. Some poems fall in pairs, so that the same situation or difficulty is seen with a pure eye first after what has happened. Blake doesn't get it completely with each idea; the sheer number of poems is astonishing - this, in the voice of a speaker other than the poet himself. Blake stands without purity and enjoys, in a remote place where he hopes a better way to catch and correct each other's mistakes. In particular, it is embroiled in a contest of dictatorship, morality, sexual oppression, and organized religion; his amazing understanding is in the process of these different ways of holding paintings together for the most sacred plaque to the people.