Songs of Innocence and of Experience
English

About The Book

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.
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