Illustrate From Blakeâs Songs

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Order NowA major target of Blakeâs in the conquest to correct the unnatural state of society was that of religion and the Church. Blake was an unconventional Christian. Although clearly religious, as seen in poems such as âThe Lambâ and âNightâ, he abhorred the concept of organised religion and believed it to be an extremely damaging institution which was more concerned with the oppression of the lower classes and the continuance of the unequal status quo than with true religion. Blake believed the moral codes that were extolled by the Church were significantly damaging to society, making innocent concepts deviant and causing bitter unhappiness. In âThe Garden of Loveâ, Blake conveys his feelings on the repressive qualities of religion. This poem is the basis for Blakeâs theory on repressive religion, using âThe Garden of Loveâ as a basis for the damaging effects of religious âbansâ, Blake then goes onto portray how the effects change with different experiences such as love and sex. In the poem, the speaker returns to âThe Garden of Loveâ where he used to âplayâ (which seems to refer to the innocent discovery of sexuality by children) and finds that it has been transformed. Where once children used to âplay on the greenâ there are now âpriests in black gownsâ, and âgravestonesâ where there used to be âflowersâ.
The speaker has become aware of Church law and its oppressive âbansâ, Blake emphasises the influence of the religious morals by use of metrical technique. The power of âThou shalt notâ paralyses the poem, with three successive stresses halting the regularly anapaestic rhythm. In the same way that âThou shalt notâ stops the flow of the poem, the construction of the Chapel stops the innocent âplayâ of children. In the design which accompanies the poem children are seen praying over the graves of âJoys & Desiresâ, which were murdered by the Church. Blake further expands his theory on how repressive religion alienates people of his day from their natural selves in his two poems on sexual intercourse, âThe Blossomâ and âThe Sick Roseâ. âThe Blossomâ is a celebration of what Blake would call completely natural sex, being free from morals and repressive religion it is a wonderful and joyous occasion, so full of emotion that it makes the robin sob with joy. âThe Blossomâ is full of positive language, such as âhappyâ, âmerryâ and âprettyâ and contains a simple and bouncing rhythm that conveys the naturalness of the act and how positive such sex is.
âThe Sick Roseâ on the other hand portrays sexual intercourse at its most depraved and shameful. The poem is a vision of sex under the influence of repressive religious morals and restricting social conventions; it portrays sexual intercourse under the influence of repressive religious morals. The poem utilises a complicated and lumpy rhythm, with a mix of anapaestic and iambic feet and a disturbing first line which is difficult to scan, the world of âExperienceâ is clearly evoked through Blakeâs metrical technique. The poemâs imagery of an âinvisible wormâ âflying at nightâ in a âhowling stormâ is full of darkness, violence and depravity. The Rose hides (implied by âfound outâ) her sexual pleasure, her âbed of crimson joyâ, which reveals the hypocrisy of female pleasure in this depraved form of sex; the Rose has sexual desire but hides it from the âinvisible wormâ. In the final two lines Blake sums up his point of the poem, that this kind of sexual intercourse, this âdark secret loveâ, âDoes thy life destroyâ. Through his portrayal of love and sex in the Songs, Blake shows the damaging effects of religious repression. Repressive religious morals and laws have led to the body becoming detached from the soul, and sex, which the Church associates with the body, has become a seedy and deviant act.
In these poems, Blake has shown that the Church has alienated people from their natural selves. In âMy Pretty Rose Treeâ, Blake reveals his beliefs on the unnatural constraints of marriage. Blake repudiated any kind of binding contracts or morals, which might constrain the natural self from its freedom and marriage fell firmly within his sights. As far as Blake was concerned, marriage was a dead institution (as revealed by the âmarriage hearseâ of âLondonâ) and an unnatural social prison which severely damaged peoplesâ natural selves. In the poem, a âflower was offeredâ to the speaker, a metaphor for an extra-marital affair, by a woman which the speaker finds attractive (âSuch a flower as May never boreâ). However, the unnatural constraints of marriage cause the speaker to unhappily, suggested by the slowing of the rhythm with a double stress in âAnd I passed the sweet flower oâerâ, turn down the offer and return to his wife, his âPretty Rose treeâ. The artificial boundaries of marriage have led to the speaker giving up the chance of being happy with his âsweet flowerâ and to being trapped with his jealous âRose treeâ whose âthornsâ are his âonly delightâ.
Blake suggests that without the constraints of marriage that the speaker would have been free to follow his heart, rather than conforming to an artificial law and becoming unhappy. In âLondonâ, Blake further expresses his attitude towards marriage. In the poem, marriage is presented as a âhearseâ, a vessel for carrying the dead, though with their bodies (their sexual selves) being dead in a loveless and institutionalised marriage which extols the virtues of the soul over the deviant and depraved body. Blake blames the unnatural state of love in society on the Churchâs separation of body and soul. The separation has forced the soul to be encapsulated in marriage and the body to be forced to become deviant and turn to âyouthful Harlotsâ. Sexual pleasure has only two options, either a loveless marriage or buying pleasure from seedy and diseased prostitutes. Marriage, in Blakeâs eyes, has made all sexual pleasure the kind found in âThe Sick Roseâ, depraved and hidden, whereas in a world free from the unnatural constraints alienating people from themselves, people would be able to enjoy the pleasure found in âThe Blossomâ.
Blake is as clear in his views on the damaging effects of political and economic repression as he is on religious repression. A key feature of Blakeâs poems is that rather than identifying the symptoms of a problem, he attempts to find the cause (so, for example, charity is an evil in âHoly Thursdayâ from Experience, but the cause of the evil is inequality). In much of the same vein as âGarden of Loveâ, Blake outlines his view on economic and political repression in one poem and then expands them in further poems. âEarthâs Answerâ is a vital poem in understanding Blakeâs view on how repressive morals can alienate people from their natural selves. In the poem, Earth is clouded in âgrey despairâ, an abstract rather than concrete barrier, though Earth perceives her despair as a âheavy chainâ, demonstrating a common technique of Blakeâs in which he makes the abstract become concrete. This can be further seen in the âmind-forged manaclesâ of âLondonâ. Earthâs despair is caused by the God of Genesis, the âfather of menâ, whose âcruel, selfish, jealous fearâ has created unnatural laws which have bound Earth.
Blakeâs so-called Urizenic God has enslaved society (Earth) with his âEternal baneâ that has with âbondage boundâ âfree loveâ. So Blake has identified the reason for the alienation of people from themselves, the âHoly Wordâ has constrained and bound people from their natural selves since the Fall. In âLondonâ, Blake presents a world wholly under the constraints of economic and political repression. The poem exposes the bitter indignation with which Blake regards society. While walking through the streets of âLondonâ the speaker of the poem views a completely unnatural state; the people are under the influence of âmind-forged manaclesâ, much the same as Earthâs âgrey despairâ, the streets themselves have become âcharterâdâ and in a symbol of the most unnatural blending of nature and economic and political forces even the Thames is âcharterâdâ. Blake utilises an expert use of language to convey the darkness and despair with which he views âLondonâ, in the âMarks of weakness, marks of woeâ, the âmidnight streetsâ, the âblackâning Churchâ and the âblastsâ, âplaguesâ and âcurseâ. Blake creates the image of a world buckling under the weight of oppressive political and economic forces.
The oppression of the people is shown again and again in the poem, the âblackâning Churchâ is blamed for the âChimney-sweepers cryâ and for âeveryâ repressive âbanâ, the King is attacked for using the âbloodâ of âhapless Soldiersâ to support his lifestyle in his âpalaceâ and how the unnatural institution of marriage has created the âHarlotâ with her damaging âcurseâ. Therefore, in âLondonâ, Blake has presented an image of society in which repressive political and economic forces have alienated people from their natural selves, forcing them to become harlots, slave-like chimney sweeps and expendable soldiers. âThe Chimney Sweeperâ of Experience is another poem in which Blake blames political and economic forces for the unnatural alienation of the sweep from his natural self. The poemâs speaker is outraged to find an impoverished young sweep and seeks someone to blame for his condition. The poem itself is a pitiful tale of oppression, the child has been sold into slavery as a sweep by his parents who have had their guilt absolved by the âchurchâ.
This poem is a scathing attack on the organised âChurchâ and the apparatus in society which are designed to maintain the status quo of oppression, âGod and His priest and kingâ. The sweep is certain that the various institutions of society have colluded in a hypocritical lie, they âmake upâ a heaven where there is only âmiseryâ. However, the sweep himself is seen as an apparatus in his alienation from his natural self, he is seen to be âhappy and dance and singâ by his parents who see that he is happy and are therefore not guilty. As in âThe Chimney Sweeperâ of Innocence the sweep is completely ignorant of another choice, his choice to not be a sweep, it is simply accepted as his life. The social institutions complicit in his slavery have such a repressive grip on society that their thoughts are constrained in âmind-forged manaclesâ, unable to consider a radically different system. Therefore, the sweep is completely alienated from his natural self, his life is constrained and so is his mind by repressive political and economic forces.