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Both Blake and Wordsworth particularly emphasise childhood in
their poetry. Blakes Songs of Innocence and Songs
of Experience for example especially appear to treat childhood
as a symbol of the human condition as seen from Blakes
perspective. His poem The Voice of the Ancient Bard in
Songs of Innocence, starts with the lines:
Youth of delight come hither
And see the opening morn,
Image of truth new-born.(3)
This sense of pleasure and newness is typical of the impression
Blake gives throughout Songs of Innocence. In a mixture of
words such as Little boy / Full of joy(4) - When
the green woods laugh with the voice of joy(5) and frequent
usage of rural imagery, lambs and sunshine, Blake uses childhood
and joy as a symbol of an aspect of human experience. But it is
only when the Songs of Innocence are read against the
background of Songs of Experience and other writings such
as All Religions are One, and The Marriage of Heaven
and Hell that one can begin to grasp what childhood symbolises
in Blakes writings.
In 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell we read that Those
who restrain desire, do so because theirs is weak enough to be
restrained(6) and Sooner murder an infant in its
cradle than nurse unacted desires(7). Blake is maintaining
in such lines that as humans we have no lower nature - everything
that lives is holy. For Blake Heaven was what he called
Poetic or creative genius. Hell was man's body and all the
energies of movement, emotions and delight that it generated.
Comparing the positive imagery of Innocence
with the changed tone of Experience we find
such lines as:
In every cry of every man,
In every infants cry of fear,
In every voice, in every ban,
The mind forged manacles I hear:(8)
As Blake is also writing about childhood in Experience
we cannot simply assume the difference is between childhood
and adulthood. The poem Infant Sorrow makes this plain:
My mother groaned, my father wept!
Into the dangerous world I leapt,
Helpless, naked, piping loud,
Like a fiend hid in a cloud.(9)
Who is the fiend and what the cloud though? Perhaps this is
clearer in the poem A Little Boy Lost.
The weeping child could not be heard;
The weeping parents wept in vain.
They stripped him to his little shirt,
And bound him in an iron chain.(10)
Something has been hidden, something bound, something stripped
of its possible apparel. Blake appears to be describing what he
calls the natural energy that is the opposite to
nursed unacted desires. He is delineating how
different the world appears when we are bound by religious or
social views that lead to constraint. Blake was a self-taught
youth, allowed to read and explore in his own manner, and he may
well associate his own genius with this ability to follow natural
inclination. Apart from this however, he makes it plain that
aspects of religion and social restraints lead to social and
personal sickness - Prisons are built with stones of law,
brothels with bricks of religion.(11) Blake does not appear
to mean a simplistic judgement by this. More likely it refers to
the sort of social attitudes that not so long ago led many women
to madness or suicide when they were pregnant with an illegitimate
child. Today we would think such levels of stress very strange in
an unmarried mother.
Michael Mason, in his Introduction to Blake's poems, warns the
reader that one must resist the temptation to simplify Blake's
intent. To quote Mason, Blake, who is so readily simplified
by his readers, was the great anti-simplifier, always probing for
contradiction and tension.(12) Blake may even be pointing
out a way of doing this when he wrote, I must create a
system, or be enslaved by another mans.(13) Everything
possible to be believed is an image of truth.(14) To have
ones own response to life, full of its contradictions and
conflicts, and attempt a marriage of these antipodes of human
experience, is recommended by Blake.
Wordsworth writes in quite a different way about his physical
surroundings and childhood, but nevertheless, still describes
nature and youth as representing something more than simple trees,
rivers or scarcity of years. In his poem Michael, we read:
Careless of books, yet having felt the power
Of nature, by the gentle agency
Of natural objects, led me on to feel
For passions that were not my own, and think
(At random and imperfectly indeed)
On man, the heart of man, and human life.(15)
Just as a story in a book may lead us on to form a picture, or
even an understanding that is not explicit in the words, so
Wordsworth is suggesting in the above lines that nature intimates
or leads to certain thoughts or understandings about human life.
He defines this further in Lines - Tintern Abbey:
Of the deep rivers, and the lonely streams
To me was all in all. - I cannot paint
What then I was. The sounding cataract
Haunted me like a passion: the tall rock,
The mountain, and the deep and gloomy wood
(16)
The words what then I was refer to childhood, and
the state defined as That time is past.(17) This with
the words all in all suggest the experience of nature
in childhood was complete in itself, experiences that have
meaning, but perhaps meaning which is the very think known, rather
than what may later be thought or interpreted, written about.
Bibliography
William Blake. Edited by Michael Mason. Published by
Oxford University Press, 1994, UK. ISBN: 0-19-282305-1
Wordsworth. Complete Poetical Works. Published by Oxford
University Press, 1936, UK. ISBN: 0-19-281052-9
(1)
Notes
William Blake. Edited by Michael Mason. Published by
Oxford University Press, 1994. ISBN: 0-19-282305-1
(2)
Wordsworth. Poetical Works. Published by Oxford
University Press, 1936, UK.
(3)
William Blake. Page 66.
(4)
William Blake. Spring. Page 64.
(5)
William Blake. Laughing Song. Page 65.
(6)
William Blake. Page 75.
(7)
William Blake. Page 78.
(8)
William Blake. London. Page 124.
(9)
William Blake. Page 125.
(10)
William Blake. Page 127.
(11)
William Blake. Proverbs of Hell. Page 76.
(12)
William Blake. Introduction. Page xi.
(13)
William Blake. Jerusalem.
(14)
William Blake. The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. Page 77.
(15)
Wordsworth. Michael. Page 104.
(16)
Wordsworth. Lines - Tintern Abbey. Page 164.
(17)
Wordsworth. Lines - Tintern Abbey. Page 164.

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