Wednesday, October 2, 2019
William Blake and The Garden of Love Essay -- Garden of Love Essays
William Blake and The Garden of Love      à       At first glance, the poetry of William Blake may appear simplistic; he     writes most often in regular metrical rhythm, apparently sticking to the     rules, blunt observations on such mundane subjects as tigers, lambs and     roses.à   But if one were to finish with Blake and move on, left with  only     these initial impressions, it would be a great pity; true enjoyment of  this     poet can only come about through some understanding of his life,  background,     and skill in the manipulation of the tool of simple lyrical poetry, to     convey deeper meaning.     à       Amongst his admirers, Blake is considered something of a renaissance man,  a     frustrated and hugely gifted artist and writer, a social renegade, and     something of a true western mystic.à  Ã   For our purposes here, it  is     sufficient to know that throughout his adult years he struggled with  ideas     of correct government, church corruption, unfair taxation, and Christian     thought, to the point of near-lunacy.à   Blake was born in London in 1857,  and     while still in his early teens (under 14) began privately writing poetry     that is considered of high caliber.     à       Blakeà ¹s family had the wherewithal to send him to a à ³drawing schoolà ² when  he     was ten, and he there began formal training in art.à   He was greatly     influenced by the art of the Renaissance world, and later wrote about his     early total comprehension and appreciation of it.à  Ã   He continued  his formal education in art, and was apprenticed and     working successfully in that world by his twenties.     à       But at heart Blake was a lover of words, and inclined to express his     impressions of life through the pen as easily and readi...              ...who would be helpful figures normally - are blindly making  their     rounds dressed in black.à   Black is the color of death, deception,  the     villainous, of loss of hope, of the opposite of innocence.     à       It would be a mistake to read the poem as a comment on an individuals     experience with the vision of a dream.à   Blake always has many layers  in     mind: one should remember that     à       Blake's own mind was enormous, and capable of juggling various meanings     simultaneously.à   Especially where Church, Innocence, Death, and such  images     as demonic priests are involved, one can count on the hint of commentary  on     society at large.     à       "The Garden of Love"à   stands as an excellent example of Blakeà ¹s ability  to     use simple meter and language as a foundation, and then twist the  foundation     ever so subtly to induce a particular idea.                         
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