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Blake's Portrayal of Creation in Songs of Innocence and Experience

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In Jerusalem, Blake famously asserted that 'I will not reason and compare: my business is to create'. This quote highlights the fact that Blake himself was participating in an inventive process. Northrop Frye commented that 'man in his creative acts and perceptions is God, and God is man? ' man's creativity is, for Blake, the manifestation of the divine. The Songs of Innocence and Experience deal with life and the move, in particular, from youth to age. Creation is an extremely important aspect of life [being its beginning], whether the subject is creating or being created. As religion plays an enormous part in all of Blake's poetry, we can expect creation to have some biblical resonance as well. Songs of Innocence and Songs of …show more content…

with ?chains? and ?anvils?. In The Lamb, even a child can answer the question of creation, but here there are many more questions, all remaining unanswered. While the lamb is easily reconciled with Christian values, even insofar as Christ, children and lambs are interchangeable, the writer here is led to question God?s part in the tiger?s creation: ?What immortal hand or eyes Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?? This leads us to consider whether the tiger is, in fact, a metaphor for the creative energies of man. David Edwards suggests that Blake?s ?emphasis was on the exuberant creativity of God, calling for a human response in the same style? ? is The Tiger, in fact, a celebration of this industrial human response? Although terrible, the tiger is portrayed as mathematically beautiful, with its forged structure ?burning bright? through ?the forests of the night?. But Blake places much emphasis on the word ?dare?, almost as if he is questioning man?s right to play God with his great contrived machines. Would God indeed ?smile his work to see?, now that his arrogant human creation attempts to raise himself to divine heights? Will the great chimneys of industry eventually tumble down like the Babel Tower of Genesis? Perhaps, conversely, Blake was commenting on God rather than man. The geometrical nature of the creator in The Tiger recalls a character in Blake?s mythological

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