William Blake 1757-1827 (Jane Austen 1775-1817)

Life

No formal education

Trained in art, apprenticed to an engraver

Married, wife illiterate

Moved to coast from London under patronage of wealthy poet

Key episode: drunken soldier enters his garden, approaches wife

Blake drives him off, tried for sedition for shouting anti-patriotic words at the soldier. Acquitted but felt attacked by the political and social system

Back to London- poverty

Work

Artist/poet – total creative vision – poems on copper engravings

Most famous collections of poems:

Songs of Innocence and Experience: lamb symbolizes the soul uncorrupted by

experience; the tiger symbolizes the soul exposed to evil

The Marriage of Heaven and Hell: warring elements

Jerusalem- vision of reunion of universal man with Jerusalem

Style

Expresses the profoundest ideas about the human condition in the simplest of

language

Spiritual intensity

Imagination, spontaneity, feeling, visionary

Uncompromising rebel in poetry and life

Philosophy

· The need to recover “the universal man.”

· The fall is not from God, but from God as man – from oneself – a sort of psychic disintegration alienation from oneself, one’s world, one’s fellow human beings, hope of recovery lies in the process of reintegration

Reflection

Blake was an iconoclastic poet who saw the world from a deeply personal religious perspective. The two books of poems, The Songs of Innocence and Experience, represent the world in terms of the “two contrary states of the human soul” (37). What are the good and evil aspects of life that Blake portrays in these poems? In what ways can he be perceived as a very modern poet in his themes and style.