International Journal on Science and Technology

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Call for Paper Volume 16 Issue 3 July-September 2025 Submit your research before last 3 days of September to publish your research paper in the issue of July-September.

Innocence and Experience in Blake’s Songs of Innocence and of Experience

Author(s) Dr. Umaji Ananda Patil
Country India
Abstract William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and of Experience (1789–1794) constitutes one of the most profound poetic investigations into the duality of human consciousness and perception in English literature. While Romantic poetry often privileges nature, imagination, and individual freedom, Blake distinguishes himself by constructing a dialectical framework that juxtaposes innocence and experience as contrary yet interdependent states of being. Far from treating them as linear stages of childhood and adulthood, Blake interprets innocence as a visionary mode of imaginative harmony, and experience as a disruptive force that exposes human suffering, social exploitation, and spiritual estrangement. His poetry operates simultaneously as mystical allegory and as radical social critique, reflecting the turbulence of late eighteenth-century Britain, marked by the rise of industrial capitalism, the exploitation of child labour, the authority of institutional religion, and the anxieties of political repression.
The Songs of Innocence embody pastoral imagery, childlike voices, and symbolic references to lambs, shepherds, and communal play. These poems seem to promise harmony between humanity, nature, and the divine, yet their simplicity is fragile, often shadowed by hints of vulnerability and mortality. By contrast, the Songs of Experience confront the disillusionment and alienation wrought by oppressive structures. Poems such as The Chimney Sweeper and Holy Thursday lay bare the complicity of church and state in perpetuating suffering, while The Tyger epitomizes the sublime mystery of creation, fusing terror and awe. The two collections, when read together, enact a dialectical tension: innocence without awareness risks sentimentality, while experience without visionary renewal collapses into despair.
Keywords Innocence; Experience; Romanticism; Dialectics; Imagination
Field Sociology > Linguistic / Literature
Published In Volume 16, Issue 3, July-September 2025
Published On 2025-08-24
DOI https://doi.org/10.71097/IJSAT.v16.i3.7887
Short DOI https://doi.org/g9x3x8

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