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FREE ESSAY ON WILLIAM BLAKE'S RELEVANCE TO THE MODERN WORLD

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William Blake and William Wordsworth
A look at how the poetry of William Wordsworth and William Blake is effective in challenging the morality of society during their time. -- 1,643 words; MLA

William Blake
This paper discusses the life of poet and artist, William Blake. -- 1,157 words; MLA

William Blake's "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell"
This paper examines William Blake's work "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell" in relationship to the Enlightenment. -- 1,020 words; MLA

"London" by William Blake
An explication of the poem, "London," by William Blake. -- 1,475 words; MLA

William Blake's Poetry
An analysis of four contrasting William Blake poems from "Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience", demonstrating both the contrary states of innocence and experience and Blake's social criticism. -- 2,870 words; MLA

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WILLIAM BLAKE'S RELEVANCE TO THE MODERN WORLD

William Blake's Relevance to the Modern World
William Blake, who lived in the latter half of the eighteenth century and the early part
of the nineteenth, was a profoundly stirring poet who was, in large part, responsible for
bringing about the Romantic movement in poetry; was able to achieve remarkable results
with the simplest means; and was one of several poets of the time who restored rich
musicality to the language (Appelbaum v). His research and introspection into the human
mind and soul has resulted in his being called the Columbus of the psyche, and because no
language existed at the time to describe what he discovered on his voyages, he created
his own mythology to describe what he found there (Damon ix). He was an accomplished
poet, painter, and engraver. 
Blake scholars disagree on whether or not Blake was a mystic. In the Norton Anthology, he
is described as an acknowledged mystic, [who] saw visions from the age of four (Mack
783). Frye, however, who seems to be one of the most influential Blake scholars,
disagrees, saying that Blake was a visionary rather than a mystic. 'Mysticism' . . .
means a certain kind of religious techniques difficult to reconcile with anyone's poetry,
says Frye (Frye 8). He next says that visionary is a word that Blake uses, and uses
constantly and cites the example of Plotinus, the mystic, who experienced a direct
apprehension of God four times in his life, and then only with great effort and
relentless discipline. He finally cites Blake's poem I rose up at the dawn of day, in
which Blake states, 
I am in God's presence night & day,
And he never turns his face away (Frye 9).
Besides all of these achievements, Blake was a social critic of his own time and
considered himself a prophet of times to come. Frye says that all his poetry was written
as though it were about to have the immediate social impact of a new play (Frye 4). His
social criticism is not only representative of his own country and era, but strikes
profound chords in our own time as well. As Appelbaum said in the introduction to his
anthology English Romantic Poetry, [Blake] was not fully rediscovered and rehabilitated
until a full century after his death (Appelbaum v). For Blake was not truly appreciated
during his life, except by small cliques of individuals, and was not well-known during
the rest of the nineteenth century (Appelbaum v). 
Blake lived during a time of intense social change. The American Revolution, the French
Revolution, and the Industrial Revolution all happened during his lifetime. These changes
gave Blake a chance to see one of the most dramatic stages in the transformation of the
Western world from a somewhat feudal, agricultural society to an industrial society where
philosophers and political thinkers such as Locke, Franklin, and Paine championed the
rights of the individual. Some of these changes had Blake's approval; others did not. 
One example of Blake's disapproval of changes that happened in his time comes in his poem
London, from his work Songs of Experience. In London, which has been described as summing
up many implications of Songs of Experience, Blake describes the woes that the Industrial
Revolution and the breaking of the common man's ties to the land have brought upon him
(Mack 785). For instance, the narrator in London describes both the Thames and the city
streets as chartered, or controlled by commercial interests; he refers to mind-forged
manacles; he relates that every man's face contains Marks of weakness, marks of woe; and
he discusses the every cry of every Man and every Infant's cry of fear. He connects
marriage and death by referring to a marriage hearse and describes it as blighted with
plague. He also talks about the hapless Soldier's sigh and the youthful Harlot's curse
and describes blackening Churches and palaces running with blood (London). 
London and many of Blake's other works dealing with a similar theme, particularly those
from the Songs of Experience, strike a particular nerve for those who are living in a
society where the cost of living compared with income is steadily increasing, where AIDS,
Ebola, and other new and frightening diseases are becoming increasingly common, and where
the public is becoming increasingly disillusioned about the reliability and
trustworthiness of politicians. These works resonate for a generation which has to deal
with exponentially increasing population problems and with rapidly increasing demands on
our immigration facilities and resources. They strike a special chord with a nation that,
due to the aforementioned problems, the rise of violent crime, and other considerations,
is rapidly desensitizing itself to the marks of weakness, marks of woe that we are
becoming accustomed to seeing on the faces of passers-by on the street. 
Blake did, however, approve of some of the measures that individuals and societies took
to gain and maintain individual freedom. As Appelbaum said, He was liberal in politics,
sensitive to the oppressive government measures of his day, [and] favorably inspired by
the American Revolutionary War and the French Revolution (Appelbaum v). According to
Keynes, Blake wrote many positive and appreciative things about the revolutionary
American political thinker Thomas Paine, for instance, such as The Bishop never saw the
Everlasting Gospel any more than Tom Paine (Damon 318). As London shows, however, Blake
did not entirely approve of the measures taken to forward the causes he longed to
advance: London refers to how the hapless Soldier's sigh/ runs in blood down Palace walls
(London 791). Among many other events which took place during the French Revolution, this
could possibly refer to the storming of the Bastille or the executions of the French
nobility. 
Blake also espoused many other notions with which we are now familiar, and occasionally
even believe to be self-evident. For instance, in Jerusalem, Blake proposes the
Brotherhood of Man as the only solution to the world's problems, both individual and
international (Damon 60). According to Blake, we are all brothers because we are all sons
of the Father, and all have Jesus (who often symbolizes Imagination, Humanity, and the
source of everything for Blake) in us (Damon 60; Damon 158-159). This is very similar to
the fundamental rights of man espoused in the Declaration of Independence, which states
that all men are created equal because they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable Rights (Declaration 10-20). Blake also believed that all life was inherently
holy; Damon says that his religion became all-inclusive when he declared that every thing
that lives is holy. This was a natural conclusion from the ancient belief that all things
were created from the divine substance (344). This becomes especially important and vital
to us in an age where terrorist attacks are becoming increasingly common (witness the
bombings at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta and the Oklahoma City building and increased
security on international airline flights), the debate over abortion has led some
anti-abortion activists to begin shooting doctors who perform abortions (such as the
shooting of Dr. David L. Gunn in 1993), and the major nations of the world have nuclear
weapons enough to kill every person on the earth multiple times. Blake's views on
religion are also particularly relevant to the modern world. As Appelbaum said of Blake,
Blake replaced the arid atheism or tepid deism of the encyclopedists and their disciples
with a glowing new personal religion (Appelbaum iii). Besides rejecting arid atheism and
tepid deism, Blake also attacked conventional religion. In The Marriage of Heaven and
Hell he wrote Prisons are built with stones of Law, Brothels with bricks of Religion and
As the caterpillar chooses the fairest leaves to lay her eggs on, so the priest lays his
curse on the fairest joys (Proverbs 19; Proverbs 20). Rather than accepting a traditional
religion from an organized church, Blake designed his own mythology (based primarily upon
the Bible and Greek mythology) to accompany his personal, revealed religion. Blake's
personal religion was an outgrowth of his search for the Everlasting Gospel, which he
believed to be the original, pre-Jesus revelation which Jesus preached. As Blake said,
all had originally one language and one religion: this was the religion of Jesus, the
everlasting Gospel. Antiquity preaches the Gospel of Jesus (Damon 344). Blake's religion
was based upon the joy of man, which he believed glorified God (Damon 344). One of
Blake's strongest objections to orthodox Christianity is that it encourages the
suppression of natural desires and discourages earthly joy; in A Vision of the Last
Judgement, Blake says that Men are admitted into Heaven not because they have curbed &
govern'd their Passions or have No Passions, but because they have Cultivated their
Understandings. The Treasures of Heaven are not Negations of Passion, but Realities of
Intellect, from which all the Passions Emanate Uncurbed in their Eternal Glory (Damon
344). Blake also believes that the religion of this world is actually the worship of the
entity that St. Paul calls the god of this world in II Corinthians 4:4: Satan. It should
be noted here that Blake does not conceive of Satan as an incarnate horned quasi-deity,
but rather as Error and the State of Death; Blake also explicitly says that Satan is not
a Human existence (Damon 355). Blake believes that orthodox Christians, in part because
of their denial of earthly joy, are actually worshiping Satan, which is to say that they
are in Error (Damon 344-345; Damon xi). Since the 1960s, more and more Westerners have
joined faith movements which promote individuals deciding on their own ethics and
beliefs, or to find their own way to salvation. Examples of these groups include some
Eastern religions, such as Buddhism, and certain liberal Christian movements, such as
Unitarian-Universalism (which can also be a non-Christian faith, depending on the
individual follower). As more people begin to question traditional, dogmatic Western
religion, Blake's vision of individual revelation and a personal mythology makes powerful
sense to many people. Blake cautions us, however, against deluding ourselves with our
personal mythologies in his poem The Little Black boy from Songs of Experience. In Black
Boy, Blake describes a young black male, who is just becoming aware of the societal
differences between himself and a white boy (English child) and uses his mother's
mythology (which he makes his own) to relegate the solution of the problems of racism to
an imagined afterlife where 
I'll shade him from the heat till he can bear
To lean in joy upon our father's knee (Mack 784).
Even more compelling to a modern audience (but definitely less important to Blake) is his
emphasis upon science as a tool of understanding. The last line of his unfinished epic
poem The Four Zoas is the dark Religions are departed & sweet Science reigns (Damon xi).
Many modern individuals would accept science while failing to attempt to create a
personal mythology, and this is not at all what Blake is looking for. 
Does Blake provide a solution to the ills of this world? Is this solution as relevant to
modern times as it was to his own? Emphatically, yes to both questions. The similarities
between our own age and Blake's are striking. Blake had the Industrial Revolution; we are
living in the age of the Information Revolution, which is, with the Internet, entering a
new phase which will enable information to be distributed on a scale never before
possible. Blake lived in a time when greedy upper-class capitalists exploited the working
class for personal profit; we are living in an age in which the nuclear family, with its
one working parent and its one parent staying at home to raise the children, is becoming
less common and feasible even as the cost of living rises. Blake lived in an age where
Deism, a faith which denied any possibility of direct experience with God, had captured
the minds of the more intelligent people of the West; we live in an age of doubt,
searching, rejection of traditional dogmatic religion, and science with no mystical
experience. Certainly Blake's vision of a personal mythology actualizing an individual,
revealed religion can offer as much to our society as it did to Blake's. However, whether
Blake's offering will save our television-oriented, fast-food, pop-culture society is
another question altogether. 


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