Black voice for voice William Black has a vision. This is a way of thinking of changing the way to write poetry forever from here. The connection between the black's point of view and the character represents a change in the way the reader decides who the victim is and who it is not. In "Chimney sweepers" in Black's "Song of Purity and Experience", the two sides of heaven and hell may be the same as good and evil in two different style poetry.
When I first read William Black in a third year grader 's romantic poetry class, it quickly caused a shock wave. I read the beat and I know that they are big fans of Break, but none of my work has been read. Black is a free voice. Voices destroying hypocrisy, injustice, sexual oppression. I have never heard of that growth. Generally speaking, poetry, literature, art has not been discussed in the growth of my family. Writers and artists are "freaks" and "freaks". They are a studio type of theater, people who walk hippie, around the South Street of Philadelphia. Any expression of a desire to pursue an artistic career will encounter such a question: "How are you going to earn money?"
William Blake is one of the great British poets. His diversity and insight into human nature is truly amazing, he can write the innocence brought by the voice of a young child, and the voice of an adult. Black wrote about dreams and sunny days, angels, jumping of children, crying, laughing, but for black these are innocent songs. Children do not have enough experience to "know" that life is bad, dull, cruel, and cruel. After experiencing many experiences of life, he probably became a test of a song of lively experience. Black can make happier poetry, laughter, sun, etc and change it to a darker color just by changing it slightly.
In attacking "ignorant employment" of "camp, court, and university" Black repeated the widely-known opinion divergence from the character established in British society. Blacks argue that "it only applies to our own imagination", which places a special burden on the readers of his poetry. As he clearly pointed out, Black asked his own readers to use creative imagination. "Booking First" contains the poem "Bud's Song of Prophecy". The song of Bud represents the fall of mankind from the horizon. We see that mankind falls in the form of destruction of Albion, as a representative of all, and falls from a position as a prophet from his country in the depravity of Paramand. What intertwines with this story is Bard's speech to the reader, a challenge to the reader's senses, a description of British contemporary events and places, and a reference to William Black's life.