After learning the two poems of 'The Rose of Sik' and 'Eagle' in a plurality of semantic classrooms of 'Sick Rose' and 'Eagle' and discussions between the groups, it is said that these verses have one meaning I do not think so. I also noticed that poetry is always interpreted differently based on your perspective and personal knowledge and experience. Poetry is also an open interpretation. Thick rose is a very decent example, poetry can be explained in various ways.
William S. Black's "Sick Rose" is a very embarrassing poem and has many explanations, but Blake uses many images and effective metaphor. My first impression of this poem is that it is very negative, including elements that impair revenge and even murder. I want a poem about two lovers, one of which lies to their partner, and the other wants revenge. This poem is very contradictory, it is shown in the first line 'O Rose, you are sick. Roses symbolize beauty, romance, and love, which are very feminine images, but because they are said to be sick, I feel something is wrong soon.
Tiger! Tiger! Do immoral hands and eyes brightly burning in the forest of the night dare to build your terrible symmetry? RICK ROSE O Rose, you are sick! An invisible worm flew at night, and in a storm of howling, you found your bed of bright red joy, and his dark secret love is the destruction of your life. The chimney sweeping person was a bit black in the snow, crying "crying" "crying". "Sadly!" Where is your father and mother? say? "" They all went to church to pray. "I am satisfied with the wasteland and are laughing in the snow in winter so they tell me to sing a sad note with my clothes on for me." Hurt me, we Praise God and his pastor and king which make up painful heaven. "
Among 'sick roses', why is the worm the love is rape, can not you see? Not only is it hiding in roses, it is also a supernatural resident in the night and storm. Perhaps the worm is an invisible time, a familiar destroyer - the beauty of roses, then the beauty of man? These are normal guesses. For abnormal speculation, E. Please refer to D. Hirsch, Jr. "Rose diseases such as syphilis are not purely open things but rather the essential result of enjoying love secretly and illegally." In Hirsch's opinion, this poem is a social criticism . Black is enjoying this type of oppression, hypocrisy and false corruption of a woman who accepted it. Still, like all the best symbols, Black roses and worms endlessly give hints, and the description does not cover them all. We are paying attention to "The Sick Rose" being included correctly in The Faber Book of Seduction (Lonely, 1988).