William Blake's innocent songs, "Shepherds", "Resounding Green", little black boys, "blooming" and "laughing songs". William Blake wrote many poems in his life. He has a collection of poems called innocent songs and a collection called "Song of Experience". This article focuses on five poems of 'Innocent Song': 'Shepard', 'Green of Reverberation', 'Little Black Boy', 'Flower', 'And' 'Rough Song'. "The Shepherd" is a very short two-part poem, and Black tells the shepherd to accompany him to praise him in the morning and evening.
Below is "Tiger" and "Lamb" in William Blake's innocence and experience songs. These include transcription of the text of poems and a link to the electronic version of Blackboard. Click on the link to this section to access the William Black Archives at the University of Virginia. Just back to this page using the back button on the web browser. For important details on text and images, see the following notes. Note on text: As these texts are Black 's original handwriting, we find that those punctuation marks are "inconsistent" even in most printed versions of Black' s poetry and even in standard English. However, this is not necessarily a problem
This article is intended to show the relationship between innocence and experience in William Blake's song. Whether it is an experience song or an innocent song, black is a mirror of society, the song of experience is the dark side of the mirror. Black's song shows two imaginative areas. Two aspects of the human soul, the state of innocence and experience. The observation method of these two states is different. You can see that it is included in the innocent world like Northrop Frye. The term "the end of the world" can be used to describe the work of William Black, whether it is poetry, art, narrative or not. It is very important in his own era, but I think his work resonates more strongly in today's society. The next verse comes from the innocence of the world, one of the most famous poems in black, one of the innocent bibles in the world.