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William BlakeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Only Plates 2-3, “The Argument,” and Plates 25-27, “A Song of Liberty,” are poetry. The remainder of the work is in prose. “The Argument” is a free-verse poem. It is divided into six stanzas of uneven length. The first stanza consists of two unrhymed lines. These lines are repeated as a refrain as the last two lines of the poem. The four unrhymed stanzas in between are of six lines, five lines, three lines, and four lines. The imagery shows how the “just man” (Plate 1) brings life, where before there was only death. The “vale of death” (Plate 1) and its “thorns” (Plate 1) and “barren heath” (Plate 1) give way to images of nature’s beauty and abundance—roses and honey bees, river, and spring. This new situation is disturbed when the “villain” (Plate 1) and “sneaking serpent” (Plate 1) enter the picture, driving the just man back into the wilderness.
“A Song of Liberty” is in a different form: a list of numbered verses. The lines are much longer, resembling biblical lines and verses. This is the same line length that Blake used in many of his Prophetic Books.
By William Blake
A Poison Tree
A Poison Tree
William Blake
Auguries of Innocence
Auguries of Innocence
William Blake
London
London
William Blake
Night
Night
William Blake
Songs of Innocence and of Experience
Songs of Innocence and of Experience
William Blake
The Book of Thel
The Book of Thel
William Blake
The Chimney Sweeper
The Chimney Sweeper
William Blake
The Garden of Love
The Garden of Love
William Blake
The Lamb
The Lamb
William Blake
The Little Boy Found
The Little Boy Found
William Blake
The Sick Rose
The Sick Rose
William Blake
The Tyger
The Tyger
William Blake