Compare and Contrast William Blake’s Holy Thursday (I) of Innocence with Holy Thursday (II) of Experience.
The two poems: Holy Thursday I, II reflect Blake’s theory of contrariness. The tile of the poems
refers to the Thursday before Easter Sunday, observed by Christians in
commemoration of Christ's Last Supper in which the ceremony of the
washing of the feet is performed: the celebrant washes the feet of 12
people to commemorate Christ's washing of his disciples' feet. In England a custom survives of giving alms to the poor.
So the title has religious significance. Both the poems deal with the same theme; but their approach to the theme is different; the first being light and ironic and the second being more savage and direct. I first analyse Holy Thursday (I) and then Holy Thursday (II) and finally, I will compare and contrast both the poems.
“Till into the high dome of Paul's they
like Thames' waters flow.”
The poem's (Holy Thursday I) dramatic setting refers to a traditional Charity School service at St. Paul's Cathedral. The first stanza captures the movement of the children from the schools to the church, likening the lines of children to the Thames River, which flows through the heart of London: the children are carried along by the current of their innocent faith. In the second stanza, the metaphor for the children changes. First they become "flowers of London
town." This comparison emphasizes their beauty and fragility; it
undercuts the assumption that these destitute children are the city's
refuse and burden, rendering them instead as London's
fairest and finest. Thus Blake emphasizes their innocence and beauty in
Holy Thursday I. Next the children are described as resembling lambs in
their innocence and meekness, as well as in the sound of their little
voices. The image transforms the character of humming "multitudes," into
something heavenly and sublime. The lamb metaphor links the children to
Christ and reminds the reader of Jesus's special tenderness and care
for children. As the children begin to sing in the third stanza, they
are no longer just weak and mild; the strength of their combined voices
raised toward God evokes something more powerful and puts them in direct
contact with heaven. The simile
for their song is first given as "a mighty wind" and then as "harmonious
thunderings." The beadles, under whose authority the children live, are
eclipsed in their aged pallor by the internal radiance of the children.
Thus the ‘guardians’ are beneath the children. The final line advises
compassion for the poor. Blake’s basic aim in this poem is to emphasize
the heavenliness and innocent or the children. The beginning of Holy
Thursday (I) is transformed into Holy Thursday II as:
“Is that trembling cry a song?
Can it be a song of joy?
Holy
Thursday II in contrast begins with a series of questions: how holy is
the sight of children living in misery in a prosperous country? Might
the children's "cry," as they sit assembled in St. Paul's Cathedral on Holy Thursday, really be a song? "Can it be a song of joy?" In the first stanza,
we learn that whatever care these children receive is minimal and
grudgingly bestowed. The "cold and usurous hand" that feeds them is
motivated more by self-interest than by love and pity. Moreover, this
"hand" metonymically represents not just the daily guardians of the
orphans, but the city of London
as a whole: the entire city has a civic responsibility to these most
helpless members of their society, yet it delegates or denies this
obligation. Here the children must participate in a public display of
joy that poorly reflects their actual circumstances, but serves rather
to reinforce the self-righteous complacency of those who are supposed to care for
them. The song that had sounded so majestic in the Songs of Innocence
shrivels, here, to a "trembling cry." In the first poem, the parade of
children found natural symbolization in London's mighty river. Here, however, the children and the natural world
conceptually connect via a strikingly different set of images: the
failing crops and sunless fields symbolize the wasting of a nation's
resources and the public's neglect of the future. The thorns,
which line their paths, link their suffering to that of Christ. They
live in an ‘eternal winter’, where they experience neither physical
comfort nor the warmth of love.
Holy
Thursday I is meek and lenient in tone; but the poem calls upon the
reader to be more critical than the speaker is: we are asked to
contemplate the true meaning of Christian pity, and to contrast the
institutionalized charity of the schools with the love of which God--and
innocent children--are capable. Moreover, the visual picture given in
the first two stanzas contains a number of unsettling aspects: the
mention of the children's clean faces suggests that they have been
tidied up for this public occasion; that their usual state is quite
different. The public display of love and charity conceals the cruelty
to which impoverished children were often subjected. Moreover, the
orderliness of the children's march and the ominous "wands" (or rods) of
the beadles suggest rigidity, regimentation, and violent authority
rather than charity and love. Lastly, the tempestuousness of the
children's song, as the poem transitions from visual to aural imagery,
carries a suggestion of divine vengeance as in these lines:
“Then cherish pity, lest you drive
an angel from your door.”
an angel from your door.”
In the Innocence version, Blake described the public appearance of charity school children in St. Paul's Cathedral In "experienced" version, however, he critiques
rather than praises the charity of the institutions responsible for
hapless children. The speaker entertains questions about the children as
victims of cruelty and injustice, some of which the earlier poem
implied. The rhetorical technique of the poem is to pose a number of
suspicious questions that receive indirect, yet quite censoriously toned
answers as in:
“Is this a holy thing to see
In a rich and fruitful land”
The question may be asked which of the two "Holy Thursday" poems states the right attitude. According to John Beer,
a famous critic the innocent poem displays greater insight, in spite of
the greater worldly wisdom, and in spite of the superior moral
interest, shown in the experienced poem. The innocent speaker, says this
critic, sees more of the scene than the experienced one. The speaker in
the experienced poem is so anxious to assert his moral ideas that the
scene in St. Paul's becomes an excuse for a moral sermon
rather than a situation he can give attention to. And John Beer
concludes: "The innocent song ends on a positive note without preaching a
sermon, while the experienced speaker preaches a sermon that is
negative in tone, being full of moral anxiety but destructive of moral
obligation." With his "Holy Thursday" of Experience", Blake clarifies
his view of the hypocrisy of formalized religion and its claimed acts of
charity. He exposes the established church's self-congratulatory hymns
as a sham that the sound of the children is only a trembling cry.In a rich and fruitful land”
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