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The
Little Black Boy,
by William Blake
Blake,
William. Songs
of Innocence and of Experience, copy AA, 1826. The William
Blake Archive. Ed. Morris Eaves, Robert N. Essick, and Josheph
Viscomi. 13 November 2006 <http://www.blakearchive.org>
My mother bore me in the
southern wild,
And I am black, but oh my soul is white!
White as an angel is the English child,
But I am black, as if bereaved of light.
My mother taught me
underneath a tree,
And, sitting down before the heat of day,
She took me on her lap and kissed me,
And, pointed to the east, began to say:
"Look on the rising sun:
there God does live,
And gives His light, and gives His heat away,
And flowers and trees and beasts and men receive
Comfort in morning, joy in the noonday.
"And we are put on earth
a little space,
That we may learn to bear the beams of love
And these black bodies and this sunburnt face
Is but a cloud, and like a shady grove.
"For when our souls have
learn'd the heat to bear,
The cloud will vanish, we shall hear His voice,
Saying, 'Come out from the grove, my love and care
And round my golden tent like lambs rejoice',"
Thus did my mother say, and
kissed me;
And thus I say to little English boy.
When I from black and he from white cloud free,
And round the tent of God like lambs we joy
I'll shade him from the heat
till he can bear
To lean in joy upon our Father's knee;
And then I'll stand and stroke his silver hair,
And be like him, and he will then love me.
- ANALYSIS
- The
intention of this essay is mainly focused
to highlight and consider the main issues dealt in the poem from the religion point of view:
-
- -
Opposition between the ideas of black and white, devil and good.
- -
The idea of
equality upon
the God’s
eyes.
- -
The idea of heat
as God and the bodies
as clouds obstructing the light of God.
- -
The difficulty of bearing the light of god’s countenance (Genesis).[i]
-
- The
Little Black boy, from Songs of
Innocence (1789) and
from Songs of Innocence and of
Experience (1794), was composed
by William Blake and written in seven heroic
quatrains, seven stanzas of pentameter lines rhyming abab.
-
- The
argument takes the form of a
biographical narration of a black boy and how he got to understand his mother’s view of overcoming the human inequality
condition through religion’s relieve. He was born in “the
southern wild” (line 01), although he is a black child his soul
is as white as an English child. His mother introduces him into the
meaning of God’s words teaching him that every single living
creature, despite his or her race or its condition, are equal to
God’s eyes. His mother compares him to a cloud and after “our souls have learn’d the heat to bear, the cloud will vanish”
every creature will live under God’s tent
as equal. The little black boy then learns the lesson and
addresses the white English child saying that he will “shade him from the heat” until the English boy learns to bear the
love of God and love him “upon
our Father’s knee”.
-
- The speaker “I” in the poem is
already identified at the very beginning of the poem, since the tittle
is The Little Black Boy and
he already introduces himself as black in the first stanza “And I am black…” (line 02).
-
- Regarding the title “The
Little Black Boy”, William Blake introduces the main theme of
the poem: that story of the black boy. As we are going to see, the
word “black” is going to
be repeated throughout the whole poem (lines 2-4-15-24) and each time
it appears, it is contrasted or compared with another idea: “And
I am black, but O! my soul is white”
/ “But I am black as if bereav'd of light” /
“And these black bodies and this sun-burnt face”
/ “When I from black and he from white cloud
free”. All these repetitions lead us to understand the
importance of this word. Black is
understood as a word with no negative connotations by the author,
but as to highlight the fact that white and black are the superficial
colours of human’s body and that is not a feature that will endure,
what is important here is the soul which will be equal under God’s
eyes. Blake’s intention is to convey to the readers his moralistic
attitude towards racism, and in order to do this he uses Christian
religious reasoning. The poem was written within the context of
slavery tradition and William Blake was a very deep religious man,
this poem shows his abolitionist attitude towards slavery and the
importance of religion, the principle that gathers everything
together, to solve the problems of the context of slavery.
-
- The formal structure would divide
the poem into seven heroic quatrains. However, here we are going to follow a thematic
structure that would
be divided into 3 parts:
- -
first part: lines 1 to 8, the black boy introduces
himself
- -
second part: lines 9 to 20, the speech of the black
boy’s mother
- -
and the last part: lines 21 to 28, when the black boy
addresses the English boy.
-
- In the first part of the poem, the black boy
addresses the readers saying that he was born in the “southern wild”, wild as opposed to civilized, wild representing the blacks and civilized
representing the whites. It could also be interpreted as nature vs.
civilization. The speaker
of the poem does not
understand why his skin is black and yet his soul is white, from
the very beginning we can notice a contrast between, black and white,
and even evil and good. He is "black as if bereav'd of light".
He views his race as lacking something, which white, English children
are receiving and making them angelic.[ii]
Then he introduces his mother who is going to teach him a
moral lesson. It is important to mention that the action of teaching
happens “underneath a tree”
(line 05), Blake’s “tree”
could be interpreted in many different ways, in a objective
description “A
tree is a large, perennial, woody plant… having
secondary branches supported on a single main stem or trunk
with clear apical dominance”.[iii]
The idea that a tree has many branches supported on a single main stem
reminds us in the poem of the Christian believe
that every single creature is created and
supported by one god. Tree could also connote wisdom as the black boy acknowledges the Christian message “underneath a tree” (line 05),
furthermore his mother could represent that wisdom and knowledge. And it is also worth to mention that tree may connote the
original sin that Adam and Eve committed in paradise, a sin that gave
place to the present situation of social injustice and racism.
-
- Through the second part we
witness the child's mother accommodating
the boy's understanding of his situation and yet correct it. His
mother tells him that he is not lacking light, but that their black
skin is protection for their souls. The sun is the source of God's
light and heat, or love., which everyone needs, "flowers and
trees and beasts and men receive". Some people need to learn to
"bear the beams of love" and the dark skin is like a cloud.
But white kids have a cloud too, "and he from white cloud". She
states that his body is “but a cloud” and his true worth is
found in his soul. Here we should point out
the important rule played by religion. Blake's
poems are full of references to nature, but these are not made from
direct observation as a naturalist or a poet like Wordsworth makes
them: rather nature is understood as in a book for children or in the
Bible: we find exotic, innocent, woolly lambs, trees, etc. All
of the poems draw on the Bible for their images.[iv]
“Rising sun” (line 09), “light” (line 10), “beams of love”
(line 14), and the most representative figure, “heat”, seem all to
refer to God.
-
- “Heat”(lines 06,10,17, 25) is the most repeated image throughout
the poem, it is almost present in every stanza and every time it is
mentioned it is a crucial message related to God: “before
the heat of the day” (line 06), there is where God
resides; “And gives his light,
and gives his heat away” (line 10), heat is the power of
God and here could imply that God has the power to give life and
death; “For when our souls
have learn’d the heat to bear” (line 17), when human
get to understand and endure that “heat”, God will open his arms
to accept human; “I’ll shade
him from the heat till he can bear to lean in joy upon our
Father’s knee” (line 25), here the black boy finally
understands the meaning of God, and in contrast to this, as it will
show the last two stanzas, the English child is ignorant about this
knowledge.
-
- The
rewarding consequences after learning to “bear
the heat” is to finally arrive at the God’s golden tent and
rejoice like lambs: “And round my golden
tent like lambs rejoice.” (lines 20, 24). The repetition of these sentence draws our attention
to one of the most important symbols used by the author: the lamb. Lamb
is a symbol of suffering innocence and Jesus Christ, and here the lambs are those who have
learned to bear the heat of God. Thus, the lamb is a strong religious
symbol and William Blake makes use of this symbol in many of his poems
about innocence.
-
- Another
important image is that of the bodies compared to a cloud “And these black
bodies and this sun-burnt face/Is but a cloud, and like a shady grove.”
Cloud implies the material, the skin covering the soul. So that when
the soul gets rid of its body, then “The
cloud will vanish; we shall hear His voice”. In this sense, we
could identify these images as ‘earthy
life’ and ‘life after death’ and the moralistic lesson would
finally underline the fact that first we should have “learn’d
the heat to bear” in order to “hear
his voice.”
-
- And
finally the last part, the black boy learns the lesson taught by his mother and
then addresses the English child in order to convey his knowledge. The
black boy accepts
the prejudices they experience and do not try to obtain equality, but
just believe that God loves them and that heaven will be a better
place.
-
- Blake believed that religion teaches
equality for all men, and this is reflected in this poem.
All the key elements, in fact, draw our attention to the contradiction
between Christian religion and slavery. On the one hand, what western
religion teaches is equality between human beings, and on the other
hand, how do all these white people, who suppose to follow this
religion, still tolerate slavery and social stratification. Blake
questions conventions of the time with basic Christian morality.
-
- INNOCENCE
- The black boy represents
innocence:
Blake first creates a world of innocence where the
inhabitants are child-like and are completely accepting of knowledge
without any concern for truth or meaning. In Songs of Innocence,
the dominant symbol is the child. The poems are narrated from the
point of view of a child and represent the youth of the human
imagination. At this point in its life, the imagination is not fully
formed and does not yet contain its own distinctive character. The
child is dependent on the information he receives from adults and does
not question their faulty reasoning. This relationship is intended as
a commentary on the Christian belief of dependence on God as akin to
the child's dependence on its father. The innocent believes that the
world is inherently good and that individuality is not important. The
innocent's world view is one of "Mercy, Pity, Peace, and
Love" where God the creator bestows meaning upon nature. However,
Blake does not believe that an external source can endow nature with
meaning. Blake believes that divinity resides within the human breast
and so it is the human imagination that gives meaning to the world. He
does not believe that the innocent can be truly happy because the
innocent does not know the wonders of the human imagination, and so
does not truly know nature, not does the innocent have any sense of
individuality. The innocent is unknowingly limiting himself because
his version of the world is based upon what he has been taught and not
a creation of his own imagination.[v]
-
- ILLUSTRATION
- As
Blake’s poems cannot be conceived separate from the illustrations,
to end up this essay I would like to consider some key issues
mentioned before that appear in the drawings.
- First, the
tree is represented both in the two drawings, they both are very big
and ancient trees. The tree in the illustration showing the black boy
and his mother is a tree full of leafs contrasting with that of a
God’s tree characterized by a lack of leafs. Those trees may imply
the life and the after life.
- Second, the
heat is also represented in both images: in the first one is a rising
sun and in the second one it is a full formed sun that curiously
surrounds God’s head. This corroborates the idea that heat is God or
constituting a part of or a power of God. Heat is also represented
with warm colours as red in the first one and yellow, the colour of
gold, in the second drawing.
[i]
(Jacob
H. Adler Symbol and
Meaning in "The Little Black Boy" Modern
Language Notes, Vol. 72, No. 6 (Jun., 1957), pp. 412-415
doi:10.2307/3043366)
[v]
The
"Mind-Forg'd Manacles" of Blake's Poetry By:
Elizabeth Whitney. February 7,
2000. November 23, 2006.
http://www.uh.edu/engines/romanticism/blakeessay2.html
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Internet
sources
Andrew
Moore,
©Poems
by William Blake study guide.
March
1999.
November 19, 2006. <http://www.universalteacher.org.uk/poetry/blake.htm>
Jacob
H. Adler,
Symbol and Meaning in "The Little Black Boy"
Modern Language Notes, Vol. 72, No. 6 (Jun., 1957), pp.
412-415 doi:10.2307/3043366
Johanna
Lamenzo.
Romanticism
Home Page.
Website date?. 20 november, 2006. <http://www.assumption.edu/users/ady/HHRomanticism/Rshpg/jlamenzo/interpret.html>
From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 15 November 2006 <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree>)
Andrew
Moore,
©Poems
by William Blake study guide. March 1999. November 19, 2006. <http://www.universalteacher.org.uk/poetry/blake.htm>
The
"Mind-Forg'd Manacles" of Blake's Poetry By:
Elizabeth Whitney. February 7,
2000. November 23, 2006.
<http://www.uh.edu/engines/romanticism/blakeessay2.html>
Blake,
William. Songs
of Innocence and of Experience,
copy AA, 1826. The William Blake Archive. Ed.
Morris Eaves, Robert N. Essick, and Joseph Viscomi. 13 November
1997. 14 November 2006 <http://www.blakearchive.org/>
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