Blake London 63.2
Blake London 63.2
Blake London 63.2
London
William Blake
145
Peter Cash
Introduction
For this long-defunct Board, I retain a high regard; at the same time, I
have to admit that these guidelines are often vague and tend to overlap.
Don‘t you just love No 4 (that blanket willingness to recognise ‗anything‘
unusual or fresh) and No 6 ‗to have flair‘, an undefined beauty in the eye
of the beholder by which the marker can justify his praise for, well,
‗anything‘? These guidelines are not especially coherent: rather, they are
informed by a Corinthian spirit which believes that there exists among
gentlemen everywhere an understanding of good critical writing; you can
hear in the terminology (‗sensibility‘, ‗subtlety‘, ‗felicity‘, ‗flair‘) how much
they trust in that sort of shared understanding. Twenty-five years ago,
neither O-Level nor A-Level English Literature scripts were being marked
by an out-of-work Classics/Sociology graduate who once saw a
production of Romeo and Juliet. In those days, you were concerned to teach
Romeo and Juliet or ‗London‘ in such a way that your candidate‘s writing
would impress a marker who did not need any grid of acronyms (AFs,
AOs, GDs) to guide him. As for the guidelines which OCSEB produced,
they constituted in practice a smorgasbord from which the candidate
could pick up hints—e.g., ‗show some historical sense‘, ‗apt quotation …
woven effectively into the texture of [her] own prose‘—and mix them into
her exam-answer. This brings me to Rob Penman‘s satirical criticism of
Assessment for Learning:
Commentary
W. H. Stevenson reminds us that Blake‘s Songs of Innocence (1789) ‗is a kind
of chap-book of poems in the tradition of Isaac Watts‘ Divine Songs for
Children (1715)‘1 and that each song was designed to teach the children
who sang it a moral lesson. Stevenson further reminds us that, although
Blake published Songs of Innocence separately both in 1789 and in
subsequent years, he published Songs of Experience, completed in 1793,
never separately, but always and only in conjunction with his earlier
collection. The reason is that Blake became primarily concerned to
dramatise the ironic contrast between ‗the Two Contrary States of the
Human Soul‘ (as he describes them in the sub -title of the original edition).
On the one hand, there is innocence, an ideal state in which children from
the countryside south of the River Thames remain capable of good and
great things and to which the adjective ‗green‘ is systematically applied;
strangely, there is no single song in Songs of Innocence which describes this
ideal place. On the other hand, there is experience, as is to be found in
the real world north of the River Thames in which children have been
corrupted and indoctrinated by adults and for which the adjective ‗dark‘
does frequent service. The song which describes this real place is
‗London‘.
Songs of Experience—in which ‗London‘ was originally the eighth of twenty -
one poems—are designed ‗to set the adult experience of real life against
the innocent pre-suppositions of children who have not experienced it‘. 2
The pattern of juxtaposition is intended to illustrate vividly the kind of
spiritual change upon which Geoffrey Keynes comments: ‗This poem is
one of Blake‘s most outspoken protests against the effect of industrial
civilisation upon the life of the individual.‘ In Songs of Innocence, the poems
that best depict the pastoral idyll to be enjoyed by the innocent souls on
the Surrey station are ‗Laughing Song‘, ‗The Echoing Green‘ and ‗Nurse‘s
Song‘. There is also ‗Holy Thursday‘ which begins:
As Robert F. Gleckner points out, there are two levels at which this poem,
a song of innocence, can be read. Ostensibly, the poor children of the
parish should be grateful that the beadles (‗wise guardians of the poor‘)
have shown charity to them/taken ‗pity‘ on them and not given them up
to the nasty, brutish and short lives of chimney sweepers or prostitutes
which would otherwise await them; at the same time, ‗the children clearly
are disciplined, regimented, marched in formation to church in the
uniforms of their respective schools—mainly to advertise the charitable
souls of their supposed guardians.‘ 3 As a delicious consequence, the
simile—‗like Thames waters flow‘ —begs a question which is of supreme
importance for the city in which St Paul‘s Cathedral stands: just how do
Thames waters flow? In ‗London‘, it is this question that Blake takes up.
During Blake‘s lifetime, London was a city in a state of flux: in 1750, it
had a population of 700,000, rising by 1801 to 960,000. It was a real city,
a place of considerable squalor through which Blake in his poem is
moving as in a nightmare. As a result, he intends a sardonic conflict
between the alternate rhymes of his ballad quatrains and the grotesque
experience which they describe:
Although in Blake‘s time the River Thames was an open sewer, his
concern here is not with the pungent filthiness of the waterway, but with a
political and social injustice: enclosure. Between 1760 and 1820, the
common land of England became ‗enclosed‘: that is, taken into private
ownership. In ‗London‘, Blake is concerned with the capitalist alliance
between George III‘s Government (under the Tory Prime Minister,
William Pitt) and the bankers and the merchants who profited from this
nationwide re-drawing of rights, implemented by the granting of charters:
indeed, research among Blake‘s manuscripts reveals that he actually
changed his adjective from the literal ‗dirty‘ to ‗chartered‘. In 1791,
Thomas Paine (Rights of Man) wrote:
To open his poem, Blake uses the adjective ‗chartered‘ first to describe
‗each...street‘ of London and then to describe the River Thames: whereas
his first use may refer plainly to the private ownership of urban properties,
his second use may not refer to riverside moorings and warehouses, but
be ironic. How do Thames waters flow? Answer: in an orderly fashion.
Even stretches of the flowing river are treated as if they are commercial
commodities to be controlled and sold off: territorial waters, as it were. I
am not enough of a scholar to know whether ‗chartered Thames‘ is a
satirical reduction to absurdity of the contemporary obsession with
property rights or whether, beyond satire, it is a grim description of the
lengths to which aristocratic landowners and their lawyers did go.
The style of ‗London‘ is characterised by Blake‘s use of repetition. The
systematic repetitions are responsible for the tone of the poem: as Blake
walks the ‗chartered streets‘, he ‗marks‘ the signs of suffering on the faces
of the Londoners whom he encounters and he pities them. When it is
repeated, ‗mark‘—the verb ‗to notice, to take visual note of‘ —involves a
mournful, rueful pun; it becomes ‗marks‘, the noun for the scars of a
suffering both physical (‗weakness‘) and spiritual (‗woe‘). In Blake‘s song,
London remains the recognisable location of William Hogarth‘s Gin Lane
of 1751, but portrayed with a much darker humour.
Blake‘s account of London gains momentum by moving from one
repetition to another. In the second quatrain, he leaves behind ‗marks‘
only to pick up from ‗every face‘ the adjectival ‗every‘:
such torments into England‘s rich and fruitful/green and pleasant land.
Very significantly, the change to ‗mind -forged‘ implicates Londoners in
their own plight; radically, ‗mind-forged‘ implies that the ‗manacles‘ on the
wretches are not metal, but mental—and that London‘s oppressed
citizens, contemporaries of Victor Hugo‘s miserable Parisians, are partly
to blame for accepting Hanoverian tyranny and Tory exploitation.
For the rest of the poem, Blake continues to ‗hear‘ alarming things. By
means of a dash, his second quatrain segues grammatically into his third
where the conjunction (‗how‘) relies for its meaning upon the verb of the
previous sentence:
References
1. W. H. Stevenson (1971) The Poems of William Blake (London:
Longman).
2. Ibid.
3. Robert F. Gleckner in Northrop Frye ed. (1966) Blake (New Jersey:
Twentieth Century Views).