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		    Songs of Experience 
 
 Introduction  
  Hear the voice of the Bard! 
 
Who Present, Past, & 
Future sees  
Whose ears have heard,  
The Holy Word,  
That walk'd among the ancient 
trees.   
Calling the lapsed Soul  
And weeping in the evening 
dew:  
That might controll,  
The starry pole;  
And fallen fallen light renew! 
  
O Earth O Earth return!  
Arise from out the dewy grass; 
 
Night is worn,  
And the morn  
Rises from the slumberous 
mass.   
Turn away no more:  
Why wilt thou turn away  
The starry floor  
The watry shore  
Is giv'n thee till the break 
of day. 
 
 *Genesis 3.8: "And [Adam and Eve] heard the voice of the Lord God waling in the garden in the cool of the day." The Bard, or poet-prophet, whose imagination is not bound by time, has heard the voice of the Lord in Eden. (from Norton Anthology footnote) *Another version of Genesis 3.8-9. "Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the Lord God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and they hid from the Lord God among the trees of the garden. But the Lord God called to the man, 'Where are you?'" 
 
 Questions 
 
 1.  What is the subject of "calling" at the beginning of Stanza 2?  The Bard or the Holy Word? 
 
 2. What is the subject of "might controll"? 
 
 3. What is the tone of this poem?  Angry, Resentful, Sympathetic, Unhappy, Sad, Hopeful, Optimistic? 
 
 4. Any difference with the poem with the same title in Songs of Innocence?   
 
 
 
 The Chimney Sweeper 
 
 
 
   
 
 A little black thing among the 
snow,  
Crying "weep! 'weep!" in notes 
of woe!  
"Where are thy father and 
mother? say?"  
"They are both gone up to the 
church to pray.   
Because I was happy upon the 
heath,  
And smil'd among the winter's 
snow,  
They clothed me in the clothes 
of death,  
And taught me to sing the 
notes of woe.   
And because I am happy and 
dance and sing,  
They think they have done me 
no injury,  
And are gone to praise God and 
his Priest and King,  
Who make up a heaven of our 
misery." 
 
 Questions 
 
 1. Any difference in the tone of voice in the narrator's words in comparison with "The Chimney Sweeper" of Innocence? 
 
 2. As a social criticism, which chimney sweeper you think is more effective? 
 
 
 
 Holy Thursday 
 
 
 
   Is this a holy thing to 
see,  
In a rich and fruitful land, 
 
Babes reducd to misery,  
Fed with cold and usurous 
hand?   
Is that trembling cry a song? 
 
Can it be a song of joy? 
 
And so many children poor? 
 
It is a land of poverty! 
  
And their sun does never 
shine.  
And their fields are bleak 
& bare.  
And their ways are fill'd with 
thorns.  
It is eternal winter there. 
  
For where-e'er the sun does 
shine,  
And where-e'er the rain does 
fall:  
Babe can never hunger there, 
 
Nor poverty the mind appall.      Questions   1. What exactly the narrator is protesting about?   2. What expression in this poem is the strongest as a term of social criticism at that time?    3. Any political resonance in "poverty" in this poem?         
		
		
		
		
		
           
				    
				    
				    
				    
				    
				    
				    
                               
                              
                         
                      
		
		
		
		
		
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