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Summary Edexcel English Lit A*: William Blake poetry essay plans

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I have compiled various essay plans for the unit 3 Poetry Edexcel English Lit. In this document I focus on William Blake, specifically these poems: Holy Thursday Innocence, Holy Thursday Experience, The Sick Rose, The Tyger, London. Each essay plan contains the short summary of the poem, and various broad themes which could be the subject of the essay question. Then I have included smaller, more concise points which should be used to structure the essays. I have included detailed language, thematic and syntax analysis, as well the relevant context needed to push your grade to the top boundary.

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Subido en
25 de agosto de 2024
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Escrito en
2022/2023
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HOLY THURSDAY INNOCENCE (William Blake, 1757-1827)

In ‘Holy Thursday’ (Innocence), Blake refers to Maundy Thursday, and the annual meetings
of the children educated in the charity schools in and about the cities of London and
Westminster that took place at St Paul's Cathedral from 1782.

● The celebration of nature



1) Blake uses nature to convey the power of children
- In ‘Holy Thursday’, Blake conveys the power of children through his celebration of
nature, which is emphasised as something which intertwines with childhood. Blake’s
simile- ‘Till into the high dome of Paul’s they like Thames’ waters flow’- refers to the
river Thames. Therefore, the simile, being kinaesthetic imagery, likens the
movements of the children to the flow of a large body of water, emphasising the
power of childhood.

CONTEXT: Romantic Poets such as Blake rejected the strict and apathetic treatment of
children. Charity schools, also called Blue Coat Schools, were a type of English primary
school that emerged in the early 18th century to educate the children of the poor. However,
supported by private contributions and The Church, many Romantic poets believed that the
education and discipline of children stripped them of the chance to express their thoughts or
feelings, fear or anger.

Therefore, we can press the simile further. Since the verb ‘flow’ connotes
free-thought or a stream of consciousness, by associating the children with the ‘flow’
of water, perhaps Blake suggests that children are comparable to nature in the sense
that they should have the power of free imagination.

2) Blake, through his imagery and similes, is suggestive of the sublime
- In ‘Holy Thursday’, Blake depicts the children’s singing through nature, which works to
convey their power and invokes a sense of the sublime. Through the simile of ‘a
mighty wind’, the use of natural elements reflecting the children’s singing of course
connotes power through the adjective ‘mighty’, but it is also suggestive of a sense of
fear, for we associate strong winds with storms, and in turn, destruction and turmoil.
Moreover, the imagery of ‘harmonious thunderings’ is a fairly oxymoronic way of
describing singing. Again, the use of natural imagery conveys the sheer power of the
children, but Blake goes further than this; he suggests that the ‘harmony’ of their
voices goes beyond extreme beauty, as it fuses with ‘thunderings’, connoting threat
of destruction.

CONTEXT: Burke’s assessment of the sublime follows as such: 'Astonishment [...] is the
effect of the sublime in its highest degree; the inferior effects are admiration, reverence and
respect.' (Edmund Burke, 'The Sublime and Beautiful', 1757)

, ● Childhood



1) The power of childhood
- In ‘Holy Thursday’, Blake conveys the power of children through his celebration of
nature, which is emphasised as something which intertwines with childhood. Blake’s
simile- ‘Till into the high dome of Paul’s they like Thames’ waters flow’- refers to the
river Thames. Therefore, the simile, being kinaesthetic imagery, likens the
movements of the children to the flow of a large body of water, emphasising the
power of childhood.

CONTEXT: Romantic Poets such as Blake rejected the strict and apathetic treatment of
children. Charity schools, also called Blue Coat Schools, were a type of English primary
school that emerged in the early 18th century to educate the children of the poor. However,
supported by private contributions and The Church, many Romantic poets believed that the
education and discipline of children stripped them of the chance to express their thoughts or
feelings, fear or anger. For example, Jean-Jacques Rousseau believed that children were
naturally innocent and were corrupted by society. He developed an idea of the ‘child of
nature’, arguing that children should be subjected to as little formal education as possible
and be allowed to live a natural life, from which they would learn all that they required

Therefore, we can press the simile further. Since the verb ‘flow’ connotes
free-thought or a stream of consciousness, by associating the children with the ‘flow’
of water, perhaps Blake suggests that children are comparable to nature in the sense
that they should have the power of free imagination.

- In ‘Holy Thursday’, Blake emphasises the power of childhood through the lexis of
large numbers. The triple repetition of the word ‘multitudes’, and the reference to the
‘thousands’ of children living in poverty in London combines to emphasise the
‘radiance’ which they bring to the church.

CONTEXT: In 1789, Gilbert Elliot described the scene, and claimed that when the king
entered, and all 6000 children sang part of the Hundredth Psalm, ‘this was the moment [he]
found most affecting’, finding himself, along with many others, crying. Therefore, Blake very
much emphasises the feelings shared between many of his contemporaries and the power
these children possessed by invoking such emotion.

- In ‘Holy Thursday’, Blake depicts the children’s singing through nature, which works to
convey their power and invokes a sense of the sublime. Through the simile of ‘a
mighty wind’, the use of natural elements reflecting the children’s singing of course
connotes power through the adjective ‘mighty’, but it is also suggestive of a sense of
fear, for we associate strong winds with storms, and in turn, destruction and turmoil.
Moreover, the imagery of ‘harmonious thunderings’ is a fairly oxymoronic way of
describing singing. Again, the use of natural imagery conveys the sheer power of the
children, but Blake goes further than this; he suggests that the ‘harmony’ of their
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