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4''Songs of Innocence and of Experience'', or to give the full title, ''Songs of Innocence and of Experience: Shewing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul'', is a book by the English artist and {{Romantic|ism}} poet Creator/WilliamBlake. It consists of two collections of poems, originally published in separate volumes. Notably, no two printings are alike, because Blake was his own engraver and printer and he hand-coloured each copy. Inexpensive facsimile editions are readily available, and are by far the best way to encounter the book.
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6The first of the two, ''Songs of Innocence'', is a cheerful and optimistic volume which concerns itself with such themes as springtime, children's games, the freedom of the human spirit, and a kind and loving God. By contrast, ''Songs of Experience'' is considerably bleaker and more cynical, concerning itself with human frailty and cruelty, and containing harsh criticisms of the repressive and authoritarian culture of its day.
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8[[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant No relation to]] the Music/{{U2}} albums titled ''Music/SongsOfInnocence'' and ''Music/SongsOfExperience''.
9----
10!! This book provides examples of:
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12* AngerIsHealthyAesop: "The Poison Tree" contains this moral and focuses on how containing one's anger leads to more terrible consequences down the line via the image of the Tree of Knowledge.
13--> I was angry with my friend.\
14I told my wrath, my wrath did end.\
15I was angry with my foe.\
16I told it not, my wrath did grow.
17* AnimalMotifs: sheep and birds in ''Songs of Innocence'', lions and tigers in ''Songs Of Experience''. The narrator also compares himself directly to an insect in "THE FLY".
18* ChildrenAreInnocent: in ''Songs of Innocence''; [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] in ''Songs of Exprerience''.
19* DarkerAndEdgier: Many of the poems in ''Songs of Experience'' provide an alternative, more cynical perspective on themes discussed in ''Songs of Innocence''.
20** There's [[FridgeBrilliance quite a bit of]] RealitySubtext involved here: ''Songs of Innocence'' was written while UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution was still considered [[TheRevolutionWillNotBeVilified brave and good]] and published in 1789, while ''Songs of Experience'' was published in 1794, during the ReignOfTerror.
21* EldritchAbomination: The eponymous Tyger of "The Tyger" is described as one. Apparently, the stars themselves are aghast at its creation, and the narrator is horrified at the implication that the creator of the Lamb could possibly make such a dread beast.
22** Another interpretation, though, is that the Tyger is simply one of Lucifer's many guises (representing chaos and revolutionary spirit rather than evil), with the lines about "The stars [throwing] down their spears" and weeping put in as an allusion to Lucifer's angels (sometimes represented as stars) being defeated in the rebellion against God.
23* ForbiddenFruit:
24** The apples in "A POISON TREE".
25** There's a more complicated version in "The Human Abstract," where we're being deceptively encouraged to eat the fruit.
26* InnocentMeansNaive: Several poems discuss and play with this trope, particularly "A Little Boy Lost", where a young child inadvertently questions church dogma and is branded a heretic by an overzealous priest.
27* MindScrew: the narrative of "The Little Girl Lost" and "The Little Girl Found".
28* MyLocal: the alehouse in "The Little Vagabond".
29* {{Revenge}}: "A POISON TREE".
30* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVsCynicism: runs the whole spectrum, with ''Songs of Innocence'' and ''Songs of Experience'' loosely corresponding to Idealism and Cynicism respectively.
31* UnreliableIllustrator: Especially in ''Songs of Experience,'' where there can be a real mismatch between the illustrations and the poems' tone.

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