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A Little Girl Lost

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Poem by William Blake This article is about William Blake's poem with that title. For other uses, see little girl lost (disambiguation). Not to be confused with The Little Girl Lost, also a William Blake poem.

William Blake's original plate for A Little Girl Lost.

"A Little Girl Lost" is a poem written by the English poet William Blake. It was first published as part of his collection Songs of Innocence and of Experience in 1794. The poem is written as a clear authorial commentary from Blake, focusing on the tension between human passions and societal expectations.

Critical concerns

In her analysis of the poem for the journal The Explicator, academic Katelin E. Trowbridge describes the poem's narratorial voice as a projection of "his own passionate voice" about the subject of pleasure and social expectations. Trowbridge focuses on the Girl's fall from innocence as one of the poem's critical moments, where she can experience the pleasures of sexual relations with her lover but in turn feels guilt when confronted by her father. The conflict between father's pressures and maiden's feelings allows Blake to "expose paternal tyranny masquerading as Christian love" while revealing "his own emotional reaction to the maiden's torment."

References

  1. ^ Trowbridge, Katelin E. (Spring 1996). "Blake's A Little Girl Lost". The Explicator. 54 (3): 139. doi:10.1080/00144940.1996.9934093. Archived from the original on 29 May 2012.

External links

Texts on Wikisource:

William Blake
Literary works
Early writings
Songs of Innocence
and of Experience
Songs of Innocence
Songs of Experience
Prophetic
books
The continental
prophecies
Other
The Pickering Manuscript
The Rossetti Manuscript"Never pain to tell thy love"
Mythology
Art
Paintings
and prints
Sketches
Scholarship, in popular culture, and more
Scholarly works
Musical
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