William Blake's "Nurse's Song" Analysis: Themes and Symbolism
Classified in Philosophy and ethics
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Imagery and Symbolism
The Color Green
Blake returns to his image of the village green, which represents:
- Growth, fertility, and spring.
- The importance of play, and therefore of imagination, in human life.
- Freedom from the rule or demands of an authority figure.
Here, the green symbolizes the children's life and freedom, which makes the Nurse 'green' with envy. At the same time, green is associated with nausea and sourness, which indicates both the corruption of the Nurse's mind and, perhaps, the corruption of childhood innocence.
The Nurse: Nurturing Capacity and Control
The image of the Nurse is used to represent the caring and nurturing capacity within human beings. This capacity can be used to protect the freedom of what is carefree, innocent, and vulnerable. When this is the case, the nurse or caregiver delights in their charge and has no desire to repress or rule.
However, this capacity can also be distorted into a desire to control and devour what is carefree and vulnerable. This is the situation presented in Nurse's Song (E).
Disguise and Concealment
The idea of Disguise and concealment has already been hinted at in 'whisperings' and is the product of experience rather than innocence. From the Nurse's bitter perspective, even the 'purity' of childhood is a pretense. Alternatively, she might be reflecting on her adult self (in the 'winter' of her life) and the necessity of concealing the true self in order to function socially.
Major Themes
The Nature of Parental Care and Authority
Here, the nurse, a quasi-parental figure, deliberately inhibits and represses the children. She uses the authority of a society based on external authority figures and laws to mask jealousy and cruelty as 'love'.
The Effects of the Fall
A second, related theme is the effect on human relationships of a fallen, divided selfhood, which sees itself at the center of its world as something to be protected and defended. Its pleasures must be jealously defended and denied to others. One chief pleasure is exerting control over others, which can often masquerade as showing protective love.
Blake's Perception of Children
Blake saw the natural child as an image of the creative imagination, which he considered the human being's spiritual core. He was concerned about the way in which social institutions, such as the school system and parental authority, crushed the capacity for imaginative vision. The child's capacity for happiness and play are expressions of this imagination. Here, the nurse resents the freedom and creativity of the children—she is not simply stopping their play, she is stifling the spirit within them.