The criticism of formal education in “The Schoolboy” by William Blake

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Blake’s The Schoolboy deals with a theme very central to his own ideals and identity, as he was an avid critic of formal institutions and the lack of creativity brought by the Industrial Revolution. Blake uses the motif a school boy to communicate the joy that comes from a lively spirit kindred by freedom that then is annihilated by the sorrow and lethargic disinterest caused by a formalized education system. This contrast between innocence, bliss, imagination and oppression, sorrow and rationality is shown to express Blake’s criticism against an education system that bases itself on fear, which kills all creative spark. Through the use of contrasting diction that symbolizes the shift in the school boy’s psyche, metaphors alluding to oppression, natural imagery as symbols for purity and paralleling structure to amplify the contrasts, Blake creates a poignant and thought-provoking piece about the dangers of fear-inducing education.

All throughout the six stanzas contrasting diction is used to symbolize the shift in spirit of a child who makes the painful transition from freedom to oppression. The first stanza’s idyllic, almost utopian tone is set up by very positively connoted diction such as ‘love” (1) and “sweet” (5). These words are monosyllabic, simple and pure, just like the children’s who are not yet corrupted and enjoying their liberty and their right to be gleeful and innocent. In the second stanza, this lively and upbeat tone clearly shifts, which is shown by the change in diction. From the second stanza on, the words are negatively charged. A world that was once described with the most basic but universally appealing symbols of happiness like love and sweetness has now morphed into a world of darkness and subjug...

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... that it belongs to the “Songs of Experience” shows the cynical and critical nature of the tone, which quickly shifts from idyllic to tragically oppressed. Although Blake’s main focus and main target to criticize is formalized education, there is an echoing of a more broad social issue that Blake also despised: industrialization and a world ruled by rationality. The poem is fundamentally a criticism of a society that has been numbed by numbers and machines and have been stripped of all creative endeavors. This powerful social denunciation is conveyed by the willowing natural metaphors, symbolic natural imagery, paralleling structure and contrasting diction. Blake uses a voice of experience and vision to sympathize with the plea of the every child who wishes to keep playing in the summer, not as a sign of laziness, but as a sign of much needed imagination and freedom.

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