“The Divine Image” and “A Divine Image”
Journal: Ars Artium (Vol.6, No. 1)Publication Date: 2018-01-01
Authors : Chiramel Paul Jose;
Page : 1-11
Keywords : Mercy; Pity; Peace; Love; Cruelty; Jealousy; Terror; Secrecy.;
Abstract
Blake's “The Divine Image”, in fact, celebrates the traditional Christian virtues of Mercy, Pity, Peace and Love. Man, by nature, also possesses these virtues, but fails to realize it. A man can rise up to the level of God if only he realizes the inherent qualities in him. In this regard the poem adopts a didactic tone. It is nothing but a sermon in verse. It is extremely simple but this deceptive simplicity deepens once the reader deflects his thought towards the philosophical suggestions of the poem. For Blake man is not merely created in the image of God, but Man is God and God is Man. God and Man are the same, in so far as these attributes of God viz., Mercy, Pity, Peace, and Love are shared by God and Man.
The poem “A Divine Image” on the other hand, tries to show that cruelty, jealousy, terror and secrecy are abstract ideas but they have no reality apart from human beings. It is from the heart of human beings that cruelty comes. It is human beings who are jealous, who cause terror, who create secrecy. Human heart is strong like iron. It is as powerful and as full of potentially destructive, as well as constructive, energy as a forge or a furnace. The human heart is not soft and tender but a consuming mouth, like that of a beast. The experience, for Blake means the sophisticated, post-lapsarian plight of the human beings. Blake might have wished to include this poem as the counter-part to “The Divine Image”, just as he did with regard to “The Lamb” and “The Tyger” and formulated the lines in a way resembling that of “The Tyger”, but never included this in the Songs of Experience during his life time.
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Last modified: 2018-01-27 03:50:03