Poetry comes in many different forms all around the writing world, William Blake, a poet that has a very unique way of expressing what he is talking about. The poet grew up with a caring mother who educated Blake at home in London, England. The Bible had an early influence on Blake life and would remain a major source of inspiration throughout his writing years. He had a very creative imagination, drawing and coloring about his life. Blake, at age ten was enrolled in a drawing school where he later sketched a human figure. The creativity of Blake was quickly noticed at age fourteen, he was sent to Westminster Abbey to make drawings of tombs and monuments where his lifelong of gothic art was seeded. At age twenty-one, Blake completed his seven-year …show more content…
These visions caused him to be more creative than the average poet, Blake wrote day and night about anything that would flow through his mind, even the visions he saw. August of 1782, Blake married Catherine Sofia Boucher, who was uneducated until partnering up with Blake. The nineteen year old poet taught his wife, Catherine, how to write, read, draw, and color. Blake helped his wife experience visions like he also did. Catherine believed in his visions and everything he did in his career. While Blake was an established engraver, soon he began receiving commissions to paint watercolors, and he painted scenes from the works of Milton, Dante, Shakespeare and the Bible. One of the most traumatic events of William Blake’s life occurred in 1787, where his brother passed away from tuberculosis at age 24. Blake allegedly saw his spirit ascend through the ceiling, that moment of seeing his brother’s spirit greatly influenced his poetry. Blake published a very interesting sequence of poems in his book, Songs of innocence. The poem, A Dream, has a lot of metaphors and meanings that would have the reader really having to dissect in order to find out exact the feeling of the …show more content…
The poet uses a glow worm to symbolize the light source as the sun lights up for humans, “but I saw a glow worm near, who replied ‘im the watchman of the night’ “. The ant needs to find a way home and hears a noise coming from a beetle, the ant later hears a voice saying, “Follow beetles hum”. The voice this ant hears is not coming from a living insect or creature, the poet uses a guardian angel as guidance to find a way home by instructing the ant to follow the beetles hum. The ant indeed follows the noise of the beetle and gets to the mother ant after being