’s “Little Girl Lost” Essay, Research Paper
?A Little GIRL Lost? from Songs of Experience is one of Blake?s most important poems. Though judging the aesthetic value of a poem is nearly impossible, I would contend that ?A Little Girl Lost? is ?better? than ?The Little Girl Lost? found in Songs of Innocence. Perhaps because ?A Little Girl Lost? was composed as an afterthought to its original counterpart, having been first written in ?Innocence,? it acts as a conclusion to the original poem. The two poems both observe a young girl as she encounters a world filled with innocence (in ?The Little Girl Lost?) and a world of experience (?A Little Girl Lost?). In first poem, a young seven-year-old girl named Lyca falls asleep in the wilderness under a tree. While her parents worry about her, she sleeps innocently in the woods with a lion prancing around her while she slumbers. The poetic vision seems to be a portrayal of young love–of innocence unprotected in the passion-haunted forest.
In the second poem, found in ?Experience,? the feeling shifts from innocence to suggest a subversive course of love exploration. The young girl, Ona, discovers passion only to find that her father has a negative view on the very love she has just been introduced to. ?A Little Girl Lost? seems to be much deeper in thought than ?The Little Girl Lost.? This depth in content begins with the title, which gives the poem an aura of uneasiness. A feeling that it is dangerous or sinful stems from word ?Little? in the title, which implies that the girl addressed in the poem is quite young. Other signs such as the fact that the prologue is addressed to ?children? and that the ?maiden? is still clearly under parental guardianship create contradicting feelings about innocence. All this could be slightly misleading. Perhaps Blake, like Shakespeare, believed in very young brides. While the boy and the girl in the ?Nurse?s Song? and the little lost boys, both in ?Innocence? and ?Experience,? are clearly children, the illustration shows Lyca (The Little Girl Lost) and her lover as fully mature. The ?youth and maiden? in ?A Little Girl Lost? are not actually shown in the illustration, but the poem itself suggests that they are more than children.
The first thing to notice about ?A Little Girl Lost? is that notwithstanding the beautiful lyrical mood of the first part, it is a tragedy. It is closely related with ?A Little Boy Lost,? because the two poems both contain themes centering on the destruction of youthful innocence. Blake is commenting on the unfortunate reality where youth is not tolerated, with the consequence that the soul of youth is systematically excluded, and innocence destroyed. ?A Little Girl Lost? simply substitutes ?Love? where ?Thought? was the innocent action destroyed in ?A Little Boy Lost.?
The poem is intensely dramatic in form and character. Un
The sentiments for these poems are rather somber, even the poems about innocence because from the ?Experience? poems we learn that innocence is almost always lost. ?A Little Girl Lost? is a step above its predecessor because it flows better and simply tells a more complicated and beautiful story. The intensity is heightened by the careless joy suddenly cut short by dismal reality. It is this intensity and emotional demonstration of love and loss that sets this poem apart from Blake?s others.