An Explication of 'On Another’s Sorrow'

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“On Another’s Sorrow” by William Blake deals with the question of whether or not people share another’s grief. It uses repetition to show all the times people share another person’s feelings of sorrow. The poem can be divided into three general sections. The first part is about empathy among humans. The second section discusses the extent of Gods depth of empathy for all creatures. The last section covers the things God gave us to deal with sorrow. The biggest point of the poem is God’s unwavering role in our hardships.
Throughout the poem, the speaker uses the rhetorical question “Can…” In lines 1-6, the speaker is talking in first person and is asking “Can I? Can I see another’s woe/ And not be in sorrow too./ Can I see another’s grief/ And not seek for a kind relief.” The answer to these questions is no. Through the repetition of rhetorical questions, Blake shows the all humans feel empathy, and are bound to feel the pain of the people around them. “No, never can it be” is the answer to all the rhetorical questions, and means no person can go without feeling empathy for someone else (11).
Blake also uses third person point of view in his rhetorical questions to apply to another large number of people, parents. In lines 7-20, the author discusses the different ways in which parents feel compassion for their children. Lines 9-12 ask “Can a mother sit and hear/ Can a father see his child/ Weep, nor be filled with sorrow/ No never can it be.” Blake is stating that a mother can never hear her child crying or whimpering with fear and not do something to comfort the child. He states that it would be wrong for a parent to see their child in distress and not move to comfort them.

At this point in the play, the focus shifts fro...

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....” In this stanza, Blake means that no matter where someone is, or how big or small their suffering, God is going to be right by their side going through the same emotion, because he feels empathy for us. Because God loves every living thing so much “He gives to us his joy/ That our grief he may destroy”, which is the authors way of saying God loves everyone so much, he will literally give us his happiness, to remove our sorrow (33-34).
This poem shows that all people feel empathy for other people, and we receive this emotion from God, who shares in the suffering of every single living creature, no matter how small. God does not give preference to the sorrow one person, but rather in there say and night through every struggle of every creature. Blake uses rhetorical questions to call into light questions people know the answer too, but are sometime to blind to see.

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