Critical Appreciation Of The Poem Ah Sunflower

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Ah! Sunflower

In the late 1700s, William Blake published an illustrated collection of poems named Songs of Innocence and Experience. In 2016, a group of students in Penn State Altoona sat down to pore over his writings, each one finding a special poem to connect with. Although Blake bled his innocence and experience onto pages over four hundred years ago, the message, imagery, and personal significance translates beautifully still. A particular poem, ‘Ah, Sunflower,’ seemed to grow roots outside of the page and wind around my hands, pulling me in. Blake used this poem to express his opinions on religion, and unfulfilled desire. He utilized stunning poetic techniques as well as stunning illustration to create and distribute a poem all the way from the 17th century to land right in the laps of students of the 21st.

The poem, drenched in wistfulness, tells the tale of a sunflower very near to the speaker’s heart (demonstrated with the use of “my” in the eighth line) that he observes as being “weary of time,” (Blake 1) and following “the steps of the sun,” (Blake 2) as all sunflowers do to stay alive. However, this particular plant goes one step farther than natural instincts as Blake personifies the flower early on in the poem. He creates an ancient traveller nearing the end of a great journey, “seeking
Both the youth and the virgin are yearning for something that they cannot have. In the youth’s case, the use of the word “desire” (Blake 5) indicates lust, which is seen as a sin. Similarly, the virgin, who is “shrouded in snow,” (Blake 6) also wakes up to pine for something more. The equal craving for lust and sin between these two symbols results in the simultaneous attention toward the sunflower’s “sweet golden clime,” which we have assumed to be heaven. William Blake expertly includes numerous vital poetic techniques that critics and students alike can’t wait to uncover in “Ah,

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