ABSTRACT
As people know, poetry
is as universal as language and almost as ancient. It has been the concern of
the folks not only the lowborn citizens but also the royal families and the
educated men. Poetry might be defined as a kind of language that says more and says
it more intensely than ordinary language does. Being in the group of the
intelligent, it is a must to study more intensively about the poetry. To enjoy
and love every time reading the poem is very important for the writer in
composing this essay. William Blake was born in London England in the
year 1757. The Sick Rose is one of The Songs of
Experience’s by William Blake written in 1794 when one of the only jobs women
could get was one within prostitution. In the 18th century London became a
center of public houses. The worm represents any male customers who goes to the
prostitute and are after personal satisfaction. The Rose’s life is destroyed
physically, emotionally, socially and psychologically.
INTRODUCTION
THE POEM
According to “A Handbook to Literature”by C. Hugh Holman, the Professor of English University of North Carolina, “Poetry is a term applied to the many forms
in which human beings have given rhythmic expression to their most imaginative
and intense perceptions of the world, themselves, and the interrelationship of
the two”.
As people know, poetry is as universal
as language and almost as ancient. It has been the concern of the folks not
only the lowborn citizens but also the royal families and the educated men.
Poetry might be defined as a kind of language that says more and says it more
intensely than ordinary language does. Being in the group of the intelligent,
it is a must to study more intensively about the poetry. To enjoy and love
every time reading the poem is very important for the writer in composing this
essay.
THE POEM
LITERARY REVIEW
3. Leopold Damsroch. Jr.
DISCUSSION
3. Leopold Damsroch. Jr.
From a background in which the poem is
issued, at the time of London in the 18th century London became the center of
public houses, where many customers who are looking for the satisfaction came
to the public houses. The speaker in “The Sick Rose” try to describe how is the women circumstances
at that time and how they suffer their life in prostitution.
“O rose, thou
art sick!”
As mentioned in the literary review by
Cervo, “The Rose” is not described as a beauty of love, but it tells about the state
of woman which is so “sick” and far from love until it suffers because she live
in the prostitution.
“Does
thy life destroy”
In the last line, according Cervo “life’s
vulnerability”, the woman which was influenced by the character "the
invisible worm” should suffer her ultimate fate because all she has had been destroyed.
As it described in the Metaphor that the man’s lust makes the woman’s life
destroyed.
Besides, the first aspect that mentioned
by Leopold Damroch before is that the poem can read as a naturalistic rose
(roses do decay). Meanwhile the speaker does not mean that that people would
innocently appreciate the poem as a description of a naturalistic decay of the
worm-eaten roses. As it is described in the Symbols that “The Rose” is refers
to “woman”. It is symbolized a woman whose love plundered by a man who does not
responsible against the woman. The virginity was taken from the woman, so that
not only the loss of purity, but she also feels physically, emotionally,
psychologically and socially ache.
The other aspect mentioned by Damroch is
sociopolitical. As we know prostitution is never been illegal and so could the
only be prosecuted when associated with disorderly conduct or public indecency.
In the middle century, England saw the apogee of the double standard of sexual
morality; male sexual access to women was a necessity but any slip from sexual
purity on woman’s part cut her off from respectable society.
However,
the proper aspect according to Leopold Damroch is about the psychosexual. The
man symbolized as an “invisible worm” is hanging around at night carrying an
aura or an unpleasant situation with him to search for sexual satisfaction
within prostitution. It does destroy the woman’s life and she must suffer her
life after the prostitution.
CONCLUSION
William
Blake’s “The Sick Rose” is a simple yet meaningful poem to describe the woman’s
suffering in 1794. In that era, London is experiencing rapid growth in
prostitution where so many people go the pub seeking for inner satisfaction. Blake
eliminating the symbol of the beauty in the “rose” and describing it as “a sick
rose” and shows his sadness about the condition of woman who lived in
prostitution in that era.
This
poem is beautifully described where Blake used the “worm” and “rose” as the
main characters and make a story about the women who suffer her life in
prostitution and get her life destroyed by the droves of men who come to search
for prostitution. “The Sick Rose” brings us about the psychosexual aspect where
the man behavior of sex drives him to search for sexual satisfaction.
REFERENCES
Abrams., Ford., Daiches. 1890. The Norton Anthology of English Literature
Volume 2. England: W. W. Norton and Company.
Cervo, Nathan. Blake's' The Sick Rose. Explicator. 48: 4 (Summer, 1990), 253-54. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00144940.1990.9934016. Accessed in
June 23 2015 at 10.00 PM.
Damrosch,
Leopold, Jr. Symbol and Truth in Blake's
Myth. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1980. https://books.google.co.id/books?id=5q3_AwAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false.
Accessed in June 25 2015 at 7.48 AM.
Harvey, Sir Paul. 1967. The Oxford Companion to English Literature. Great Britain: Oxford
University Press.
Holman,
C. Hugh. 1985. A Handbook to Literature.
Indianapolis: ITT Bobbs-Merrill Educational Publishing Company, Inc.
Perrine,
Laurence., Thomas R. Arp. 1992. Sound and
Sense: An Introduction to Poetry. United States of America: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College
Publishers.
Oxford. 2008. Oxford
Learner’s Pocket Dictionary. Oxford: Oxford University Press.