In reading Blake’s “Nurses Song” and viewing the images that are provided, Blake’s poem from “Songs of Experience” remind me much about a mother telling her children “been there, done that” and how mothers want more for their children, than what they had as children. My mother always told me that she grew up with nearly nothing and she wanted to give my sister and I everything she never had. She was never granted the freedom of playing all day and could not afford most of the luxuries that a lot of other kids had. She recently told me, “When I was little, and I asked for something and my mom would say ‘When we get the money, you can have it’ it usually meant I would never have it.” I can see this image from the images that were provided for this text. The child in the image has an expressionless face and the mother is combing her hair and I feel like the mother is telling her something disciplinary. I feel that these images mirror Blake’s unpleasant childhood and not his children’s childhood.
Therefore, when I read Blake’s “Nurses Song” it elicited somewhat of a motherly tone to it; like he’s writing from a mother’s perspective. Before looking at the images and just reading the text, I imagined a mother speaking to her child and when I viewed the images, indeed, there was a mother and what looks to be two young people beneath her.
When Blake hears “the voices of children. are heard on the green” he reminisces on his own childhood when he says, “The days of my youth are fresh in my mind” (2-4). It is tangible and blatant that the sounds of children remind him of his youth but, following this he states, “My face turns green and pale” (5). From this, memories of his childhood are obviously not pleasant. Although the children are enjoying themselves and innocently playing outside, when he reflects on his own childhood, it does not elicit good memories. Perhaps he was not given the same freedom that his own children have now.
As he is calling his children to come inside for the night, he describes the night as a “night in disguise” (6-9). I can see this as a metaphor for growing up. Your childhood is the purest and more fun years of your life, as the sun goes down and the night approaches, a new day is to follow. If a new day is to follow, that means you are another day older and another day closer to adulthood. Thus, the night is not just a time to alternate into the next day, though it is the beginning of a anew day, meaning you are becoming older.
I see this text as more of a reflection of his childhood and his own children remind him of his unpleasant childhood. However, why is it called “Nurses Song”? A nurse always provides care regardless of the circumstance; nurses tend to have a motherly essence. Therefore, I think in many ways, regardless of Blake’s unfortunate childhood, he will still provide care to his children because he cares for them and only wants the best for them. Rather he is speaking from experience in that he knows what a lousy childhood feels like and he does not want that for his children.
I definitely thought of a mother speaking to her children when I read this poem, also. It completely makes sense that Blake would write about the negativity of his childhood, as well as the scary thought that every day is a step closer to adulthood. Since this poem is from Songs of Experience, he puts a clearer emphasis on the negative than he would if it were in Songs of Innocence. We can tell this from reading the Innocence version of “Nurse’s Song”–the poem appears on the outside to be lighthearted and happy, and he talks about how wonderful it is to play all day and then go to bed and play more the next day. The Experience version just emphasizes those negative underlying themes (the narrator says the kids”wasted” the day in play).