Songs of Innocence is a collection of 19 illustrated poems published in 1789. According to scholar Donald A. Dike, the collection does not “describe an absolute state of being or fashion an autonomous truth.” Rather, he says the poems are resistant, being “consciously against something and trying to see their way through something.” Songs of Innocence was followed by Blake's
Songs of Experience in 1794. The two collections were published together under the title
Songs of Innocence and of Experience, showing the "two contrary states of the human soul.” ==The poem==