![]() ![]() ^ a b TATE: "Songs of Innocence: Holy Thursday"."Songs of Innocence and of Experience, copy AA, object 19 (Bentley 19, Erdman 19, Keynes 19) "HOLY THURSDAY" ". ![]() The bleak reality of the orphans' lives is depicted in the contrasting poem, "Holy Thursday" ( Songs of Experience). Their singing on the day that commemorated the Ascension of Jesus is depicted as raising them above their old, lifeless guardians, who remain at a lower level. The children in their colourful dresses are compared to flowers and their procession toward the church as a river. ![]() The poem depicts a ceremony held on Ascension Day, which in England was then called Holy Thursday, a name now generally applied to what is also called Maundy Thursday: Six thousand orphans of London's charity schools, scrubbed clean and dressed in the coats of distinctive colours, are marched two by two to Saint Paul's Cathedral, under the control of their beadles, and sing in the cathedral. (There is also a Holy Thursday poem in Songs of Experience, which contrasts with this song.) Holy Thursday is a poem by William Blake, from his 1789 book of poems Songs of Innocence. This copy is currently held by The Fitzwilliam Museum. Copy AA of "Holy Thursday", printed in 1826. ![]()
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