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In William Blakes "The Garden of Love", the tensions between "Innocence" and "Experience" are expressed through the oppositional relation of two physical sites: the garden and a chapel. ... He may very well be a grown-up, possibly of an old age, wandering back to his childhood ‘play-place - his “Garden of Love”. He goes to the Garden of Love but finds that his earlier Eden has undergone the fall and is now a chapel. ...
The speaker, disappointed and distressed, turns towards his “Garden of Love” that had many “sweet flowers” in it in the past. While “so many sweet flowers bore” may propose to us a beautiful and animated sight, yet it may also convey the possibility of the speaker’s involvement in a cute kiddy-Romance story once transpired in this Garden of LOVE that gave the speaker strength or purpose to recollect himself to visit the Garden again.
Approximate Word count = 665 Approximate Pages = 2.7 (250 words per page double spaced)
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