"To See a World in a Grain of Sand" by William Blake is a short poem that is filled with deep meaning. Through the use of metaphors and word choice the work seems lengthy to the mind but short to the eye. A metaphor is "a statement that one thing is something else, but in a literal sense it is not" (Kennedy 817). A metaphor is filled with suggestion giving a simple line of poetry almost infinite meanings. "To See the World in a Grain of Sand" (1) is a statement that is loaded with suggestion. There are many similarities between a grain of sand and the world such as: the world is made up of many grains of sand, both are round, and both are the same material to name a few. The two objects are also so different that that the line of poetry leaves the mind scrambling to figure out the meaning of this word combination. To figure out the meaning one must look at the literal meanings of the words and the figurative meaning of the word combinations to unscramble the riddle. On the literal level one must look at the key words in the line such as world, grain, and sand and find their definitions and how they relate to the other words in the line. By definition world is "the Earth or Universe" grain is "a relatively small particle" and sand is "loose grains of worn or disintegrated rock" (On Line Dictionary). The
"To See a World in a Grain of Sand" by William Blake is a short poem that is filled with deep meaning. Through the use of metaphors and word choice the work seems lengthy to the mind but short to the eye. A metaphor is "a statement that one thing is something else, but in a literal sense it is not" (Kennedy 817). A metaphor is filled with suggestion giving a simple line of poetry almost infinite meanings. "To See the World in a Grain of Sand" (1) is a statement that is loaded with suggestion. There are many similarities between a grain of sand and the world such as: the world is made up of many grains of sand, both are round, and both are the same material to name a few. The two objects are also so different that that the line of poetry leaves the mind scrambling to figure out the meaning of this word combination. To figure out the meaning one must look at the literal meanings of the words and the figurative meaning of the word combinations to unscramble the riddle. On the literal level one must look at the key words in the line such as world, grain, and sand and find their definitions and how they relate to the other words in the line. By definition world is "the Earth or Universe" grain is "a relatively small particle" and sand is "loose grains of worn or disintegrated rock" (On Line Dictionary). The