London Flashcards

1
Q

Form

A

Iambic tetrameter
Regular ABAB rhyme scheme
Shows monotony and the desensitising nature of violence and the acceptance of misery
Dramatic monologue - first person narrator gives sense of passion, also creates the sense the suffering is universal
Regular rhythm corporeally symbolises trudging of feet, and physiologically, the trudging through life

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2
Q

Structure

A

First two stanzas focus on the consequences of the people- major pathos (1st shows sights, 2nd shows sounds)

Stanza 3 discusses the institutions responsible, this juxtaposition increases the sense of blame. Visual and aural.

Stanza 4 back to people, exacerbating blame as we are forcefully reminded of the horrible situation. Visual and aural.

Repetition of ‘every’ highlights universality of pain, and how every aspect of life is hopeless
Repetition of ‘charter’d’ shows repression
Repetition of ‘marks’ how every experiences not just one sorrow, and that every aspect of their life involves suffering. general repetition shows Blake’s demand for change- trying to push past the repression to bring reform

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3
Q

Language

A

Bleak semantic field -> links to the French Revolution

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4
Q

Mood

A

Bleak but also angry tone

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5
Q

wander

A

Sense of purposlessness and powerlessness

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6
Q

Charter’d street

Chart’d Thames

A

Confinement, symbol of repression
Also shows how everywhere is affected

Even nature (something as powerful as the river) is being repressed

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7
Q

Mark

A

Means notice

Could suggest that people have been physically altered by the suffering

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8
Q

Every, cry

A

Repetition

Shows ubiquitous and unanimous nature of suffering

Aural imagery disturbs the reader

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9
Q

Mind-forg’d manacles

A

Brainwashing
Repression
Trapped physically and mentally
Unable to help themselves

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10
Q

Every black’ning Church appalls

A

Literally the industrial revolution-> context, yay!

Symbolically judgmental religious allusion- not focusing on true Light - Romanticism
Church becoming corrupt, tarnished by callousness. Grim imagery on a place of hope- juxtapostition

Colour imagery

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11
Q

the hapless Soldier’s sigh Runs in blood down the palace walls

A

Signifies rebellion and the addressing of the imbalance of power
Juxtaposition, emotive language
Also French Revolution
Blood -> giving life for what? Insignificance
Those is palace are protected while ppl die for them -> equality, context

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12
Q

‘Midnight streets’

A

Without colour insinuates perpetual darkness

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13
Q

the youthful Harlot’s curse Blasts

A

Powerful verbs

Sense of pathos for the immediately juxtaposition between the pure connotation of youth, and sordid ones of prostitution

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15
Q

Blights with plagues

A

Sick and diseased imagery

Contagious?

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16
Q

new born Infant’s tears

A

Innocence is lost immediately
Distressing image
Survival?

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16
Q

Marriage hearse

A

Oxymoron -> marriage and death. Nothing is truly alive, even love. Profoundly bleak final image

17
Q

Context

A

French Revolution

Part of the ‘songs of experience’ describe how innocence is lost, and how society has been corrupted. Paired with ‘songs of innocence’- positive poems which focus on childhood, nature and love

1794- English poet and artists who has quite radical social and political views of social and racial equality, questioning the church’s teachings

‘Chimney-sweepers’ ; young boys- emotive and distressing image of child labour