Thursday, May 30, 2019
Blake :: essays research papers
In Blakes "London" the speaker connects various characters and socio/political institutions in order to go over the injustices perpetrated in England. The busy, commercial city of London functions as a space in which the speaker can imagine the inescapable interconnections of English institution and citizens. Although separated by differences of class and gender, the citizens of London brush up against each other so that the misery of the poor and dispossessed is a direct indictment of the severeness of the rich and powerful, f the institutions of state and religion.     The speaker of the poem emphasizes the social and economic differences that separate the citizens of London. By repeating the intelligence information "charterd", he reminds the reader of the commercial record of the city, the fact that portions of it are owned, and that non everyone has equal access to goods or property. In the first note of hand of his poem as Blake speak s of how he is wandering through the "charterd" streets, he is commenting on this commercial aspect of London. As he moves on in his poem he also refers to the "charterd" Thames, he is telling us in this aid line that even a river which is a force of nature, is owned in London. When Blake says that he sees "marks of weakness, marks of woe" in "every face" he meets, he means that he can see how this commercialism is affecting everyone rich and poor.     Yet, despite the divisions that the word charterd suggests, the speaker contends that no one in London, uncomplete rich or poor, escapes a pervasive sense of misery and entrapment. The speaker talks of how in "every cry of every man" he hears the misery. Blake is at a time again reminding us that this is affecting everyone. As he goes on to comment on he can hear it in "every infants cry of charge", he is saying that even the babies know what is going to happen to them when they grow up and they fear the misery that they will soon face. In the next line of the poem Blake chooses to use a very interesting word. When he writes "in every ban" he leaves the line open to many different interpretations. The word ban can mean a political prohibition, a curse, or an announcement of marriage. The political meaning is an obvious one in this poem, Blake obviously does not like the politics of London and he fells that the commercialism is preventing the people from being happy.
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