Anna Ebaugh
Mrs. Wilson
British Literature B
May 12, 2013
Romantic
Period Essay
The
Romantic Period lasted between 1798 and 1832. During this period, their
agricultural society turned into an industrial nation, which then created
desperate living conditions and increased child labor (Henry 711). The Romance
of the Romantic Period signifies a fascination with a child’s sense of wonder
and their innocence (Henry 713). In “Chimney Sweeper: Songs of Innocence and
Songs of Experience” by William Blake, he uses symbolism, children’s
imagination, and irony to emphasize how the harsh child labor in the Romantic
Period is destroying children’s innocence.
William Blake uses symbolism in these two poems to show
the contrast between the chimney sweeper’s innocence and their excruciating
child labor. Blake uses the colors white and black throughout both of his poems
to symbolize their innocence and their miserable lives. White symbolizes
innocence and the childhood that children are supposed to have. Black
symbolizes their miserable lives working as a chimney sweeper and everything
bad about child labor. In “Songs of Innocence”, Blake says, “’Hush, Tom!’ never
mind it, for when your head’s bare, / you know that the soot cannot spoil your
white hair” (ll. 7-8). Blake mentions the “white hair” instead of just “hair”
because it shows that they are still children and that they are innocent. The
fact that his white hair is being shaved off, shows that their innocence is
being taken away by child labor. In “Songs of Experience”, Blake says, “because I was happy upon the heath, / and smiled among
the winter’s snow...” (ll. 5-6). The whiteness of the snow symbolizes nature
and naturalness which contrasts with the unnaturalness of a chimney sweeper.
The fact that the snow is white symbolizes that there is much better things
outside of their world as chimney sweepers. The use of “black” in these poems
symbolizes the awful lives of the chimney sweepers and what they have to go
through. In “Songs of Innocence”, William Blake talks about black and he says, “That
thousands of sweepers, Dick, Joe, Ned, and Jack, /were all of them locked up in
coffins of black” (ll. 11-12). In this quote, locked up is meaning that they
feel trapped, coffins mean that they feel like they are already dead, and black
is referring to their soot covered bodies and their miserable lives. In “Songs
of Experience”, Blake says, “A little black thing among the snow” (l. 1). This
quote shows that “the little black thing” is unrecognizable and doesn’t even
look like a little boy. The boy is completely covered in soot that the adult doesn’t
even know that “the little back thing” is a little boy. In these two poems,
white and black contrast completely about how the boys lives should and shouldn’t
be.
Imagination is all these
boys have left of their childhood and even that is starting to be taken away by
child labor. In “Songs of Innocence” the narrator talks about his fellow
chimney sweeper, Tom Dacre, and Tom has a very different imagination compared to
the narrator. Blake talks about a dream Tom is having and he says, “And by came
an angel who had a bright key, / And he opened the coffins and set them all
free; / Then down a green plain leaping, laughing, they run,/ And wash in a
river, and shine in the sun. /Then naked and white, all their bags left behind
(ll. 13-17). Tom is dreaming about heaven and where he will go once he dies
from being a chimney sweeper. Being naked and white shows that they are clean
and innocent again. This quote shows that Tom still has hope because he is
imagining a perfect heaven but we can’t say the same for the speaker. We can
conclude that the speaker does not feel the same way that Tom does and does not
have any hope for himself because the speaker has a negative tone throughout
the poem and only talks about how Tom is happy, not himself. In “Songs of
Experience”, the narrator has no imagination and absolutely no hope at all for
the afterlife. The narrator now realizes that his own parents made him become a
chimney sweeper and that ruined his innocence and his imagination. Imagination is
being destroyed by child labor and what these kids have to go through.
Irony
is being portrayed in these poems to express how the chimney sweepers feel
about their horrible lives. In “Songs of Innocence” the narrator talks about Tom
and how Tom is dreaming of heaven. William Blake says, “Though the morning was
cold, Tom was happy and warm” (l. 23). This quote is ironic because Tom is a
chimney sweeper and he experiences very harsh child labor, yet he is happy and
he still has hope. It is ironic that Tom could still be happy and overlook
everything bad around him because he still has his imagination and innocence.
In “Songs of Experience”, Blake says, “They
clothed me in the clothes of death, / and taught me to sing the notes of woe”
(ll. 8-9). It is ironic that his own parents contributed to making him a
chimney sweeper and they were the ones who clothed him in the “clothes of death”.
Parents are supposed to take care of their child, so it is ironic that they are
the ones making their child miserable. In the last stanza of the poem “Songs of
Experience”, he says, “and because I am happy and dance and sing, / they think
they have done me no injury” (ll. 9-10). His parents think that he is happy
when he is really not. He talks about singing “notes of woe” which shows that
he is not singing happily, he is singing out of misery and his parents don’t even
know. It is ironic that his parents think he is okay and that they are in
church praising God because they think their son is happy when really he is completely
miserable.
In
“Chimney Sweeper: Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience” by William Blake,
he uses symbolism, children’s imagination, and irony to emphasize how the harsh
child labor in the Romantic Period is destroying children’s innocence. All
three of these tools show that the children’s innocence and childhood is slowly
degrading through their times as a chimney sweeper. Child labor has greatly
increased because of the Industrial Revolution which creates a loss of
innocence and a loss of the children having a childhood because of child labor.
-12 May 2013
ReplyDeleteINTRO: good thesis.Just make sure you cite the textbook
FIRST PARAGRAPH- innocence taken away by what? "“A little black thing among the snow” (l. 1). This quote shows that “the little black thing” is unrecognizable and doesn’t even look like a little boy. The boy is completely covered in soot that the adult doesn’t even know that “the little back thing” is a little boy." this is repetitive, what is the significance of saying that the boy is covered in soot and is unrecognizable? Add transition.
SECOND PARAGRAPH- add transition
THIRD PARAGRAPH- "the narrator talks about Tom and how Tom is dreaming of heaven" repeated Tom twice in the same sentence
-Ironic how his parents can be sitting in church praying for him, when they were the ones who put him out in the world with the gruesome job of a chimney sweeper at such a young age.
Conclusion- "Child labor has greatly increased because of the Industrial Revolution which creates a loss of innocence and a loss of the children having a childhood because of child labor." used child a lot in this sentence.
-Talk about how experience affects their innocence, for example the harsh experiences of the chimney sweeper's job has exposed these young children to the horrors of the Industrial revolution, destroying their innocence.