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Summary Of Blake's Songs Of Innocence And Experience By William Blake

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Of the poems and stories we’ve read up to this point the most captivating for me personally has to be the two Chimney Sweeper poems from William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience. These poems are incredibly moving in the way that they shed light on the lives of these young chimney sweeps and I think also serve as an important testimony to the horrible repercussions that this era of rapid industrialization had on the lives of contemporary England’s working poor. The hopelessness of these kid’s lives really hit home for me while watching the BBC documentary which did a perfect job of illustrating just how inhuman their working conditions were.
William Blake espoused the idea that there are two periods of our lives that we go through, childhood innocence that is eventually replaced by the experience of adulthood. The two chimney sweeper poems in Blake’s Songs are written within each of these states of consciousness, and are both able to capture the tragic nature of this industrial age. In the Experience version, we see a young child who harbors so much bitterness towards his parents who have left him behind to sweep chimneys, a kind of hell on earth, while they are off praying in church. This is a child who has already lost his innocence and has been forced to come to terms with the harsh world around him and resents how his parents are so ignorant of his suffering because he still has the strength to smile and dance despite his presumably daily suffering. And perhaps

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