Thursday, November 19, 2015

Blog Post #13: Paired Poem FRQ Revision

Revision

In "The Chimney Sweeper," William Blake illustrates the disillusionment of life as a chimney sweep, using two paired poems. Although the first poem depicts a young sweep’s optimistic view of his life, the second displays an experienced, bitter view. Blake uses shifts in rhyme scheme, allusions to religion, and contrasting tones to depict the morbid reality of life as a chimney sweep.


In the first poem, the rhyme scheme is aabb. This rhyme scheme is very typical and parallels a nursery rhyme, adding to the hopeful and optimistic tone. However, this rhyme scheme shifts slightly in the final stanza to a slant rhyme. This shift draws attention to the final line, “so if all do their duty, they need not fear harm” (24). This emphasizes the irony in the 1789 poem; the character is hopeful and optimistic, but in reality, their lives are destined for grief. This rhyme scheme is repeated in the second poem, but not entirely. In the second stanza of the 1794 poem, the rhyme scheme shifts to abab. This shift in rhyme scheme creates a distinction between the two poems, allowing the readers to separate them. However, when the rhyme scheme shifts, so does the author's perspective towards chimney sweeping. This shift in rhyme scheme suggests organized innocence and rebellion. The lines with abab rhyme scheme present a disillusioned view of being a chimney sweep; before, the reader "need not fear harm" (24), but in the abab rhyme scheme, the reader believes "they have done me...injury" (10). No longer conforming to the usual aabb rhyme scheme, the sweep is not only rebelling against their predetermined destiny of a difficult life as a sweep, but also using the tenth line to identify those who did wrong to them -- their parents and those in authority.This poem’s disillusioned bitterness towards chimney sweeping is further emphasized through the use of allusions to religion in the poem.

Blake depicts the main character's disillusionment with chimney sweeps through the role of religion in each poem. In the first poem, the character's innocence is revealed through the death of the other chimney sweeps. Blake introduces an Angel who opens the coffins of the dead children and sets "them all free" (14). The Angel also tells a child, Tom, that if he is an obedient chimney sweep, "he'd have God for his father" (20). In both of these lines, it is obvious that the innocent chimney sweeps view their jobs as means to achieving salvation, or being rewarded by God.  This suggests a trust toward the higher authority in their lives. Their belief towards the role of religion is drastically different in the second poem. Written five years later, the second poem illustrates an angry, more hateful child. The main character refers to God and religion as making "up a heaven of our misery" (12). This perspective is drastically different because it suggests a negative connotation towards their faith. In the first poem, God and Heaven are the reward, whereas in the second poem, God and Heaven are instead looked at with misery and anger.

The child's disillusionment in the second poem is emphasized with Blake's choice of words. In the first poem, words have a positive, innocent connotation; the children, although dead, are "free" and his friend, Tom, is "happy & warm" (23). Although the characters are in a terrible situation, they do not realize it, instead believing that "they need not fear harm" (24). Blake's choice of these words suggests that the characters are very innocent, because they do not understand their predicament. In the second poem, however, the words have a darker connotation. The children are taught to cry "in notes of woe" and are clothed in "clothes of death (7-8). They point out that although on the outside they mirror themselves in the first poem--appearing "happy" and dancing and singing--on the inside, they are filled with misery and vengeance. The children say that their parents "think they have done me no injury" (10). This reveals the complexity in the disillusionment of the children; although they appear unaffected and happy on the outside, they have become filled with dark misery on the inside. Blake's writing of these two poems depicts the change in the chimney sweeps as they grow up.

Although both poems are centered upon the subject of chimney sweeping, they present two drastically different outlooks. The first poem is naive, illustrating an innocent perspective towards the death and difficulty of chimney sweeping through consistent rhyme scheme, allusions to religion, and diction with positive connotation. In the second poem, on the other hand, the shift in rhyme scheme and negative connotation of religion and the words used reflect a darker perspective towards chimney sweep, revealing the reality of the childrens' lives as chimney sweeps. Blake's poems are binary contrasts, the first representing innocence and trust towards God, and the second representing a disillusioned perspective that is more hateful, and negative. Still, the final lines of the second poem reflect a different view. Although the first is mostly innocent and the second is mostly experienced, the end of the second poem suggests organized innocence. The second poem retells the difficulties in being a chimney sweep. However, the final stanza, "they think they have done me no injury" suggests that the children are not only coming to terms with the reality of their life, but identifying those who are responsible for their situation. By acknowledging that their parents placed them in the situation, they begin to look at not only chimney sweeping, but their parents, with disdain. This suggests that the children feel more than simply innocence or disillusionment; their organized innocence suggests that they are prepared to rebel against their predicament.

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