Blake London Storyboard Mohammed Rayyan 6/10/20

Luo Kuvakäsikirjoitus
Kopioi tämä kuvakäsikirjoitus
Blake London Storyboard Mohammed Rayyan 6/10/20
Storyboard That

Luo oma kuvakäsikirjoitus

Kokeile ilmaiseksi!

Luo oma kuvakäsikirjoitus

Kokeile ilmaiseksi!

Kuvakäsikirjoitus Teksti

  • In stanza one, the word "Wander," arrays that William Blake is describing the faces of the forlorn and impoverished people that were begging for food and stole from other people. William Blake walked in an aimless way to show how the people of London were deteriorating from the inanition of the people of London.
  • When the poet uses repetition for "In every," the poet hears this pain too, in the cries men as well as those of fearful newborn babies. In every voice in the city, in every law or restriction London places on its population, the poet can sense people's feelings of being oppressed by city life.
  • When the writer says "in every ban, the mind-forged manacles I hear," he means in every law or restriction London places on its population, the speaker can sense people's feelings of being oppressed by city life.
  • When Blake says "How the Chimney-sweepers cryevery blackening Church appalls," he means that the speaker hears the cry of young chimney-sweeps, whose misery brings shame on the Church authorities.
  • When William Blake says "Runs in blood down Palace walls," he means that he imagines their blood running down the walls of a palace.
  • The quote "But most thro' midnight streets I hear how the youthful Harlots curse," he means that most of all, the speaker hears the midnight cries of young prostitutes, who swear and curse at their situation.
Yli 30 miljoonaa kuvakäsikirjoitusta luotu