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“The Chimney Sweeper”
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Who is the speaker of the poem? The speaker is a chimney sweeper whose mother died when he was 4 or 5. His father sold him to a chimney sweep before he could even talk.
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Rhyming quatrains of anapestic and iambic tetrameter. 1st line of the poem: When my moth /er died / I was ve /ry young 1 st and 3 rd are u u / (unstressed, unstressed, stressed) which is… anapest
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When my moth /er died / I was ve /ry young The 2 nd and 3 rd feet are u / (unstressed, stressed) or… Iambic Blake likes to do this in his poems!
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1 st Stanza is… AA BB When we have rhyming lines like these, they are called Couplets In the sixth stanza, the rhymes are not exact. They are called slant rhymes.
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The first stanza tells the tale of the chimney sweeper. The second stanza introduces his friend Tom Dacre. Why does Blake compare Tom’s hair to a lamb? A lamb is young and innocent like these chimney sweepers. Line 8 – read again. What could it symbolize? Soot = something black and dirty that could corrupt white hair = innocence
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Tom’s vision Why did Blake use these particular names? They could be anyone; they are generic names. Line 12 “Were all of them” what is the purpose of confusing the diction here? To show that it is a child speaking. Imagery of line 12 – What is black, and dark that the boys are boxed in now? Chimneys Just like a coffin – This could foreshadow their death as well. Coffins also are a metaphor for their current state of affairs.
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This is more uplifting – an angel arrives with a bright key. This could be allusion to Matthew 16:19 where Jesus gives Peter the keys to the kingdom of heaven. The last two lines show the children acting as children should.
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First line – What does it symbolize? Their bag of tools are gone and so is their burden.
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Slant rhyme Why is he happy to go to work? He believes if he does his duty he will be free of harm.
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Who is the speaker? There are two! One is a man who spots the child in the snow, and the other is the child.
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18 th century England; winter
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What is the meter (mostly)? Iambic tetrameter Line 6 is a perfect example: And smil’d / a mong / the win /ter’s snow But this is Blake so nothing is that simple.
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Line 1 A litt /le black / What is the meter? First two are iambs (daDUM) thing among Meter? DA dum - trochee
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And taught - this is a(n)… Iamb Me to sing – this is Anapest And finally The notes/of woe iamb
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In the first like there is an immediate contrast – what is it? A black thing AND snow What is the black THING? Child What is the rhyme scheme? AABB – this is called… Rhyming couplet
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The rhyming couplet makes the poem “sing- songy” like a nursery rhyme but what is the poem about? Child labor In lines 3 and 4 it’s dialogue
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What is the rhyme scheme? CACA What is the imagery in line 7? What are the clothes of death?
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What are the parents like? How do we know? Read lines 11 and 12 again. What do these 2 lines mean? Who is to blame for his suffering? God, church, and the government
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