The Chimney-Sweeper Innocence Flashcards

1
Q

My father sold me while yet my tongue could scarcely cry, ‘weep weep weep weep’

A
  • Blakes commentary on child labour and abuse
  • Link to the lamb
  • ‘weep weep weep weep’ audible description, auricula imagery
  • ‘scarcely’ -> emphasises the youngness of the child.
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2
Q

‘There’s little Tom Dacre’

A
  • ‘Tom Dacre’ -> full name which humanises him.
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3
Q

curled like a lamb’s back was shaved

A
  • Lamb imagery, reference to jesus? Sacrificial imagery
  • ‘shaved’ -> dehumanising, convenience with no nurture.
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4
Q

‘know that the soot cannot spoil your white hair.’

A
  • Contrasts of dark and light.
  • White has associations with purity
  • The innocence of the children cannot be tainted.
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5
Q

‘Thousands of sweepers, Dick, Joe, Ned, and Jack.’

A
  • ‘Thousands’ emphasises the enormity of the issue.
  • ‘Dick, Joe, Ned, and Jack.’ -> Monosyballic basic names represent everyone.
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6
Q

‘all of them locked up in coffins of black,’

A
  • Oppression imagery, the children are trapped.
  • ‘coffins’ emphasises the dangers of the job. Children are working to death.
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7
Q

‘an angel who had a bright key,’

A
  • ‘bright key’ –> a beacon of hope, light in the dark.
  • Angel is both the liberator and jailor, from one cage into another. Indoctrination.
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8
Q

‘opened the coffins and set them all free.’

A
  • Allusion to heaven. Heaven is where these hardworking children are promised to go.
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9
Q

‘Then down a green plain leaping, laughing they run, and wash in a river and shine in the sun.’

A
  • Natural imagery
  • Encapsulates the child’s innocence and showcases the lives these children should have had.
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10
Q

all their bags left behind,

A
  • Representation of their worries and troubles in life?
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11
Q

‘The angel told Tom if he’d be a good boy, He’d have God for father, and never want joy.’

A
  • These children must behave and sweep these chimney’s in order to get into heaven.
  • Blind Faith
  • Ventriloquist industrial voice.
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12
Q

‘We rose in the dark,’

A

‘we’ collective, the narrator is a chimney sweeper, Indoctrination.

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13
Q

‘So if all do their duty, they need not fear harm.’

A
  • Hopeful ending
  • Faith in god takes away the fear of death.
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14
Q

POV shift

A

Tom Dacre -> Omniscent narrator

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15
Q

So your chimneys I sweep and in soot I sleep

A
  • Direct address
  • Contributes to the overarching depiction of exploitation and brutality which instills underlining terror and fear in readers about the children who work as chimney sweepers.
  • ‘Soot’-> dark imagery.
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16
Q

Use of tense

A
  • Past and present
  • Child exploitation is an ongoing issue.
17
Q

Biblical allusions

A
  • Only rescuing can be done by mythical beings
  • No human is there to help the children.