London William Blake Research Paper

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In spite of England’s tyrannical and destitute conditions, the Romantic era engendered many influential writers motivated to evoke reformation. The precursors of Romanticism included the French Revolution, the Industrial Revolution, and the widespread poverty and oppression that followed. Although many important essays and letters were written by the Romantics in support of social and economic reform, Romantic poets published profoundly influential poems reflecting the visible inequality subsequent to industrialization. Nowhere was this inequality more evident than in the slums of London. Unsurprisingly, romantic poets William Wordsworth and William Blake both wrote poems, adequately titled “London”. While the poems attack the issues of the era from different angles, their messages, like their title, are identical. …show more content…

Blake’s “London” is focused primarily on piquing the reader's visual interpretation of the state of London. Speaking as if he is writing the poem while walking down the streets he describes, Blake gives deep-seated descriptions of the corruption of London, but names no cause for it. Conversely, Wordsworth’s “London” attempts to ascertain the reasons for London’s fall from glory. Wordsworth begins his poem by calling for John Milton, a romantic’s hero, and then tells of the Englishman's divergence from prior nobility into the amoral people they have become. The defining difference of the two poems is that Blake’s work shows the reader the impoverished state of London, and Wordsworth’s poem tells the reader the cause and philosophy behind

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