Sunday, February 3, 2019
Comparing the Two Pictures of London, Illustrated by Wordsworth and Bla
Comparing the Two Pictures of capital of the United Kingdom, Illustrated by Wordsworth and Blake in Their Two Poems The two poems portrait London by Wordsworth and Blake are in some ways alike(p) and further have many differences. Both observations of London are envisioned by the poets personal perspectives of London using individual experiences. We can ensure that twain poems are from the persons interpretations and experiences as they are said in the number 1 person Neer saw I in Wordswoths poem and I wonder finished each chartered street in Blakes. Both poems are well(p) structured and use emphatic language. Upon Westminster Bridge is a Petrachran sonnet which expresses strong emotion. It depicts his rejoice and awe of a beautiful urban center that is sleeping. It comes across as genuinely optimistic with only positive things to say. The elation is built up through the sonnet using rhyme and emphatic language ... a cool it so deep and simile s are used that portray an underlying substructure This metropolis now doth, like a garment, wear. I think this is where the offshoot look at the poem is not enough to fully bag Wordsworths meaning. Blakes poem at first glance is very much the enemy it too uses emphatic language and builds up the feeling through the quatrains which award his thoughts to progress yet the feeling and emotional outbursts are of a tout ensemble different nature. This poem seems pessimistic and has only gloom and negative points mentioned. In every cry of every man is different to Wordsworths depiction of serenity, beauty and take root A sight so touching in its majesty. The River Thames is used in both poems but is illustrated differently.... ...hat people are trapped in their social spatial relation but it is only in the mind and thoughts can be changed it isnt yet a physical state. This leaves us with optimism of change. Wordsworth although his poem is very opt imistic the ridicule is that it is only captured in one moment. His depiction is not typical. He duologue about London being this beautiful thing but he is talking form the panoramic view above it all and more than that he is talking whilst London is asleep leaving us to mean that it will be different, more like Blakes poem once London re-awakens. He talks from a moment in the revolution where This city now doth, like a garment, wear implying it is superficial and normally the city isnt like that. So when looking deeper in to both poems there is an ironical ulterior meaning there which connect the two.
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