Explore the themes of power and conflict used in the poem 'London' By William Blake example answer

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  • Created by: kkk02
  • Created on: 03-03-17 14:34

William Blake consistently uses language and punctuation to depict an image of supremacy within the monarchy and the government unanimously throughout the era of romanticism, combining this with a sense of fear and conflict using various different language techniques.

The use of the adjective "Chartered" is ambiguous and goes against control and ownership. It may express the political and economic control that Blake considered London to be enduring at the time of his work. However, "chartered" could also mean "freighted" and may refer to the overburdened streets and rivers or to the licensed trade carried on within them, this may correspond with the next line where it elucidates that it is ‘near where the chartered Thames does flow,’ illustrating that my earlier point has a level of validity.

It is said that the government controls and monitors society due to their prior knowledge of the peoples naivety and their unwillingness to have a different perception than common society – no ambition. For the peasants in London, for that was what the government

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