Tuesday, November 12, 2019
Mr. Blakeââ¬â¢s views on Upon Westminster Bridge :: Westminster Bridge Poetry Essays
Mr. Blakeââ¬â¢s views on Upon Westminster Bridge     I read Mr Wordsworthââ¬â¢s poem. I was dismayed by his views on London. I  was horrified when I read the first line. ââ¬Å"Earth has not anything to  show more fair,â⬠ I believed he would have experienced beautiful views  since he was brought up in the Lake District. He obviously has not  seen London in 1794. I have lived in London for many years of my life.  I have seen people in poverty from the poorest parts of London to  people in mansions the richest places. One day I was walking through  the streets of London and it sprung upon me to write a poem. This is  my view on the real London. I opened the poem with the line ââ¬Å"I wonder  through each chartered streetâ⬠     I used this word wandered to make it seem as if I was freely roaming  the streets not knowing where I was or where I was going. As if I was  lost down the back streets of London. Chartered street carryââ¬â¢s the  mark of changed and revolutionised London. All the streets seemed dull  and grim and had something mysterious about them.    My second line was on the same theme as the first line first from it  id talking about the Thames!    ââ¬Å"Near where the chartered Thames does flow,â⬠ in the first draft of  this poem I wrote dirty Thames instead of ââ¬Å"chartered Thames.â⬠ I  changed because I felt that it would have more effect. Everywhere is  dirty in London, but I am trying to say that everywhere is dull and  grim; also as you are walking through the streets it is like deja vu.  One of the most distinct things about London is how the people look  and feel. My next two lines are,    ââ¬Å"And mark in every face I meet marks of weakness marks of woeâ⬠    As l walked though the streets I could see no one was smiling. I  actually felt sorry for some people. Nearly every person I met looked  ill or suffered from malnutrition due to over working, low income, no  food and poor living space. I used this stanza to emphasize my views  and to make it sound more obvious, to paint a picture in the readers  mind    ââ¬Å"In every cry of everyman ââ¬Å" this next stanza is very strong and  meaningful. A crying man is not often heard. Unless he is under real  distress. Suffering is a very big theme in the street of London  everywhere you walk you can see it in the stanza, I started the first  three lines with ââ¬Å"in everyâ⬠ to emphasize my point.  					    
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