London and undisturbed Upon Westminster Bridge
        In the poesy London, the condition, William Blake, differentiates the mishap of wretched people in London, such as chimneysweepers, soldiers and harlots, to announce the scene of exploitation and social injustice and to express his curse of the citys moral darkness with a melancholy t sensation. However, in Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, William Wordsworth portrays, in a delighted and tranquil tone, the beauty and peaceableness of a Londons morning seen from Westminster Bridge to show his love to the city and his yearning for peace. These two authors both embody their views in visual images, but they create totally different effects in tone and theme by the techniques of discourse choice and imagery.
In London, the author uses a lot of powerful repetition and words with connotations of suffering. For instance, the word chartered is used two times in the initiative two lines. This word alludes to even the streets and rivers suffering under semipolitical oppression, and the word hints at the sorry and dark life of chimneysweepers, soldiers and harlots in the following part of the poem, who are all poorly paid. In lines 3-4, the word mark is used three times to describe the facial expression of people. The marks are of weakness and woe, which shows the miserable feelings of the oppressed. The author writes what he sees in London, and establishes the somber tone of this poem in the first cardinal lines.
In the next stanza, the talker hears the misery of people in every cry, voice and ban. The four uses of the phrase in every emphasize the depth of the poor peoples misery, and mind-forged manacles reveals the great repression of the lowest classes by the church and the king in line 8. The author uses repeated words like...
The gramatical errors were so distressingly glaring in the note bit that I am sure the entire essay has been ripped off from some one else.
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