Why a Certified Chimney Sweep is Better A fireplace can provide your home with many hours of warmth, and you may have endless fond memories of relaxing in front of it on cold days and nights. However, basic upkeep is essential if you want to keep your abode and its inhabitants safe. As reported at ABC15 Arizona, if you don’t have your chimney cleaned on a regular basis, it could catch fire due to “soot buildup, debris, and even animal nests”. According to News Guardian, your household could also
When one thinks of Chimney Sweeps, the first thing that often comes to mind is the romanticized version of them that the media holds today. Mainly due to Disney’s Mary Poppins, people think of young men who played in the soot and had a fun time goofing off and working cheerfully. Sadly, this is not the picture that history paints. Chimney Sweeps were young boys, often too young to even speak fully, who were forced to climb down chimneys - some of which would remain lit in the process, burning any
primarily on the two poems titled “The Chimney Sweeper”. In his response to the innocent version, he says that, “the boy explains that he was sold by his father after the death of his mother. The reader, too, becomes implicated in his exploitation: ‘So your chimneys I sweep’ (my italics), he declares, though the suggestion is Blake’s; the speaker seems unaware of his own degradation. Central to the poem is the dual contrast between the grim realities of the sweeps’ lives and the ecstatic vision of liberty
imagine his/her age? social standing? "The Chimney Sweeper" 1. Who is the speaker and what do you know about his age and background? The speaker is a young boy who sweeps chimneys. The speaker’s mother died when he was very young. The speaker was then sold by his father before he could speak properly and since then has been cleaning chimneys and living homeless. 2. To whom is he speaking and why? The speaker is speaking to a boy who is new to chimney cleaning. The new comer may be a bit nervous
The dangers and widespread injustice of the chimney sweeping profession caught William Blake’s attention, causing him to compose two similar works titled, ‘The Chimney Sweep.’ The first belonged to the book ‘Songs of Innocence’ published 1789 and the second, to ‘Songs of Innocence and Experience’ published in 1793. Both poems show the joys of childhood innocence as the main subject. It highlights how childhood innocence was destroyed, taken away or ruined by adults. Blake saw innocence as a joke
In the “Chimney Sweep” poems “Experience” and “Innocence” the tone is Loneliness and Madness because of the pain and harsh life they were living as children because of the disaster that burned out the whole city in London in 1875. These poems describe the feelings that the children carried every single day as chimney sweepers workers. There is differences and similarities by both poems and i will be describing in the following paragraphs . At the same time that in poems experience and innocence
showed the audience through his poems, that he believes in innocence and the body of God itself, and all of God’s creations. One of the few examples are, “The Lamb,” “The Tyger,” and “The Chimney Sweeper.” The poem, “The Chimney Sweeper,” was narrated by one of the children that worked as a chimney sweeper. In the beginning of the poem, the child gives us an introduction of his early life on how his mother died when he was younger, and that his father sold him. The name of the child
The dangers and widespread injustice of the chimney sweeping profession caught William Blake’s attention, causing him to compose two similar works titled, ‘The Chimney Sweep.’ The first belonged to the book ‘Songs of Innocence’ published in the year 1789 and the second, to ‘Songs of Innocence and Experience’ published just four years after; 1793. Both poems show the joys of childhood innocence as the main subject. It highlights how childhood innocence was destroyed, taken away or ruined by adults
for a cozy evening, there is nothing more frustrating than a smoking fireplace. Jeff Thomas of Thomas Chimney Sweep in Jefferson County, IL has more than 35 years of experience cleaning and repairing chimneys. He says smoking fireplaces are more than just an annoyance; they are often an indication of a chimney problem that needs to be addressed. Below, he explains three common reasons that chimneys are unable to effectively remove smoke from fireplaces. Closed or Broken Damper: When your fireplace
In the poems by “william Blake” they are both talking on the same subject matter of Chimney Sweepers and how they feel about their situation, they also both use elements of a dark and light tone in their poems but address it differently and end different from each other. The poem “ from songs of Innocence” the overall feel of the story is bittersweet. At the beginning of the poem, it starts off in a very dark place “When my mother died I was very young” and towards the middle they’re is a tone
In a time when people are often exposed to deceptive practices facilitated by the anonymity and impulsiveness of the internet, Jenny Holzer presents her work featuring an extensive list of truisms which addresses an equally extensive range of topics. While at face value, the work could be dismissed as a simple series of rhetoric, the sophistication in Jenny Holzer’s truisms as art manifests from its presentation and methodology. Holzer maintains a delicate balance between chaos and continuity and
Chimney sweepers are known as bringing clean, and fresh air back to the home. Moreover, in literature, movie and artwork, child sweepers are portrayed as the cheerful young apprentices with older sweeps. But the truth is a huge difference in the history. Many orphans and children were forced into labors at an early age. In addition, these child labors were treated poorly while they were working for long hours as chimney boys. In his book The Songs of Innocence and The Songs of Experience
In the 18th century, the treatment of children was despicably terrible and absolutely different from what it is today. Children were forced to sweep chimneys; they were not forced as slavers, they were forced as a convenience to the adults simply because they were small enough to where they could easily fit in the chimney and sweep it out. Due to this, the children life expectancy dropped tremendously because of the black soot they took into their lungs on a daily basis. William Blake, a poet, wrote
conditions, the lifespan of Victorian Chimney sweeps rarely made it to middle age. William Blake wrote two poems in the 1700’s recounting the lives of the poor kids who worked as chimney sweepers. Even though being written along similar premises, the two poems differ drastically as well. Although both poems contain similar diction, a constant theme, and imagery the point of view and tone are remarkably different. The point of view of the first poem was of a young chimney sweeper, while the second was of
Conflict is a big theme and many poems and texts have been written on this topic, but two of the most well done and most expressive poems about this topics are “Out of the Blue” and “The Charge of the Light Brigade”. Even though the topic is the same the two authors, Simon Armitage and Alfred, Lord Tennyson, present the theme with different approaches, one about the innocent, one about the ones that chose to get involved In the conflict. The first poem, “Out of the blue”, is about the terrorist acts
In his poems Blake uses imagery and diction to contrast how children meet adversity with naive hope while adults meet adversity with delusion and denial. In the 1789 version of “Chimney Sweeper,” Blake describes the situation through the eyes of a child. He invokes sympathy from the reader by creating images of a poor young boy slaving away and sleeping in “soot” (Blake 4). To show how the boys are mistreated, Blake dehumanizes one boy by comparing him to an animal. The comparison of the boy to a
In the 1700’s there lived a very specific and dangerous line of work in Britain. These were chimney sweeps. Young children, mostly boys saw themselves sold by parents of guardians and taken as apprentices to these chimney sweep “masters”. In “The Chimney Sweeper” (Songs of innocence and Experience) we will explore the lives and Tone of such young men who had the displeasure of being such and apprentice. The first of the two is the “Songs of innocence” where we explore the living quarters and thought
famous poems is known as “The Chimney Sweeper”. The theme of this poem is innocence. The kids have been robbed of their innocence. They get up before dawn and is forced to live a “black” life, covered in soot and facing a premature death. They can only play and frolic in their dreams. The poem itself describes the time that Blake lived in. The poem is a harsh justifiable critique of child labor. Children just as young as 4 years old were being trained to sweep chimneys and it could cause them to get
speakers of the “The Chimney Sweeper” poems are fairly ambiguous, but their levels of experience and innocence are quite apparent. Also, I think think that the age of the narrators (generally) are clear. For example, I think the poem’s narrator in “Songs of Innocence” is a child. From what I know, chimney sweeps were mostly small boys (they fit in the chimney easier), and the poem’s narration is a first person recollection of being a chimney sweep. For example: “So your chimneys I sweep and in soot I sleep”
introduces the speaker in which invited us to follow a story of a child who has been forced after his mother died into the most dangerous occupation of chimney sweeper. He was barely able to speak or at least not able to pronounce the word “sweep”. Most of the little boys were sold out and forced to be a chimney sweepers. They were forced to clean the chimney from the soot that is why they die early because the inhaled unclean air and soot which caused them different killing diseases, such as tuberculosis