In the poem, the poet makes comparison of the children who have to work at a young age with the dreams that they have about their life with their real life.
<u>Explanation:</u>
"The chimney sweeper" is a poem written by William Blake. In the poem, the poet makes comparison of the life that the children have to spend who start working at a very young age with the dreams that they see of spending their lives.
The children want to laugh, run, enjoy, shine and play in their childhood. But in reality they are made to work hard. Their dreams are like locked and caught up in a coffin.
<span> don't think either are desirable alone or if the question is to an extreme where if one were extremely beautiful, they would also be extremely idiotic, or extremely smart but extremely ugly. </span><span>Smart is also a very broad adjective. People can have collective knowledge of just about anything. If I choose beauty, would I lack common sense or rationality? or would I just learn at a slower rate? If I choose smarts, would I just contain information without the understanding or ability to use and apply it? Knowledge without wisdom and understanding is useless.</span>
Answer: I believe it means to create/cause change within someone.
Explanation: Just what I remember.
I would say church attendance and sticking to rules of the church