Answer: A. Blake is outraged by the fact that families allow and encourage child labor.
Explanation:
In this poem by William Blake, he hopes to expose the corrupting influences of the Church on families as they lead families away from providing the best they can for their children and instead condoning child labor with the Chimney sweepers being the focus.
Blake is outraged that the families cannot see what they are doing to their children by putting religion above the children's happiness and instead pushing them to engage in child labor.
Hey there!
We can assume her falling down the stairs was an accident and technically we can blame Ana for it. If not an accident, say that there was some water leaking from a pipe that went on the stairs or someone was cleaning them and left some hazardous slippery chemicals- that would be a violation of basic workplace standards.
However, our real problem here is Ron. He picks up Ana, and instead of calling someone who could help or seeing if someone else had a first aid kit, he uses a paper towel. The problem with this is that the cut could get infected because the paper towel may have bacteria on it. This is the main violation.
Hope this helps
Answer:
The speaker asks the wind to “make me thy lyre,” to be his own Spirit, and to drive his thoughts across the universe, “like withered leaves, to quicken a new birth.” He asks the wind, by the incantation of this verse, to scatter his words among mankind, to be the “trumpet of a prophecy.”