1. "Get thee back into the tempest and the Night's Plutonian shore!" (Plutonian alludes to the Roman god of the underworld)
2. "On the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door." (Pallas alludes to a Greek titan god)
Answer:
Yes thats the right answer
Explanation:
D. Oscar studied Dr. Frost's article and summarized it in his own words
Answer:
Childlike trust.
Explanation:
The poem "Chimney Sweeper" written by William Blake is one of the poems in his "Songs of Experience", a collection of poems. This poem details the lives and experiences of children born in poverty, working as chimney sweepers and finding contention in themselves.
Personally, the poet protests the societal issues like child labor and poverty prevalent in the society, but the narrator of the poem seems to find happiness in himself. The child narrator writes that even through all the pain and suffering that Tom endured working as a chimney sweeper, he "was happy and warm". This is the childlike innocence, trust that everything will be alright if they do their duty.
Thus, this claim by the child narrator is an ironic expression of his childlike trust, the blind faith/ belief that everything will get better and well for them.