Elizabeth Barrett Browning's The Cry Of The Children

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In "The Cry of the Children," by Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote this poem to describe the thoughts and wishes of the children paired with an outsider’s pleas with the public to change the lives and conditions of the children. Browning uses one theme in partictlar about politics, with the use of strong imagery, to draw her readers into the live of the children forced into working in the mines and factories of industrial England. Browning writen the poem in order to expose the horrific conditions under which these children are forced to live and die by using the psycholoical approach. In the first stanza of the poem, the reader is offered an idea of just how awful the conditions these children experience everyday are. Browning describes the children as, "weeping," and "they are leaning their young heads against their mothers, and that cannot stop their tears." Usually, children turn to their mothers for comfort and reassurance, especially at the worst of times. Mothers instinctively have the ability to "make it all better." Browning illustrates that what these children are put through is so terrible that even their mothers cannot offer them the reassurance that things will be ok. …show more content…

By doing as Browing hopes to gain their support in helping these children and saving them from their present living conditions. The poem describes how while "in the playtime of others," these children are crying. This sentence points out that the owners of the factories and mines, perhaps even the members of Parliament, are simply living their day to day lives, happy and care free, without regard for these children who are being taken advantage of. The people who have the power to stop the tears of these children from falling continue with their "playtime" without concern for these innocent

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