In Blake's "London," references to "mind-forged manacles" and "the hapless soldier's sigh" highlight the impact of societal oppression and injustice. These references align with Romantic ideas about childhood as a time of innocence and vulnerability, suggesting that the corruption and suffering in society can negatively affect children's well-being and development. The poem reflects the Romantics' concern for the welfare of children and their belief in the importance of preserving innocence in the face of societal ills.
London
Sex on the beach
Cathrine Parr spent her childhood in London
i like turtles<3333
London - England UK
Leicester Square in London was Where he spent his childhood.
In his childhood he lived in Romford, London
Leicester Square in London was Where he spent his childhood.
What was Jack Lodon's childhood like
the city as a place of misery and sin
Paris, Rome, New York, Venice, London
The references to Camdon Town which is on the edge of the city, the use of the Corn Exchange which is still a building in use in London, the references to many of the streets which were and are still in london and the quote in Stave one "also that Scrooge had as little of what is called fancy about him as any man in the City of London"