Prominent Themes of the Poem The Cry of the Children
by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Themes of "The Cry of the Children" - Analysis
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Themes in Elizabeth Barrett Browning's
"The Cry of the Children"

Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "The Cry of the Children" is a powerful social protest poem that explores several interwoven themes, each contributing to its devastating critique of industrial-era child labour. Written in 1843, the poem transcends its historical context to address universal concerns about innocence, exploitation, faith, and social justice.

1. The Destruction of Childhood and Innocence

The most immediate and heartbreaking theme is the complete destruction of childhood. Browning establishes this through stark contrast: the natural world contains young lambs bleating, birds chirping, fawns playing, and flowers blooming—all experiencing their natural, joyful development. Human children, however, weep bitterly during what should be their "playtime." Their innocence is not merely lost; it is actively crushed by labour that ages them prematurely. They speak with a weary wisdom beyond their years, viewing death as a merciful escape.

"They are weeping in the playtime of the others,
In the country of the free."

The poem argues that stealing childhood is a fundamental crime against nature and humanity, creating beings who are "weary ere they run" and who possess "the grief of man, without its wisdom."

2. Industrialization as Dehumanizing Force

Browning presents the machinery of the Industrial Revolution not as progress but as a dehumanizing monster. The factories and mines consume children physically and spiritually. The relentless "iron wheels" become a symbol of this system—they drone, turn, and dominate every aspect of the children's existence. The poet masterfully uses kinetic imagery to show how the machines colonize the children's very perception.

"All are turning, all the day, and we with all! —
And all day, the iron wheels are droning;
And sometimes we could pray,
'O ye wheels,' (breaking out in a mad moaning)
'Stop ! be silent for to-day !'"

The children are reduced to extensions of the machine, their humanity erased by repetitive motion and noise. Their plea is a cry for a moment of human stillness in the mechanical storm.

3. The Corruption of Faith and Religion

A profound and complex theme is the corruption of religious faith by economic exploitation. When advised to pray, the children respond with devastating logic: if the factory masters (created in God's image) ignore their suffering, and if human prayers cannot be heard over the wheels' noise, how can God hear them?

"They answer, 'Who is God that He should hear us,
While the rushing of the iron wheels is stirred?'"

Their faith has been shattered by experience. They only remember "Our Father" as a "charm" whispered at midnight, not as a lived relationship. Browning suggests that social sin creates theological crisis: when those representing God's image on earth are cruel, belief in heavenly goodness becomes impossible.

4. Societal Hypocrisy and Complicity

The poem directly attacks societal hypocrisy, particularly that of a "Christian nation" that tolerates such brutality. Britain, the "country of the free" and "happy Fatherland," is revealed as a "cruel nation" that builds its empire "on a child's heart." The comfortable citizens ("my brothers") who might read the poem are implicated in this system through their indifference.

"How long," they say, "how long, O cruel nation,
Will you stand, to move the world, on a child's heart?"

Browning challenges the reader's morality, asking how they can enjoy their freedoms while children suffer underground. The theme extends to questioning all forms of privilege that depend on others' exploitation.

5. Death as Preferable to Life

One of the poem's most disturbing themes is the inversion of natural instincts, where death becomes preferable to life. For these children, the grave represents rest and peace, unlike their waking torment. Little Alice, dead and buried, is envied because she never cries and has "the smile has time for growing in her eyes."

"It is good when it happens," say the children,
"That we die before our time!"

This perverse longing highlights the extremity of their suffering. When children see early death as "good," society has failed catastrophically. Their acceptance of death represents the ultimate theft of future and hope.

6. The Power of Silent Suffering vs. Loud Protest

The concluding theme concerns the nature of protest and moral consequence. The poem suggests that "the child's sob curseth deeper in the silence / Than the strong man in his wrath." This challenges conventional ideas about power and resistance.

"But the child's sob curseth deeper in the silence
Than the strong man in his wrath!"

The silent, accumulated suffering of the innocent carries a moral and spiritual weight that may ultimately be more transformative—and damning to the oppressor—than open rebellion. It's a warning about historical justice: societies that build on such suffering inherit a moral rot that may eventually undermine them.

7. The Failure of Romantic Idealism

Browning subtly critiques Romantic idealism that offers nature as a solution to industrial ills. When the poet-speaker suggests the children go to meadows, pluck flowers, and laugh like birds, the children dismiss this as irrelevant to their reality.

"But they answer, 'Are your cowslips of the meadows
Like our weeds anear the mine?'"

This exchange highlights how empty sentimental solutions are when confronting systemic exploitation. Real change requires addressing power structures, not just recommending fresh air.

8. Economic Exploitation as Spiritual Catastrophe

Finally, the poem frames economic exploitation as a spiritual catastrophe. The children aren't just physically exhausted; their souls are damaged. Created to grow "sunward" toward God and goodness, they instead "spin on blindly in the dark."

"And the children's souls, which God is calling sunward,
Spin on blindly in the dark."

The industrial system doesn't just steal their labour; it steals their spiritual potential. They become "martyrs, by the pang without the palm"—suffering without the glory or meaning of true martyrdom.

Conclusion

In conclusion, "The Cry of the Children" weaves these themes into a cohesive indictment. Browning shows how industrial capitalism doesn't merely exploit bodies but dismantles the very foundations of childhood, faith, and human dignity. The poem's enduring power lies in its recognition that how a society treats its most vulnerable—especially its children—is the ultimate measure of its civilization. These themes remain urgently relevant wherever children's welfare is sacrificed for economic gain, making the poem not just a historical document but a continuing moral challenge.

Sources Consulted for this Thematic Analysis

  • Primary Text:
    Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. "The Cry of the Children." Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol. 54, No. 333, August 1843, pp. 260-262.
  • Biographical and Historical Context:
    Forster, Margaret. Elizabeth Barrett Browning: A Biography. Chatto & Windus, 1988.
    "The 1842 Royal Commission on Children's Employment (Mines)." Reports from Commissioners: Children's Employment, Vol. XV-XVII, 1842.
    Altick, Richard D. Victorian People and Ideas. W.W. Norton & Company, 1973.
  • Literary Criticism and Analysis:
    Stone, Marjorie. Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Macmillan, 1995.
    Mermin, Dorothy. Elizabeth Barrett Browning: The Origins of a New Poetry. University of Chicago Press, 1989.
    "The Cry of the Children: Analysis." Poetry Foundation.
    Blake, Kathleen. "Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Wordsworth: The Romantic Poet as a Woman." Victorian Poetry, Vol. 24, No. 4, 1986, pp. 387-398.
  • Thematic and Philosophical Frameworks:
    Analysis draws upon concepts in sociology of religion, ethics, and social justice theory regarding systemic injustice, moral authority, and power dynamics.