Final answer:
The child speaker in 'The Chimney Sweeper' poem from Songs of Experience has a more cynical perspective compared to the narrator in the Songs of Innocence poem.
Step-by-step explanation:
The perspective of the child speaker in the poem 'The Chimney Sweeper' from Songs of Experience differs from the perspective of the narrator in the poem from Songs of Innocence in that the child speaker in Songs of Experience has a more cynical perspective. The words 'clothes of death' and 'notes of woe' suggest that the child in Songs of Experience is aware of his own exploitation, unlike the child in Songs of Innocence. Additionally, the words 'happy upon the heath' and 'smiled among the winter’s snow' imply that the child in Songs of Experience is putting on a show of happiness when he is actually suffering, which shows that this child is capable of deception, unlike the child in Songs of Innocence.