In this poem, Blake criticizes religious and governmental authority. He mentions the "Harlot's curse" in the final stanza. This refers to the spread of syphilis as a venereal disease in London at this time. When men would visit prostitutes, they would risk contracting syphilis. This would then lead to the potential for the man to give the disease to his wife and perhaps his own children. The "Infant's tear" refers to the resulting blindness of contracting the disease. But note that Blake is more critical of the sexual repression caused by church authority than he is critical of the man who cheats on his wife.
Since this poem outlines authorial oppression, Blake is trying to show how every individual is subject to certain dangers. The soldier risks his life for the greed of the royal leaders. So, in the second stanza, Blake repeats "every" to emphasize how every person is controlled and manipulated by their governmental and religious leaders. In every man, child, and ban (strict laws and/or religious oppression), he hears the "mind-forg'd manacles." The notion that the people's minds are manacled (chained) shows how each and "every" one of them are controlled by these institutions.
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