In William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience, the poems “The Lamb” and “The Tyger” are companion poems. Together, the two poems showcase one of Blake’s five main themes- childhood innocence can be dominated by evil after experience has brought an awareness of evil. With the lamb representing childhood and the tiger representing evil, Blake’s poems “The Lamb” and “The Tyger” focus on childhood and what people become after they grow and experience life.…
The Tyger, written in 1974, is one of both simplicity and mystery. Within this poem written by old English William Blake, there are 13 full questions within this short 24 line work. Though many literary analysts have attempted to forge a meaning from this work, not one theme has a more correct stance than any of the others. One clear symbol within the piece is the Tyger, who represents some form of evil entity, quite possibly Satan himself. One possibility for the theme is that the poet is questioning why God would create such an evil being. This can be exemplified in the first stanza and last stanzas, where the word “could” is changed to “dare”, implying a fear of such haunting creature.…
On November 28, 1757, one of the most eminent poets from the Romantic period was born. William Blake, the son of a successful London hosier, only briefly attended school since most of the education he received was from his mother. He was a very religious man and almost all of his poems enclose some reference to God. “Night” by William Blake is part of a larger compilation of poems called Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience. This collection of poems, published in 1789, depicts innocence and experience. “Night” dramatizes the conflict between heaven and earth.…
These two portrayals contrast the diction of both poems. Blake's poem describes God's creation with fiercer diction, while Notley's poem describes the Goddess's creation with softer and more picturesque diction. Since "The Tyger" is about a masculine God, male-oriented words are utilized to stress the power of God such as "dread," "sinews," and "anvil." The words are considered fierce because they paint a picture of a God capable of anything. God's shoulders are mentioned because shoulders emphasize the strength of male authority. Words that are more feminine in Notley's poem are "colors", "dreams", and "beautiful". These words are softer because women are considered daintier than men. The Goddess's "voice & wrist & smile" focus on the feminine beauty of a woman, and the importance of beauty in these features emphasizes the beauty in the Goddess's creation. The difference in the sex of the creator causes the poems to focus on distinct aspects of…
Like most protagonists starting out on their journey, Blake starts off naive and optimistic, but who wouldn't be when it's an opportunity to explore the world you live in, meet all kinds of new people and Pokemon, and realize what your dream in life is?…
The use of metaphor in poetry is one of the most important aspects of poetic style that must be mastered. Metaphor can be described as figure of speech in which a thing is referred to as being something that it resembles. For example, a fierce person can be referred to as a tiger. Another example of a metaphor would be the description of a person who was uncommunicative as being as "silent as stone". The word stone is an image that is used to explain the intense silence of the person. In this way, metaphors are used in poetry to explain and elucidate emotions, feelings, relationships other elements that could not to described in ordinary language. Poets also use metaphor as a way of explaining or referring to something in a brief but effective way.…
With his individual visions William Blake created new symbols and myths in the British literature. The purpose of his poetry was to wake up our imagination and to present the reality between a heavenly place and a dark hell. In his Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience he manages to do this with simplicity. These two types of poetry were written in two different stages of his life, consequently there could be seen a move from his innocence towards experience.…
The poem “The Tyger” by William Blake is from the song of Experience. This poem sends an evil tone through dark images, fearful words, symbols, and personification. The poem’s focus is the speaker questioning a terrifying tiger what kind of superior being could have made it.…
As English poets emerged in the eighteenth century, William Blake’s name became a topic of discussion. He was a well-known poet who had one eye on mystical visions and the other on the real social ills around him. The way he expressed his mystical vision side was through archetypes, plot patterns, character types, or ideas with emotional power and widespread appeal. These were sometimes viewed as ways to describe truths about humanity. “In archetypes, there is the Nurturer and the Warrior. Different kinds of strengths that, ideally, complement each other and are equally respected.” (Bishop) Some of his poems with the best examples were written in pairs, expressing each side of the archetype in separate poems. Blake uses outstanding archetypes in The Lamb, The Tyger, The Chimney Sweeper, and Infant Sorrow.…
What “immortal hand or eye” (3) could have created someone to be like this? It is believed God is part light and darkness due to the fact for creating such good people in the world but also putting others into it that give no help to society. Not only are we concerned with what made him but where was he made. What “distant deeps or skies”, (5) pertaining to Hell as the deeps and Heaven as the skies, was he made? He puts “distant” in there showing the reader that he was created somewhere far away that does not belong here. It continues into the next stanza questioning who made this Tyger. “What shoulder, & what art” (9) could have the strength to create something like this. The “art” is spoken about a type of work that was done to create this Tyger. It is considered art because of the complexity and how much meaning was put into creating it. The metaphors he uses in the poem, “hammer”, (13) “chain”, (13) “furnace”, (14) and “anvil” (15) are all devices that a blacksmith uses in order to form metal. Metal is hard and cold which can be interpreted about the personality of this Tyger. At this point in the poem we can tell Blake is becoming angry and wanting to know more about this person. The questions are being asked more and more, “What the hammer? What the chain? / (13) In what furnace was thy brain? / (14) What the anvil? What dread grasp /” (15) and the pace of the poem is picking up. He also uses his first exclamation point,…
William Blake’s poem “The Tyger” relies on diction, syntax, figurative language, and imagery to convey a tone of violent indignation. Through these elements, we can conclude that the poem’s theme is about how a tyrannical government can cause negative emotions in the people under their rule. The author’s choice of words, or diction, was used in the sentence, “dare seize fire”. The author’s use of these words triggers a feeling of danger, making the tone violent indignation.…
The poem The Tiger By William Blake is about one of nature’s most ferocious creatures, the tiger. The speaker wonders about who created the tiger, and how the tiger was created. “Did He who made the lamb make thee?” this it made the poem clear to me, that he was wondering about God and what divine power could have made such a thing as beautiful as the tiger.…
I wander through each chartered street, Near where the chartered Thames does flow, And mark in every face I meet Marks of weakness, marks of woe. In every cry of man, In every infant’s cry of fear, In every voice, in every ban, The mind-forged manacles I hear. How the Chimney-sweeper’s cry Every black’ning Church appalls; And the hapless Soldier’s sigh Runs in blood down the Palace walls. But most through midnight streets I hear How the youthful Harlot’s curse Blasts the new-born infant’s tear, And blights with plague the Marriage hearse. When the poem reads, “Runs in blood down Palace walls” and “Blasts the new-born infant’s tear”, there is a central conflict between life and death and innocence and experience. Life is created with the new-born baby, and as Blake views is born innocent. The blood running down the palace walls is a symbol of death, and how along with death comes experience in knowing the cruelties and the truths of the world. William Blake became a major pioneer for writing in his time, because he chose to make his own mythology and not conform to what the world wanted him to be, which “kept him more simply a poet than…
William Blake was a great poet, and visionary amongst many other things. He was fearless in putting real life situations and debates into his work of art. In his poems he secretly spoke a lot about spirituality. Blake was a rebel who associated with some of the most important radical thinkers of his times. In this paper, I will go more in depth on the poems "The Tyger and Lamb", by William Blake.…
He was the first philosopher of Ancient Greece and the founder of Western philosophy. Thales came from the seaport of Miletus. He was born around 620 BC who claimed that water is the fundamental nature of the world. He correctly predicted that there would be a solar eclise in 585 BC which was credited by Herodotus. He was also known as the first natural scientist and analytical philosopher in Western intellectual history. Aside from being a philosopher, Thales was also something of an entrepreneur. He believes that water was the first principle of life. He also professed that the flat earth floated on water. He thought that earth has buoyancy. He also claimed that earthquakes were due to the rockinng of the earth by subterranean waves.…