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    Tyger and Lamb 1997 Poem

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    Tyger And Lamb 1997 poem Compare/ Contrast Venn Diagram You just read two poems by Williams Blake‚ “The Tyger” and “The Lamb”. Now‚ you are going to be asked to compare and contrast the two poems in a VENN DIAGRAM (see below). On the OGT test‚ you might be asked to compare and contrast two different pieces of literature. In order to do so‚ you must understand what compare/ contrast is. A graphic organizer‚ such as a Venn Diagram‚ will help you organize your thoughts.

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    Rebeka Barney May 3‚2012 Mrs Nunely English 102 MWF 11 am Lamb Vs Tyger! Grr.. “The Tyger” and “The Lamb” are poems written by William Blake. William was an English poet‚ painter‚ and printmaker. Though he was considered mentally unstable or “mad” by some contemporaries of his time‚ he was later held in high regard for his expressiveness and creativity. In both of these short poems‚ Blake poses rhetorical questions to make the reader think and reflect. He uses figurative language

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    Critical Analysis of The Tyger. The Tyger‚ by William Blake is a classical literary work. It has both deep theological meaning as well as cunning use of advanced literary technique to deliver its message to an audience through a series of cleverly written metaphors‚ rhyme and structure. This analysis will attempt to describe one of many possible motif’s Blake could have had while writing this poem. Blake’s Tyger is not‚ in the normal and familiar sense of the word‚ actually a Tiger. The poem

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    What Does The Tyger Mean

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    The Tyger is a poem by William Blake in which Blake examines the concept of suffering and how the creator could allow it to occur. This essay will discuss the concept of suffering in God’s universe‚ using The Tyger as a reference. One of the greatest mysteries of our existence is how God can allow the suffering of innocents. Daily we are bombarded with images of seemingly needless suffering‚ of children starving to death‚ diseases‚ war victims and car accidents. Why does God allow this to take place

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    What Does The Tyger Mean

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    Contrasting “The TYGER” and “The Lamb” Blake contrast the ideas of “THE TYGER” and “The Lamb” in his poems through the use of evident symbolism‚ changing the tone‚ and subtle metaphors. To contrast the poems “The Lamb” and “THE TYGER”‚ William Blake has many examples of symbolism. In “The Lamb”‚ Blake uses the lamb to symbolize God’s children and his son‚ Jesus. The lamb is being symbolized that God created mankind and that humans are his children. People are the lamb for him to watch over‚ “He

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    The Lamb & The Tyger William Blake “The Lamb” and “The Tyger” are two different poems written by William Blake‚ the first taken from the Songs of Innocence and the second taken from the Songs of Experience. Both poems follow an A-A-B-B rhyme scheme and both focus on the topic of religion. Many sources have recommended the reading of the two poems together and I‚ myself‚ found that it was an experiment worth trying. When I first read “The Lamb” I was sure that it would be a poem with Jesus

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    William Blake: the Tyger

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    William Blake: The Tyger analysis To understand "The Tiger" fully‚ you need to know Blake’s symbols. The title seems to be quite simple. It lets us know that the poem is about a tiger. So‚ we expect it to be just that‚ about a tiger. However‚ as we start reading‚ it becomes clear pretty quickly that this is not just any tiger. It could be a symbol Blake uses to make a far deeper point than something like tigers are scary. It is one of the poem of his collection named: songs of experience. The

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    The poem begins with the speaker asking a fearsome tiger what kind of divine being could have created it: “What immortal hand or eye/ Could frame they fearful symmetry?” Each subsequent stanza contains further questions‚ all of which refine this first one. From what part of the cosmos could the tiger’s fiery eyes have come‚ and who would have dared to handle that fire? What sort of physical presence‚ and what kind of dark craftsmanship‚ would have been required to “twist the sinews” of the tiger’s

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    What Does The Tyger Mean

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    that expresses Blake’s awe over the might and ferocity of the “Tyger.” The poem is primarily about a “Tyger” with its intense and frightening aspects‚ and Blake’s awestruck questions for the “Tyger.” For example‚ he asks‚ “What immortal hand or eye dare frame thy fearful symmetry?” (24). This poem is twenty-four lines long with stanzas two‚ three‚ four‚ and five consisting of two couplets each. Blake also uses allusion in “The Tyger.” “Did he who made the Lamb make thee?” (20) alludes to both Blake’s

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    “The Tyger” by: William Blake. Summary I believe the tiger and the lamb are metaphors for characteristics of humanity. With the human race being superior to all other creatures‚ how is it that we have those that are preferred lamb like and others that are feared as much as the tiger? What was he/she thinking? Why did you make us capable of being so devastating and carnivorous? So I pretty much think that William Blake meant the tyger to be use tiger‚ else it would go for an animal. The

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