both "The Lamb" and "The Tyger‚" by William Blake‚ an animal is represented as a personification of a thought‚ feeling or an abstract idea. Although both of the poems are similar in style and the questions they pose‚ the two creatures couldn’t be more different. The Lamb represents simplicity‚ purity and innocence whereas the Tyger represents evilness and fear. Where the Lamb is considered a very natural creature‚ the Tyger is the complete opposite. Blake asks who created both of these creatures
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‘A Poison Tree’ by William Blake was written in 1794. It tells the story of a boy who gets really angry with his enemy‚ so he gets revenge. So a seed grows in him which turns into an apple. The enemy eats this poisonous apple and dies. In “A Poison Tree‚” by William Blake is a metaphor explains a truth of human nature. This poem teaches how anger can be maxed out by goodwill to become a deadly poison. The opening stanza sets up everything for the poem‚ from the ending of anger with the “friend‚”
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Comparing Blake and Wordsworth William Blake and William Wordsworth were two of the most influential of all of the romantic writers‚ although neither was fully appreciated until years after his death. They grew up with very different lifestyles which greatly affected the way they as individuals viewed the world and wrote about it. Both play an important role in Literature today. Despite their differences‚ with their literature backgrounds they cannot help but have a few similarities. William
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was in control. Surely many people of the working class in Britain found this revolution inspirational. One could assume that Blake is vaguely alluding to these people in this poem by explaining that the living conditions in London were so miserable and deplorable that the people could be eventually forced‚ even justified‚ into revolt. It is much clearer‚ however‚ that Blake is attempting to outline the inequality between the working class and the aristocratic. This inequality has been further perpetuated
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What message is the artist communicating? Tim Hawkinson conveys the passage of recorded time. This art piece shows how history repeats itself and overlaps. Despite changing times‚ we still face war‚ natural disasters‚ famines. Some things never change. How has the artist used unexpected materials and/ or methods to shock‚ invite‚ enhance or challenge the viewer? At first glance‚ I perceived the piece to be 3D — it looked to be constructed out of stuffed pink and red tubes of fabric; however
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In 1988 Nelson Mandela was still in South Africa’s apartheid prison system‚ where he had been incarcerated for a quarter of a century. He would turn 70 that July and his friend‚ the doughty president of the Anti-Apartheid Movement‚ Archbishop Trevor Huddleston‚ C.R.‚ had suggested that the world should celebrate this birthday. Many young people started pilgrimages from various parts of the United Kingdom‚ and they converged on Hyde Park Corner in London on Nelson’s birthday. The crowd that gathered
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“The devil himself is in the house. The devil came here yesterday and it smells of sulfur still today." Hugo Chávez said on September 10th‚ 2006; defying President Bush in the United Nations (U.N.) assembly. Chávez as president of Venezuela since 1999‚ he defied the world by insulting Bush and other high rank political leaders. He has influenced governments of other countries by the power gained by oil such as Bolivia‚ Peru and Iran that has also defied the U.S. by selling military supplies to Iraqis
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clarify and illustrate your discussion.) To eat or not to eat the cookies - that is the question. William Blake is one of the most popular English romantic artists. He was a painter‚ a sculptor and a poet. I find him most interesting as his poetry touches problems which are timeless and I may say that a latter-day person asks himself the same questions concerning religious matters as Blake did. He used his poetry as a powerful instrument of social comment. He believed‚ that his vocation was to
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at how God could have tamed fire and turned it into this magnificent creature. "What the hand dare seize the fire."The poet‚ William Blake‚ uses a lot of rhyme in this poem. Rhyming couplets are found throughout the poem. "What the hammer? What the chain? In what furnace was thy brain? What the anvil? What dread grasp‚ dare its deadly terrors clasp?" William Blake never uses the same rhyming sound twice. Every couplet has a different rhyming sound. All in all‚ the rhyming scheme is very well structured
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“London” by William Blake London‚ which consists of sixteen lines‚ is not just a description of William Blake’s birthplace but also a detailed poem of how the social status works in London. The poem is a devastating and concise political analysis delivered with passionate anger. It is revealing the complex connections between patterns of ownership and the ruling ideology‚ the way all human relations are inescapably bound together within a single destructive society. The reason why Blake wrote it was because
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