English, asked by tiyashachakraborty, 1 month ago

How does Blake blend childlike innocence with adult wisdom in ‘The Tyger’?​

Answers

Answered by ITZMEGOVARDHANREDDY
4

Answer:

The Lamb and The Tyger are both representative poems of Blake. They celebrate two contrary states of the human soul- innocence and experience. ... The child asks the lamb weather it knows its merciful creator, the tiger giver of its soft easy clothing's or its tender voice which fills the valets with music and pleasure.

Answered by rajagrewal768
0

Answer: Blake bring out two aspects of society-some are sacred and innocent, others are cruel and violent. As a result, children are confused about seeing society through their experiences. However, these two poems call for the spiritual mysticism of God's work. God can not only create holy innocent things, but also cruel and violent things when needed. Diversity coexists equally in this world, so the Creator maintains a balance of creation and a unity of diversity.

Explanation:

"The Lamb" and "The Tyger" are both William Blake's signature poems. They celebrate the two opposite states of the human soul-innocence and experience. The "lamb" celebrates the divinity and innocence of the lamb, the most harmless creature on earth, as well as the child. The child makes a beautiful and sweet voice to the lamb and asks if he knows who made it. Instead of waiting for an answer, he answers the question himself. He refers to the meekness and meekness of God, the Creator of the Lamb. His descent to Earth (ie his incarnation) as a child and himself is the divinity of the lamb. Finally, he wishes for the blessing of the Lamb God.

Tiger shows how experience destroys a child's innocence and replaces it with destructive forces.

It expresses the free life of the imagination and replaces it with four dark, cold and imprisoned, resulting in a fatal blow to the carefree human spirit. The fear of experience and the denial of life create hypocrisy, a sin as serious as cruelty. When innocence is destroyed by experience, God creates a tiger (ie, the power of the wild) to restore the spirit to innocence.

Both the "lamb" and the "tiger" were created by God. The "lamb" represents the calmer and calmer side of humanity, and the tiger represents the rougher and more violent side. The lamb represents the calm and gentle beauty of creation, and the tiger represents its terrifying beauty. A clear contrast between the nature of the lamb and the tiger makes the poet ask, "Did the one who made the lamb make you?"

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