English, asked by pankaj4323, 1 year ago

what does clothing of delight referred to​

Answers

Answered by priyakumarit10
0

Answer:

Clothing of delight referred to "The Lamb".

Explanation:

In The Poems of William Blake, The "clothing of delight" would be the lamb's wool.

The interaction between the lamb and the kid in "The Lamb" is a synthesis of pastoral tradition and Christian literature.

Jesus the Lamb represents the kind imagination, the Divine Humanity, and the lamb is a global emblem of altruistic innocence. In order to create the Trinity of a child, a lamb, and a Redeemer, the Lamb connects with Christ.

In the poem, the theme of charity is presented, supporting Christian compassion and Caritas, or care, which are the principles of the Lamb of God. Christ, the human sacrifice, looked upon himself as the sins of the world, and the Christian connotations also imply sacrifice, death, and sorrow.

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Answered by aroranishant799
0

Answer:

Clothing of delight referred to " The Lamb "

Explanation:

William Blake's shortest poem, "The Lamb," appeared in his collection Songs of Innocence in 1789. The poem discovers the manifestation of God's will and the splendor of God's creation in the lamb's figure. The poem is told from the perspective of a young child who exhibits an instinctive grasp of the essence of joy and, in fact, the joy of nature. In other parts of Blake's poem "The Lamb," there is scant indication of an urban location. The song "The Lamb," which praises God while simultaneously implying that man has lost the ability to completely understand his creation, is a sort of tribute to God.

The poem is written from the viewpoint of a little child. Blake employs a little child as the speaker who addresses a lamb directly in this short poem. He asks some queries and then responds. Who made you? is a question that is tied to itself and is asked often. This clarifies the key query that people have regarding our origins and identity. By asking this question of the most helpless of animals, a lamb, via the innocent child's eyes, Blake makes it clear that kids sometimes ask the most difficult questions because they haven't yet learned how to make things more complicated. To understand this, you only need to see an adult's response to the question "Where did I come from?"

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