English, asked by janardhandas27, 10 months ago

with whom the lamb has compared by william blake in lamb and how he describe it ?

Answers

Answered by klakshmivathi1983
0

Answer:

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Answered by smartbrainz
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With Jesus the lamb has compared by William Blake.

EXPLANATION:

  • The lamb symbolises Jesus, since the lamb is innocent and pure. The conventional representation of Jesus as a lamb accentuates the Christian tenets of meekness, peace, and gentleness. Blake describes the lamb as he perceives it. The lamb is blessed with a life and with ability to feed from the meadow and drink from the stream. It has been assigned with soft, warm, and bright wool that serves as its clothing. It has a tender voice that permeates the valley with bliss.
  • The child, too, is an innocent child. Jesus was also a child when he had first appeared on the Earth as God's Son. The child enjoys the lamb’s company who is analogous to the child, that is, the lamb is just like the child, meek and mild. In the poem, there’s an identification of the lamb, Jesus, and the child. Jesus has another name, which is, lamb, since Christ is mild and meek like lamb. The poem articulates the spirit of childhood - the purity, the tenderness, the innocence, the affection which a child feels for small creatures such as the lamb.
  • The state of the soul that has not been besmirched by the world of conventionalised pretensions called society, culture, religion, and other codified systems. William Blake then continues to praise Jesus's characteristics by remarking on His mild and meek personality. The child symbolises Jesus, the physical embodiment of the God. The speaker is talking about a real lamb on the surface, however, the connotation of the poem stems from Christian as well as classical mythos.
  • The lamb is sent to feed along the stream and among the meadow which indicates that it must live by instinctual, natural, means, or the Heavenly law of the nature. The woolly brightness and softness which comes from inside support the lamb’s divine nature. The lamb’s voice is also significant. The lamb, the child and Jesus are close to the creative being; creativity is a childlike occupation, as it also encompasses the sense of wonder, undefiled imagination, and natural spirit.
  • Jesus is depicted as a loving, giving, peaceful divinity all through the poem and Blake emphases on Jesus’ innocent attributes. This explicitly simple poem also delicately considers the subject of ingenuity and the Creator. In short, Blake's poem complements the gifts from God and shows his tender qualities and benevolence.  

To know more

About william blake​

https://brainly.in/question/11435402

Summary of the poem the schoolboy by william blake

https://brainly.in/question/10873830

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