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What Is The Theme Of The Tyger Poem

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Earth is a confusing place. One doesn’t understand it, and yet wants to know it all. He has questions that don’t seem to have answers; questions about religion, science, nature and humanity. The poet Blake documented one such question in his poem “The Tyger.” He had a desire to know about the tiger. His fascination with the animal leads him to ask many questions about it, specifically about its creator. Wondering who made the tiger, what its origin was, he asks in what place was such a fierce creature designed. In what he has been taught about the physical world, he finds a scary contrast between the character of the creator and the creation. Looking at the questions Blake did, with what in mind the creator made the tiger, where it’s from, …show more content…

The third stanza goes on with those inquiries about the creator of the tiger. Blake asks what shoulder, which is a metaphor for power or work, could create the tiger; he asks what art could make such a thing. The use of the word ‘art’ points to beauty, which shows mixed feelings about the tiger: both horrible and beautiful, and perhaps somewhat allegorical. Blake’s interest in the tiger continues for two more lines, only this time he looks at the horror, and after that stanza number four delves into the making of the tiger. This looks like blacksmith imagery, for a hammer, chain, anvil, and furnace are all the tools of someone who forges things out of iron. This metaphorical stanza indicates two things: first, the tiger is made of tough steel, not out of delicate silver, gold, and gems; now no longer can one find symbols of the tiger’s beauty in the poem, just of its terror. Second, “In what furnace was thy brain” points to the tiger’s aggressive nature, and thereafter Blake indicates that such a nature is not one from a good place, but from a nasty hellish place, filled with fire and brimstone: from a

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