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Blake's Style Of The Idyyger And The Tyger By William Blake

Decent Essays

William Blake, a revolutionary writer of his era, illustrates the differences between the innocent, kind, and ignorant childhood, to the corrupt, dark, and gothic adulthood that follows. Many of his pieces such as the “The Tyger”, “The Lamb”, are all written in Blake’s style that convey many different messages than how the story was written. Each specific line in these misunderstood poems convey meanings that show the other side of the world, the side thats gloomy, dark, and corrupt. In his poems, Blake evaluates two totally different perspectives in the world and how people who view the world in one of these perspectives live. But the truly outstanding fact about Blake’s style is the fact that he does not favor a perspective, he criticizes …show more content…

A time in his life where he vehemently complained about the Church, and any cultural traditions that included racism, sex, and other habits. Blake revolt against these ideals was due to the fact that he believed that passion and imagination can be limited by these things. On the other hand, ‘Songs of Innocence’ always believed that no matter what, God was always by your side whenever a person truly needed him. Idyllic poems of this nature tend to have a specific theme overall, they are positive, optimistic, and very happy when a reader begins to analyze the poetry. The poem “The Tyger” is often compared to his other work that contradict each other, “The Lamb”. The logic behind this poem is that the almighty creator creates animals that are cute, soft, and gentle. This in every way, goes against “The Tyger” when God is said to create a vicious and cruel animal such as a tiger. Just as “The Little Boy Found”, another piece by Blake, a sense of happiness and comfort is felt when reading this poem, this was also not present when reading “The Tyger”. Blake was known to be a great artist. Throughout his poems, he would add illustrations for tigers, and lambs that can shift the true meaning of the poem. In “The Tyger”, the tiger was illustrated in a way that made this ferocious animal seem harmless. As we know tigers, they are able to kill anyone they lay their hands on. As for most people in the radical era, tiger sighting was a rare scene. His use of imagery forces people into imagining an animal that is deadly, ferocious and nothing like the illustrations

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