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The Tyger Argument

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William Blake is an English poet, painter, and printmaker from the eighteenth century. With his unique way with words and mastery craftsmanship, he created an illustration collection of poems called Songs of Innocence and Experience in 1789. His most famous poems from Songs of Innocence and Experience are “The Lamb and The Tyger”. These poems use animals to attest to God’s role as the Creator, yet they possess contrasting tones and language of the speaker and present conflicting views of God’s power and ability. “The Lamb” and “The Tyger” called me to ask questions of myself, my beliefs, and how my beliefs shape my worldview.
In the first stanza of “The Lamb”, the speaker asks a lamb who was its creator. The speaker proceeds in the second stanza by answering his or her own question and tells the lamb its creator is a Lamb. Through prior theological knowledge, I instantly knew who the Lamb was. The most telling part of the Lamb’s identity was that it “became a little child”. The Lamb the speaker was referring to was the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ, born to become the ultimate sacrifice on behalf of the human race. An interesting nuance to the poem was added in line seventeen when the speaker referred to himself/herself as a lamb, painting a mental picture of three lambs: the literal lamb, the speaker lamb, and the Lamb of God. According to biblical text, God is in three forms: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit also known as the Holy Trinity. Philosophically, the three

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