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The Tyger Poem Analysis

Decent Essays

This poem dramatizes the conflict between the divine perspective and the speaker's terrified human and morally affronted perspective. The theme of “The Tyger” is creation and the ability of divine figure to create evil. The poem mainly focuses on the beauty and ferociousness of creation in general and how we think we see the whole story. William Blake wrote this piece in the voice of a witness that watched the making of the so-called “Tyger” and what it has become. This witness describes to the audience which is directed to society of what he/she sees in order to open their eyes to see the bigger picture. The poem is written in a rhythm of both trochaic and iambic meter where the author purposely changes the last line of each stanza in order to make that specific line stand out the most for the audience to notice. “The Tyger” is composed of six stanzas, each containing four lines, and is written with an AABB rhyme scheme. Many of the sentences are written as interrogative sentences as Blake asks several rhetorical questions. Also, the first and last stanzas are almost identical, with the exception of a single word, which emphasizes this text and at the end forces the reader to reevaluate these words after reading the rest of the poem. The author uses words such as “fearful,” “dread,” and “deadly” to draw an image for the reader that the creature is a beast capable of destruction. The first 2 lines begin with the repetition of the character ("Tyger, Tyger"). The repetition creates a chant-like mood to the whole poem, which contributes to the mysteriousness. It quotes "burning bright"(1) which is an example of alliteration. This piece may describe the appearance of the Tyger as tigers have fiery orange fur, or it may on a deeper analyzation describe a kind of energy or power that this Tyger possesses. The Tyger's presence in "the forests of the night"(2) further increases the mystery and power of the creature – it’s mysterious, while at the same time burning with some sort of inner force. The speaker uses the symbolic character of a tiger as something so fearsome yet very beautiful. William Blake is building on the idea that nature, like a work of art, can in some way contain a reflection of its

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