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The poem The Tyger by William Blake

Decent Essays

“If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all men liberally, and upbraids not, and it shall be given to him.” These wise words of King James verse (1:5) of the bible portrays an underlying message that although we should follow in God’s path, we are not expected to follow blindly. Likewise, in the poem “The Tyger” by William Blake, it’s theme is a reflection of what this quote implies. Throughout this poem, Blake explores the possibility of questioning God while using the structure of the poem, as well as the irony of God’s character, and several sound devices in hopes of communicating a message, that to question God is only human nature.

First of all, the structure of Blake’s poem really contributes to emphasizing it’s theme. Roughly the poem is divided into three major parts, the author starts by describing a tiger, a ferocious and deadly animal. He slowly transitions into questioning the creation of the Tyger, which he purposely and carefully organizes as context to the third stage where he will prove what he is trying to convey through this poem. “And what shoulder, and what art. Could twist the sinews of thy heart?” (11-120) This quote, taken from the second part of this poem’s structure displays an example the kind of questions Blake would ask about the tiger’s creation. It supports the theme by helping to create suspense to really magnifying the third part of the poem’s structure by making the reader really think, which is essential in

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