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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 9 page paper which compares and contrasts William Blake’s poems The Lamb and The Tyger. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JA7_RAblbty.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
his poems are still consistently analyzed and discussed for their varied qualities concerning the condition of humanity, religion, and the inner being. In relationship to his Songs of Innocence and
Experience one author notes how, the poetry "depicts the discord between inherent human passions and societys artificial proprieties. In the Songs of Innocence, the author avows his fidelity to nature;
he asserts that human beings can achieve beatitude by embracing their own innate sensuality" (Trowbridge 139). In his Songs of Experience he illustrates how that innocence is often stripped away
by reality, or society. The following paper examines two of Blakes poems. The first is The Lamb from Songs of Innocence. The second poem is The Tyger from Songs of
Experience. The poems are first discussed individually and then presented in a comparison and contrast. William Blakes The Lamb
The Lamb is a poem that possesses many religious elements. First of all lambs are often associated with Christianity in that Jesus was symbolically
a Shepard and all people who follow him are his sheep. A lamb, therefore, is symbolic of a very young sheep which, in the case of the innocent nature of
the placement of the poem, offers the reader a sense of innocence and childhood as well as purity. The poem begins with
lines that seem clearly religious: "Little Lamb, who made thee?/ Dost thou know who made thee?/ Gave thee life, and bid thee feed" (Blake 1-3; 6). The narrator continues with
descriptions of the actions, and blessings, of the lamb claiming they were given "clothing of delight,/ Softest clothing, woolly, bright" and a voice that is "tender" (Blake 5-6, 7; 6).
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