Tuesday, November 26, 2019

The Lamb essays

The Lamb essays William Blake was born on 1757. He grew up in the middle of London. Since Blake lived in a bad part of the neighborhood, he was poorly educated. Around the age of ten his father had enough money to send him to drawing school and then at fourteen he became an engraver. Blake realized that he was not any good at being artistic. Starting in 1778 Blake began making a living by giving booksellers and publishers with copperphte engravings. In Blakes later years he began to write The Gates of Paradise, and The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. As he grew older, he became more involved in his religion. William published The Lamb, The Tiger, and The Sick Rose toward the end of his life. William Blake uses symbolism in The Lamb, The Tiger, and The Sick Rose. In the poem called The Lamb, the lamb symbolizes innocence. The lamb also symbolizes the forgiveness of sin. The lamb is like a little innocent child. The creator is shy and mild in his ways, which makes him seem like a little child. So the creator symbolizes the innocent lamb. Which means the creator is actually like the lamb. The creator wants to be like the lamb in one way or the other. In the poem called The Tiger, the tiger symbolizes the wrath of God. The tiger also symbolizes punishment of sin. The tiger is evil, deceiving, and conniving but the tiger is very experienced. Experience is one of the traits that helps the tiger with all of his bad traits. The tiger is the evil of what the creator makes. The tiger is very experienced but in the wrong way. It is experience in the wrong way because it uses its experience for evil things. The image of the tiger is very frightful and not pleasant. The tiger is very cruel in one way or the other and does not care too much about other things or other people. In the poem The Sick Rose, the rose symbolizes experience. The invisible worm symbolizes the sadnes...

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