Wednesday, November 27, 2019
William Blakes The Tyger Essays - The Tyger, Poetry, Tyger
  William Blake's The Tyger    The Tyger Ana Melching  5-8-99  Does god create both gentle and fearful creatures? If he does   what right does he have? Both of these rhetorical questions are   asked by William Blake in his poem The Tyger. The poem takes   the reader on a journey of faith, questioning god and his nature. The poem   completes a cycle of questioning the creator of the tyger, discussing how it   could have been created, and then returns to questioning the creator again.   Both questions about the tyger's creator are left unanswered. William Blake   uses rhythm, rhyme, and poetic devices to create a unique effect and to   parallel his theme in his work The Tyger.  William Blake's choice of rhythm is important to his poem   The Tyger because it parallels the theme of the poem, that the   tyger may have been made by god or another harsher creator. Most   of the poem is written in trochaic tetrameter as can be seen in line   three, when Blake says, What immortal hand or eye. This rhythm is   very harsh sounding, exemplifying the very nature of the tyger.   Some of the lines in the poem were written in iambic tetrameter,   such as in line ten, when Blake says, Could twist the sinews of thy heart? .  Iambic tetrameter has a much softer sounding beat   than does trochaic tetrameter. This implies the gentle nature of   god, and if he could create such a beast. The last word of each   quatrain is written in a spondee. This helps to create a unique symmetry   and to parallel the fearful symmetry of a tyger.   William Blake's use of rhyme greatly affects his work The   Tyger. The entire poem is written in couplets. Couplets contain   two lines, paralleling the dichotomy of the poem, that everything   has two sides or parts. The rhyme scheme is AA BB CC etc. Because the   rhyming words are so distinguishable from the non-rhyming words, they   form two separate categories, which also parallels the dichotomy of the   poem.  William Blake's choice of poetic devices greatly affect his   work The Tyger. He uses cacophony, which is a rough sounding group of   words, to exemplify the brute nature of the tyger and to wonder if it was   made in hell by an evil creator. This can be seen in line sixteen when he   says, Dare its deadly terrors clasp. This line sounds unpleasant and harsh   to the ears. William Blake uses euphony, which is a smooth sounding group   of words, to show the gentle nature of god and to wonder if he created the   tyger. This can be seen in line twenty when he says Did he who made the   lamb make thee? This line sounds soft and pleasing to the ears. William   Blake uses alliteration and assonance to make his words seem harsh or soft.   He uses alliteration, which is the repetition of identical consonants to make   his words seem harsh as in distant deeps or dare the deadly. This   emphasizes the tiger's rough nature, and questions the nature of it's creator.   He also uses assonance, which is the repetition of identical vowel sounds, in   lines ten and eleven when he says twist the sinews, and began to beat.   This emphasizes the good nature of god.  William Blake never answers his question about the   unknown nature of god. He leaves it up to the reader to decide.  By beginning and ending his poem with the same quatrain he asks   the question about god creating evil as well as good, again. By changing one   word from could to dare he states that if god truly did create this beast, the   tyger, then how dare he. This also helps to give the poem a formal completeness.   By switching his rhythm from trochaic to iambic, Blake shows the two   possible natures of god, or of the two creators. By using couplets   he emphasizes the dichotomy of the poem. By using poetic devices   such as euphony, cacophony, assonance, and alliteration he can   further develop his question about the nature of god, gentle, or   harsh. His rhetorical questions are left unanswered. By doing this   he leaves his readers wondering, Is there really an answer?  Bibliography  none    Poetry Essays    
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