The fear and denial of life which come with experience breed hypocrisy which is as grave a sin as cruelty. It beaks the free life of imagination, and substitutes a dark, cold, imprisoning four, and the result is a deadly blow to blithe human spirit. “The Tyger” shows how experience destroys the state of childlike innocence and puts destructive forces in its place. He concludes wishing the lamb God’s blessing. his incarnation) and his own is the lamb’s divinity. His descent to the earth as a child (i.e. He refers to the meekness and gentleness of God, the lamb’s creator. He does not wait for the answers, but answers the questions himself. The child asks the lamb if it knows who has created it, given it its beautiful and sweet voice. “The Lamb” celebrates the divinity and innocence not merely of the child but also of the least harmless of creatures on earth, the lamb. They celebrate two contrary states of human soul – innocence and experience. “The Lamb” and “The Tyger” are both representative poems of William Blake. A Comparative Study of The Lamb and The Tyger
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