Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Tyger (A)
- William Blake
- Romantics
- Speaker's addressing tiger
- Asking what being could'v created it
- Compares Creator to blacksmith
- "burnt the fire" (6) "twist" (10) "hammer" "chain" (13) "furnace" (14) "anvil" (15)
- Traditional image of artistic creation
- Blake's building on the idea that nature contains the reflection of its creator
- God created man in his own image
- A tiger
- Beautiful, but has terrible capacity for violence
- What kind of God would create such a terrifying beast?
- What does the existence of evil/violence in the world tell us about God?
- Do we live in a world where one thing can have both beauty & horror?
- Creative responsibility & will
- Symbolizes spiritual & moral problems
- Perfectly beautiful but perfectly destructive
- Symbol of presence of evil in world
- (1) Asks what entity had the capacity/ability to create such a creature
- "What immortal hand or eye could frame thy fearful symmetry?" (3-4)
- (2) Asks what entity dared create such a creature
- "What immortal hand or eye, dare frame thy fearful symmetry?" (23-24)
- Creator's forging of the tiger
- Physical, laborius, deliberate action
- Emphasizes tiger's power
- Couldn't have accidently created it
- Shows God's strength