Appreciation of Tiger Poems

Tiger and Lamb: In Tiger, Blake pointed out the contrast between these two animals: the tiger is fierce, active and predatory, while the lamb is docile, fragile and harmless. The penultimate section mentions the lamb, reminding readers that the tiger and the lamb were created by the same God, and puts forward the meaning of this point. This also caused the contrast between her and the "experience" and "innocence" represented in the poem Lamb. The "tiger" is completely composed of unanswered questions. The poet makes us awe the complexity of creation, the great power of God and the unpredictability of divine will. The empirical perspective in this poem involves the complex cognition of the unexplained things in the universe, taking evil as the main example of the undeniable things, but it can't stand the superficial explanation. The open awe in Tiger is in sharp contrast with the relaxed self-confidence in Lamb, which is a child's naive belief in the benevolent universe. Theme: This poem is more about the creator of the tiger than the tiger itself. It is difficult for farmers to explain why the God who made the lamb can also make the tiger. Therefore, the theme is: Man cannot fully understand God's thoughts and the mystery of his masterpieces. Blake writes poems in simple and direct language. He uses visual images instead of abstract concepts to express his views. Extensive symbolism is a major feature of his poems. Tiger, included in Song of Experience, is one of Blake's most famous poems. It seems to praise the great power of the tiger, but what the tiger symbolizes is still controversial: the power of people? Or a revolutionary force? Or evil? This poem is very symbolic, with a hint of mystery, and can be interpreted in many ways. The tiger was a very sexy image at first. However, with the development of poetry, it presents a symbolic feature and embodies the spiritual and moral problems explored by poetry: perfect beauty but perfect destruction. Blake's Tiger Bee is a symbolic center for studying the existence of evil in the world. Because the tiger's extraordinary nature exists in both physical and moral aspects, the speaker's questions about its origin must also go beyond physical and moral aspects. A series of questions in this poem repeatedly ask what kind of physical creativity the tiger's "terrible symmetry" shows; Probably only very powerful creatures have the ability to create such things.