Urgently ask William. The thoughts and feelings expressed in Blake's poem Tiger.
Multiple. It is mainly a symbolic force, but we can't simply say that it is an evil force or a revolutionary force (because there is movement when Blake writes, and China scholars tend to explain it this way, and everyone knows why), which simplifies the problem. This force is abstract, powerful and violent (but not simple moral good and evil). Contrary to the meekness, softness and kindness of the lamb. At the same time, both of them are God's creations, and they are two levels of Yin and Yang. Lambs appear in the chapter of naivety, and tigers come from the chapter of experience, which is relative, so tigers represent maturity and so on. Blake is thinking about the magic and omnipotence of God (there is a saying that the fire in the forest is provoking God's anger and destroying something in the Bible, which in short represents God's will to power).