In the first stanza of "The Tyger," Blake states a repetition of the name "Tyger, Tyger," defining the mysterious tone of the passage (1). Following, the author asks "what immortal hand or eye / could frame thy fearful symmetry?" preceding the principal question of the creature Tyger: what "immortal" power could produce the Tyger (3-4). The first questions convey the dramatic movement of the poem, and each corresponding line elaborates on the idea the author seeks to relay. Blake sets up the view that nature, like a design of art, reflects the author, whereas the Tyger reflects God. In the third and fourth stanzas, Blake exhibits a central metaphor depicting a parallel between a blacksmith and God. The questions "in what furnace was thy brain? / what the anvil?" describes the situation as if the Creator created the wild creature from the bases hammering the materials from his forge (14-15). Throughout the poem, the Tyger strikes beauty yet is horrific with its potential for violence as the physical characteristics include a "burning bright [coat]," and "deadly terrors clasp" (17). The Tyger becomes the symbol of the presence of evil in the world as the author continues to question the sole existence of it. Lastly, the first and sixth stanza correspond in every word except for a shift in "could frame’ to …show more content…
His collections portray adult's vulgar corruption with the demons inside themselves that they are unable to rid their life of. His visions on poetry were chaotic to many in this era. The critics ignored him and left him to die in poverty as one of the best poets of the Romantic Age. In today's society we can begin to appreciate his literature, considering he attempted to understand the complexity he wrote about. Having faced evil in the world, implemented by God's creations, Blake is tasked with a challenge like no