Lamb and mutton

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    It is common for people of the first world to wander from their place of home to consume food that might not be completely natural to them. Some do prefer to stick to what they know, but others like to experience something new and fresh. I, personally, enjoy going out to eat. I like trying foods that I don’t normally have prepared for me at home. In that, there are places that I like to visit more than once, because I can appreciate the service, ethnicity, and quality of food that they offer.…

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    Tyger” and “The Lamb”, Blake uses repetition and rhyming throughout both of these works, but their meanings are extremely contrasting. “The Lamb” is all about stating answers about the world around him, but “The Tyger” is all about questioning the world around him. He is attempting to show that questioning the world is a more powerful outlook than attempting to know everything about the…

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    “The Lamb” and “The Tyger” describe {two contrary states of the human soul} with “The Lamb” reflecting the soul at an innocent state, and “The Tyger” reflecting the soul at a more experienced (and destructive?) state. Blake’s poem “The Lamb” serves as a representation of a stage of innocence in one’s life, which encompasses purity, gentleness, and dependency. He describes the lamb as a docile, dependent creature with white, fluffy wool and a gentle voice, nothing out of the ordinary for a lamb…

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    evil and symbolizes the human mind, the creature represents the other half to create a whole. In “The Tyger,” the creator of the Tyger is unnamed and unidentified. There is a reference to the creator being the same one as the one who created the Lamb, so that means the one who created both of them, “... suggests that God has…

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    The Exodus hero Moses. The Biblical Moses, portrayed here as a shepherd in a print by contemporary Israeli artist Mordechai Beck, protectively clasps a sheep in his arms. Photo: Mordechai Beck. Moses’ story is told in the Book of Exodus, but it starts in Genesis with the story of Abraham and his family with whom God makes a covenant. Generations later the Biblical Moses draws the extended family together in the form of a nation with a structure and code of law, given to him on Mount Sinai. Below…

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    Henry Robinson stated that when Blake was four years old, he saw God’s head appear in a window. I believe this incident contributed to his purpose for writing “The Lamb.” The poem begins with asking a lamb about its origin.…

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    In the story “Lamb to the Slaughter” by Roald Dahl, a pregnant woman, by the name of Mary Maloney , murders her husband with a frozen lamb leg and hides the evidence in the oven. She plans on telling the police about his death, but she has to be ready for their questions. The police are working hard in her house, so she invites them for dinner. Yet, the police officers didn’t know that they were eating the murder weapon, all they knew is they were eating lamb leg. What does it mean when a…

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    The poem “The Lamb” by William Blake has a question then answer format. It is simple yet complex in that it is easy to understand, but it answers the important question of who mad you. Everyone looks for answers to this question at some point in their life. The author believes he knows the answer to that question and seems excited about it. The poem is written in a way that resembles a children’s song or rhyme. “The Lamb” is a poem that answers the question who made the lamb by describing the…

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    The Innocent V.S. The Experience (An Analysis of Blakes use of Archetypes in the Lamb and The Tyger) “What immortal hand or eye, dare frame thy fearful symmetry?”(Line 23-24). The poems that will be discussed are “The Lamb” and “The Tyger” both wrote by William Blake. The poem “The Lamb” is about how unmindful and innocent the lamb is. In “The Tyger” he writes about the evil about the tiger and how the tiger knows a greater extent about the world. Each of these poems show an archetype. An…

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    by created such a powerful animal with a strong ferocity which represent the devil, as well created a humble a Lamb that represent purity and reference to Christ. b- Thesis statement: William Blake is asserting that GOD creation are representing the evil and the purity referring to the Lamb that is symbol of faith. Additionally, created the Tyger that will prey upon it and causing the Lamb misery. II- Body Paragraph I a- Topic Sentence: the author of the poem is showing that the creation of GOD…

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