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The Tyger

2023-04-23 19:45:18

Our question about the image of this poem brings us to the basic question of the speaker in "Tegel": Who raised this problem? If the tyrant is related to darkness and flames and is "terrible", his creator will double. Indeed, the spokesperson of "Tegel" seems to be "afraid" because the creator is "tricking" to the creator. But who is this creator? Through implicit techniques Black ties the creator with a series of Western mythical characters: Daedelus and Icarus (line 7), bold Greek god Prometheus (line 8), Vulcan the ironsmith (line 9 on line 9 13-14), Lucifer and his angels (lines 17-18), and finally the God of the Old Testament. This author is bold, rash, creative and destructive, craftsman, author, successor, people who always fail. Like Tiger, he seems to be both good and evil at the same time.

William Black's 1793 poem "Tegel" has many explanations, but its main purpose is to ask God as a Creator. The poetic skill creates vivid paintings and urges the reader to consider Tiger as a terrible being. The problem the speaker discussed was whether the same god, a gentle creature that built a lamb could form Tiger and all its darkness. - Ben Johnson is said to have been born on June 11, 1572 in London, England. Jonson was educated by William Camden at the classical scholar Westminster School. Ben Johnson is a giant with great courage. He lives with his mother, but his father died one month before he was born. Then his mother got married to a brickworker, then Johnson left school to work for his step-step father. Ben Jonson really did not like the transaction he made, so he went to the army. He is a poor man at college, so he is fighting for Dutch freedom from Spain