William Blake’s The Tyger: Critique and Appraisal
Q.03.
William Blake’s The Tyger: Critique
and Appraisal
Ans:
"The
Tyger" represents an
intense, visionary style with which William Blake confronts a timeless question
through the creation of a still-life reverie. To examine "The
Tyger's" world, a reader must inspect Blake’s word choice, images,
allusions, rhyme scheme, meter, and theme. "The Tyger" seems like a
simple poem, yet this simple poem contains all the complexities of the human
mystery. The first impression that William Blake gives is that he sees a
terrible tiger in the night, and, as a result of his state of panic, the poet
exaggerates the description of the animal when he writes:
‘Tyger!
Tyger! Burning bright
In the
forests of the night…’
The opening
question enacts what will be the single dramatic gesture of the poem, and each
subsequent stanza elaborates on this conception. Blake is building on the
conventional idea that nature, like a work of art, must in some way contain a
reflection of its creator. The tiger is strikingly beautiful yet also horrific
in its capacity for violence. What kind of a God, then, could or would design
such a terrifying beast as the tiger? In more general terms, what does the
undeniable existence of evil and violence in the world tell us about the nature
of God, and what does it mean to live in a world where a being can at once
contain both beauty and horror? Immediately after seeing the ‘Tyger’ in the
forests, the poet asks it what deity could have created it:
‘What
immortal hand and eye,
Could frame
thy fearful symmetry?’
The word
‘immortal’ gives the reader a clue that the poet refers to God. Then, in the
second stanza, the author wonders in what far-away places the tiger was made,
maybe, referring that these places cannot be reached by any mortal. In the
third stanza, the poet asks again, once the tiger’s heart began to beat, who
could make such a frightening and evil animal. Next, in the forth stanza,
William Blake asks questions about the tools used by God. And he names the
hammer, the chain, the furnace, and anvil. All these elements are used by an
ironsmith. The tiger initially appears as a strikingly sensuous image. However,
as the poem progresses, it takes on a symbolic character, and comes to embody
the spiritual and moral problem the poem explores: perfectly beautiful and yet
perfectly destructive, Blake's tiger becomes the symbolic center for an
investigation into the presence of evil in the world. Since the tiger's
remarkable nature exists both in physical and moral terms, the speaker's
questions about its origin must also encompass both physical and moral
dimensions. The poem's series of questions repeatedly ask what sort of physical
creative capacity the "fearful symmetry" of the tiger bespeaks;
assumedly only a very strong and powerful being could be capable of such a
creation.
“What the
hammer? what the chain?
In what
furnace was thy brain?”
The smithy
represents a traditional image of artistic creation; here Blake applies it to
the divine creation of the natural world. The "forging" of the tiger
suggests a very physical, laborious, and deliberate kind of making; it
emphasizes the awesome physical presence of the tiger and precludes the idea
that such a creation could have been in any way accidentally or haphazardly
produced. It also continues from the first description of the tiger the imagery
of fire with its simultaneous connotations of creation, purification, and
destruction. The speaker stands in awe of the tiger as a sheer physical and
aesthetic achievement, even as he recoils in horror from the moral implications
of such a creation; for the poem addresses not only the question of who could
make such a creature as the tiger, but who would perform this act. This is a
question of creative responsibility and of will, and the poet carefully
includes this moral question with the consideration of physical power. Note, in
the third stanza, the parallelism of "shoulder" and "art,"
as well as the fact that it is not just the body but also the "heart"
of the tiger that is being forged. The repeated use of word the
"dare" to replace the "could" of the first stanza
introduces a dimension of aspiration and willfulness into the sheer might of
the creative act.
“Did he
smile his work to see?
Did he who
made the Lamb make thee?”
The reference to
the lamb in the penultimate stanza reminds the reader that a tiger and a lamb
have been created by the same God, and raises questions about the implications
of this. It also invites a contrast between the perspectives of "experience"
and "innocence" represented here and in the poem "The
Lamb." "The Tyger" consists entirely of unanswered questions,
and the poet leaves us to awe at the complexity of creation, the sheer
magnitude of God's power, and the inscrutability of divine will. The
perspective of experience in this poem involves a sophisticated acknowledgment
of what is unexplainable in the universe, presenting evil as the prime example
of something that cannot be denied, but will not withstand facile explanation,
either. The open awe of "The Tyger" contrasts with the easy
confidence, in "The Lamb," of a child's innocent faith in a
benevolent universe. The meekness of Blake’s lamb makes his “fearful” and
“deadly” tiger appear all the more horrific, but to conclude that one is
decidedly good and the other evil would be incorrect. The innocent portrayal of
childhood in “The Lamb,” though attractive, lacks imagination. The tiger,
conversely, is repeatedly associated with fire or brightness, providing a sharp
contrast against the dark forests from which it emerges — “Tyger! Tyger!
burning bright / In the forests of the night.” While such brightness might
symbolize violence, it can also imply insight, energy, and vitality. The
tiger’s domain is one of unrestrained self-assertion. Far from evil, Blake’s
poem celebrates the tiger and the sublime excessiveness he represents. “Jesus
was all virtue,” wrote Blake “and acted from impulse, not from rules.”
William Blake
never answers his question about the unknown nature of god. He leaves it up to
the reader to decide. By beginning and ending his poem with the same quatrain
he asks the question about god creating evil as well as good, again. In
conclusion, a reading of "The Tyger" offers different thematic
possibilities. The poem seems to change as the reader changes, but the beauty
of the words and meter make this poem an astonishing, enjoyable excursion into
the humanity of theology. Moreover, the poem is quotable in various situations,
and it leaves a permanent impression on the reader. Therefore, "The
Tyger" by William Blake emerges from creation's cold, clear stream as a
perpetual inspiration - a classic. In my opinion, William Blake wrote the poem
with a simple structure and a perfect rhyme to help the reader see the images
he wanted to transmit. Above all, the description of the tiger is glaringly
graphic due to essentially the contrast between fire and night.
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