The poem describes a tiger's burning eyes contrasting with the darkness of night. The poet asks rhetorical questions about the tiger's origins, emphasizing its nature that provokes dread and fear. The creator is portrayed as a blacksmith, and the poem reflects on the contrast between the innocence of the lamb and fearful nature of the tiger, emphasizing the power and strength of the creator through repeated questions.
The poem describes a tiger's burning eyes contrasting with the darkness of night. The poet asks rhetorical questions about the tiger's origins, emphasizing its nature that provokes dread and fear. The creator is portrayed as a blacksmith, and the poem reflects on the contrast between the innocence of the lamb and fearful nature of the tiger, emphasizing the power and strength of the creator through repeated questions.
The poem describes a tiger's burning eyes contrasting with the darkness of night. The poet asks rhetorical questions about the tiger's origins, emphasizing its nature that provokes dread and fear. The creator is portrayed as a blacksmith, and the poem reflects on the contrast between the innocence of the lamb and fearful nature of the tiger, emphasizing the power and strength of the creator through repeated questions.
The poem describes a tiger's burning eyes contrasting with the darkness of night. The poet asks rhetorical questions about the tiger's origins, emphasizing its nature that provokes dread and fear. The creator is portrayed as a blacksmith, and the poem reflects on the contrast between the innocence of the lamb and fearful nature of the tiger, emphasizing the power and strength of the creator through repeated questions.
In the first stanza the poet describes the burning eyes of the tyger in contrast to the darkness of the night THE TYGER In the second stanza the poet asks about the REPEATED RHETORICAL QUESTIONS origins of the tyger DEVICES HAMMERING RHYTHM In the third stanza the poet underlines that the tyger is an animale that provokes dread and fear KEY IMAGES In the fourth stanza the creator-God is seen as a blacksmith
In the fifth stanza the poet reflect on the
contrast between the innocence of the lamb and the fearful nautre of the tyger