William Blake weaves the notion of the image of evil by showing the animal tiger in his poem "The Tyger" is:
Scary and terrifying [lines 4,6,12]. Scientists have proposed that tigers can be inspiring, holy, creative, historical, and magnificent creatures (gigantic, mysterious, powerful and sometimes terrifying)
The poem "The Tiger" by William Blake is well recognized. It explores the dark and destructive sides of God and His creation. The Tyger, William Blake's literary masterwork, is examined both literally and metaphorically as he repeats his favorite concerns about innocence and experience of life.
It's worth noting that "The Tyger" is a brief poem with a very regular pattern and rhythm, much like a nursery rhyme. It is broken into six quatrains that rhyme AABB and each has two rhyming couplets.
Hence the concept of the Tyger as an evil entity is properly depicted in lines 4, 6 and 12.
Learn more about "The Tyger":
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