The Lamb and Tyger
The Lamb and Tyger
The Lamb and Tyger
characterized
by
purity,
guiltlessness,
liberty,
vulnerability and uninhibited enjoyment of innocent
fancies. The Lamb is a most remarkable poem in which
the lamb is a symbol of The Lamb of God that taketh
away the sin of the world. In this symbolic universe the
harmlessness of the lamb and the purity of the heart of a
child are nothing but the manifestations of Christs
innocence. In the world of innocence even the meanest
creature such as a lamb is treated as having unbound
divinity. Here is an exclusive unification of the three
characters Christ, Child, and the Lamb that constitute
and enact the Christian concept of Trinity in the world of
innocence. This identification between the creator and
the created which accords a symbolic dimension to the
lambs gentleness and meekness is fraught with
theological-metaphysical implications. The line, He is
meek and he is mild is an echo of Charles Wesleys
Gentle Jesus, meek and mild.
It underlines the
devotional motivation behind the poem and relates it to
the tradition of moral tales for children which flourished
during the last decades of the 18 th century. Christ is the
Lamb of God; the child is often called little lamb, a term
of affection. But Blake also widens the reference by
recalling Jeremiah, Thou, O lord, art in the midst of us,
and we are called by the name, leave us not, or We are
called by thy namewe are the lords chosen people.
These inter-textual reminiscences give richness and
depth to an apparently simplistic sentiment and make it
out as a profoundly religious view of the world. It may be
remembered in this connection that for Blake the true
God is the God of love, of whom Christ is the most perfect