BCOM English Language 02
BCOM English Language 02
BCOM English Language 02
02
Poems by William Blake & Ted
Hughes
Names of Sub-Units
Introduction to William Blake’s Biography, Poem: The Tyger by William Blake, Ted Hughes- Biography,
Poem: Hawk Roosting by Ted Hughes
Overview
The following content is an in-depth study of the poem Tyger and the Lamb by William Blake and
Hawk Roosting by Ted Hughes. It highlights their life events, their work and achievements done with
assessment questions to study.
Learning Objectives
Learning Outcomes
https://mabuty.com/william-blake-and-ted-hughes-essay/
2.1 INTRODUCTION
William Blake and Ted Huges both have contriuted alot in the history of literuatre and are one of the
renovned writers to their time. William Blake was a poet, painter, engraver, and visionary who tried
to reform the social order as well as men’s minds. Though he was widely ignored or rejected during his
lifetime, he is now regarded as one of the main lights of English poetry, and his work has only increased
in popularity. On the other hand, English Poet, Ted Hughes has written most the verse that are without
sentimentality, emphasizing the cunning and savagery of animal life in harsh, sometimes disjunctive
lines.
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an acid-resisting substance, the words, design, or a fascinating combination of the two were drawn
in reverse and later applied by corrosive material. From the same etched plates, pages were printed
and later hand-colored. Almost all of Blake’s large poems and a representative of his short works were
printed using distinct methods. The French Revolution exists as printer's evidence.
Blake preferred line to chiaroscuro, or masses of light and dark, as an engraver. Rather than “blurs” (as
he called them) of color and mass, Blake’s liking for the line had a philosophical as well as an artistic
dimension. To the poet, the line described the honest clarity of the human day as specified from the
mystery of the night.
As the first major work in his new process in 1787, Blake moved to Poland Street, where he produced
Songs of Innocence (1789) which was later accompanied by Songs of Experience (1794).
Blake produced the disillusioned reaction The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (1790-1793) after a brief
period of admiration for the religious thinker Emanuel Swedenborg. Some of his other works are The
Book of Thel (1789-1791) and Vision of the Daughters of Albion (1793).
Blake became a political radical and was in consolation with the American and French Revolution during
its early years. Shortly after his move from, Poland street to Lambeth in 1793, Blake wrote “prophetic”
books concerning these events, keeping in mind the religious and political repression. America, Europe,
The Book of Urisen, The Book of Los, The Song of Los and The Book of Ahania are among these works (all
written between 1793 and 1795)
Blake started to flesh out the mythology he developed in these poems. In his first epic-length poem, The
Four Zoas, he described the mythology (ca. 1795-1803). This was a challenging but powerful saga, that
indicates how religious and social evils are rooted in the internal warfare of man’s basic faculties—
reason (Urisen), passion (Luvah), instinct (Tharmas) and inspiration or prophetic imagination.
Felpham Period
Blake spent years in Felpham, Sussex, between 1800 and 1803. He began to collaborate with William
Hayley, a minor poet and man of letters. Hayley had genuine intentions of healing Blake of his profitless
and improper interests and therefore ensured him commissions for refined projects. The day arose
when Blake finally revolted against this favouritism and turned down Hayley’s assistance. Their
quarrel resulted in Blake’s epic poem Milton (about 1800-1810). In this poem, he uses spiritual matters
in a disagreement with Hayley that is allegorized and exaggerates Blake’s themes. The poet Milton
renounces the safety of heaven and return to earth to rectify the errors of the Puritan heritage he had
encouraged.
A disturbing experience was faced by Blake in the year 1803 when a soldier accused him of uttering
rebellious views. Such a charge in the witch-hunting atmosphere of the time was serious indeed.
Blake was later acquitted, but he recognised in the incident further confirmation of his views on the
conflict between a sadistic society and the man of humane genius. The trial experience colors much
of Blake’s monumental final epic, Jerusalem (ca. 1804-1820).
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Stanza Four
In the fourth verse, the almighty is questioned about all of the steps involved in the tiger’s creation. If a
blacksmith is used as a metaphor, he believes that some intelligent creator is working on his creation in
the same way as a blacksmith cuts and hammers. The stanza is rich in rhythmic poetry, which adds flair
and colour. The poet becomes irritated and embarks after examining religion.
Stanza Five
These are the poem’s ‘Christian’ verses. The first line depicts God’s arch-angel ‘Satan’ being demoted as
a symbol of defiance against God’s will. It’s also shrouded in regards to Milton’s heroic poem ‘Paradise
Lost.’ He alludes to the all-mighty creator with admiration for his completed work. By all accounts,
this stanza is solely Christian. In verse, the lamb can imply either ‘lamb from his poem’ or ‘the lamb of
God.’ The first is a direct reference to Jesus (the Lamb of God), who was sent by God to earth to die for
mankind’s sins.
Stanza Six
The first stanza is repeated as a chorus in the last stanza. The only change being that the word ‘could’
has been replaced by ‘dare’. During this portion, the poet seeks to cast doubt on the creator’s abilities.
The poet sets out to test his creator’s ability to create such a powerful monster.
2.3.2 Theme
In ‘The Tyger,’ William Blake explores the idea that every living thing must resemble its creator in some
way. The poem’s fundamental goal is slowly revealed in the early verses: pondering God in the sky above.
In essence, the tiger is a gorgeous, fascinating creature that is also lethal. This also represents God’s
character, as he considers how a God may be both loving and lethal when necessary.
Religion is one of the first themes of the poem. As a result, what quiet beings are often both violent
and magnificent simultaneously. The poet’s moral issue is mostly focused with the metaphysical being
that this poem investigates. According to the poet, a profoundly destructive living being is frequently
a creation of a purely, artful God. The notion of the tiger’s creation precludes in any way accidental or
haphazard says the poet. This tiger, he believes, is given enormous physical strength so it can wield its
dominance over inferior creatures. The final reference to the lamb could be interpreted as a nod to the
poetry. ‘The Lamb,’ as he compares and contrasts the timid living animal thereto of a tiger. The tiger was
formed as a dominant species, whereas the lamb is a weakling in comparison to the tiger. The poet left
pondering the will of the creator, his limitless power, and adoration of his creation, a three-fold theme,
on the whole, ‘The Tyger’ explains that it has unresolved questions. The poet concludes his poem with
viewpoints on both innocence and experience, a subject that he finds fascinating.
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Following Plath’s suicide in 1963, Hughes almost completely ceased producing poetry for nearly three
years (the couple had separated the previous year). Following that, he wrote a slew of poetry collections,
including Wodwo (1967), Crow (1970), Wolfwatching (1989), and New Selected Poems, 1957–1994 (1995). In
his Birthday Letters, he acknowledged his relationship with Plath after decades of silence (1998). Hughes
was also the executor of her estate’s executor, and he edited and released many volumes. He admitted
that he had burned numerous of her journals after being accused of editing her work before to her
suicide.
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2.5.1 Summary
A hawk is imagined chatting and sharing his opinions in the poem, where “roosting” refers to “resting”
or “lost in one’s thoughts right before falling asleep.” This hawk is seated securely in his nest on a high
tree, displaying his joy and complete pleasure with his existence. He says that keeping his eyes shut he is
sitting on the top of the wood. In his imagination, he thinks of the various birds whom he had killed and
eaten, and of the various birds whom he would kill and dine in the longer term.
He feels that there is nothing false about this view of his activities. Later, he starts thinking of the
comfort of his nest where the air is light and on which the rays of the sun fall to warm him situated on
a high tree. The whole earth below lies welcoming his inspection, he further says. Thinking of his feet
and feathers and the molding of the same was no easy matter says hawk. Great pains had to be taken to
offer him the form which he possesses, particularly his feet and his feathers. He can now fly up from his
nest and go round all Creation just because he’s so important that he holds all Creation in his foot. The
hawk can kill any prey that he likes because the entire of Creation now belongs to him. He says about
his shape and his body that there is nothing illusory or deceptive. He flies directly towards his prey, and
pierces his prey with his beak or his claws. He doesn’t need to argue his case or his authority that has got
to be taken without any consideration. Finally, the hawk says that the sun is shining behind him, which
nothing has changed since he came into this universe because he never allowed any change to take
place. He would like to keep things as they are even in future hence permits no change in the universe.
Analysis
The form of the above poem is called a monologue or a soliloquy. The speaker here may be a hawk
(which may be a bird of prey, attacking smaller birds and eating them to feed himself). The universe of
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which the hawk has admired a denizen because it imagines as speaking and expressing his ideas about
himself. The hawk speaks with a way of authority, and with the fullest possible confidence in himself.
Indeed, we are astounded by his boundless and infinite egocentrism and self-centeredness.
2.5.2 Theme
The hawk may be a cunning and silent death from above, a bird of prey often portrayed because of the
noble killer who perches on top of the organic phenomenon. The poem begins with a majestic image
of a hawk perched “on top of the wood, so the earth’s face upward for my inspection,” according to
the poetry. Many religions believe our lives on this earth are ephemeral, therefore the idea of death in
“Hawk Roosting” could be strongly linked to its themes of creation. The hawk’s lofty diction, verging on
arrogance, along with the bird’s physical position overlooking the entire globe, gives the impression
that it is in complete control of life and death.
Even the “Creation” that gave it claws and “each feather” is now prey, securely grasped in its talons.
While the topic of death is usually heavy with grief and remorse, the hawk is emotionless in its discussion,
about it as an “allotment,” as if it were to be rationed out. Because the bird’s path to survival is “straight,”
there is no capacity for guilt in that small skull. When Hughes defended the hawk against accusations
of brutality and even fascism, he stated that the bird was meant to represent “Simply Nature.” Perhaps
the poem’s topic is that, while a person’s act of violence against another human is generally seen
unlawful, nature follows its own set of rules. Hughes claims that Christian morality and judgement
have “corrupted” our ability to observe nature.
In his poem “The Tyger,” William Blake suggests that God should be quick to chastise the animals he
creates. God created the Lamb, but he also made the Tyger, and he is personally accountable for the
suffering of that same lamb, the Tyger who would prey on it. William Blake’s “The Tyger” is an interesting
theological critique since it depicts the Protestant God, the creator of the Tyger as well as the Lamb,
crafting a monster in the depths of hell to be unleashed upon mankind.
On a literal level, Ted Hughes’ poem ‘Hawk Roosting’ is an expression of a bird of prey, the hawk, resting
on a tree contemplating its power of devastation, ability to inhibit change, and egotistical hubris and
superiority. However, because the bird is clearly projected with human characteristics, we can easily
deduce that the poem is an implied satire on the dictator that the bird represents.
In general, the hawk is a symbol of human evils such as arrogance, destructiveness, conceited and
egotistical attitude, obsession with power, and tyranny; in short, the hawk is a symbol of inhumanity.
Ted Hughes paints an image of a ruthless and self-involved creature in “Hawk Roosting,” demonstrating
how a lust for power can take over a being and end in brutality.
2.7 GLOSSARY
Mysticism: It is the concept that by contemplation and self-surrender, one can achieve unity with or
absorption into the Deity or the absolute, or the spiritual understanding of knowledge inaccessible
to the intellect.
Poetical Sketches: The first collection of poetry and prose by William Blake, written between 1769
and 1777.
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https://interestingliterature.com/2017/03/a-short-analysis-of-william-blakes-the-tyger/
https://poemanalysis.com/ted-hughes/hawk-roosting/
If not the tiger, then which animal do you think is the most powerful creature? Explain Why.
Do you think that Hawk Roosting is a poem of violence?
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