Your analysis and explanation is a delight! I hadn't realised how superficial my understanding of this poem was. By the way, it seems to me that the rhythm is rather like a fearful heart beat, making the poem all the more atmospheric
You are the first person I have seen a video of who got this poem right.. the question intonations in particular are so important, but almost everyone misses that. Also, the stress on "DARE..."
Hi Ms Hanna, thank you for the helpful video. I was wondering if you think the Tiger could represent other things? Like the Industrial Revolution for example, since there's mechanistic imagery, and Blake did tend to address the widespread suffering of the poor people (especially children) of London as a result of the Industrial Revolution in his poems. Also, do you think the narrator of the poem is Blake himself? Is it the same narrator as with The Lamb poem? I'd love to hear your thoughts!
Fascinating questions...the tiger as a representation of the Industrial Revolution sounds fabulously rich! Hard to know decisively if this is Blake himself but he was certainly a craftsman and this could enhance a reading too! Thanks so much for leaving such a detailed and insightful interpretation! Your question about 'the lamb' makes for an excellent comparison...I do see them as written from the same poetic gaze! Do you?
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar Hi Ms Hanna, sorry for the late response! I think that the two poems could have the same narrator, but as a child for The Lamb, and as an adult for The Tyger, after seeing the awe-inspiring and simultaneously horrific power of the Tyger (whatever it may represent). One poem is in Innocence and the other in Experience, so it might make sense to have an innocent and then an experienced speaker.
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock", "The Waste Land" and "Gerontion". I thoroughly enjoyed your explication of metaphysical poetry, and who but Eliot could follow such a study. Love you, I could hear your all day. Thanks MissHanna.
Your analysis and explanation is a delight! I hadn't realised how superficial my understanding of this poem was. By the way, it seems to me that the rhythm is rather like a fearful heart beat, making the poem all the more atmospheric
Thank you so much for sharing this comment
You are the first person I have seen a video of who got this poem right.. the question intonations in particular are so important, but almost everyone misses that.
Also, the stress on "DARE..."
THANK YOU so much!
THANK YOU for this great illustration of the poem, I got a comprehensive understanding for all it’s aspects.
A brilliant analysis of this poem. Thank you.
Thank you for checking out my channel!!
Thank you, will need this for my exam tmrw. Highly appreciated and clear brief explanation. Enjoyed this by heart! 💖
Thank you once again, Ms Hanna.
Hope that the exam goes incredibly well tomorrow and that all your hardwork pays off! Thanks so much for sharing this comment!
Teacher put me on this. Brilliant analysis of the poem
Thanks for watching my video!
thank god i have you. my presentation would have failed me tomorrow
Hope that the presentation goes really well!
Crystal explanation👍
This is the best analysis of the poem in all of TH-cam😘😘😘
Thank you SO much for this kind comment
You saved me from me failing my assessment
Delightes to help!
Hi Ms Hanna, thank you for the helpful video. I was wondering if you think the Tiger could represent other things? Like the Industrial Revolution for example, since there's mechanistic imagery, and Blake did tend to address the widespread suffering of the poor people (especially children) of London as a result of the Industrial Revolution in his poems. Also, do you think the narrator of the poem is Blake himself? Is it the same narrator as with The Lamb poem? I'd love to hear your thoughts!
Fascinating questions...the tiger as a representation of the Industrial Revolution sounds fabulously rich! Hard to know decisively if this is Blake himself but he was certainly a craftsman and this could enhance a reading too! Thanks so much for leaving such a detailed and insightful interpretation! Your question about 'the lamb' makes for an excellent comparison...I do see them as written from the same poetic gaze! Do you?
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar Hi Ms Hanna, sorry for the late response! I think that the two poems could have the same narrator, but as a child for The Lamb, and as an adult for The Tyger, after seeing the awe-inspiring and simultaneously horrific power of the Tyger (whatever it may represent). One poem is in Innocence and the other in Experience, so it might make sense to have an innocent and then an experienced speaker.
Well explained ma'am
If possible make a video on Gulliver's Travels book 3 &4.From India🇮🇳
Love it, can you make a series of videos on Eliot
Great plan! Which poems in particular?
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock", "The Waste Land" and "Gerontion". I thoroughly enjoyed your explication of metaphysical poetry, and who but Eliot could follow such a study. Love you, I could hear your all day. Thanks MissHanna.
ummm this was amazing but have u done an analysis of The Lamb
thx
Thnkq this might help me in tomorrow's test✌
Subscribed. Amazing explanation!
I think Blake refers to the tiger's burning eyes,not God's
I thinks it's gods
Great explanation
Thanks SO much for checking out my channel!
the raven by edgar allan poe please explain this poem
Is that a poem you'd like analysed?
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar please explain line by line
Tomorrow is my test so I came here😂😂.
Wishing you all the best and thanks for using my channel. Why not hit subscribe? :)
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