Today’s National Poetry Month offering is one of my
all-time favorites, one whose imagery I find powerful and gripping. William
Blake’s “The Tyger” has always torn my heart out, and I’ve been glad for the
tearing.
I suppose the visual impact of Blake’s poetry
shouldn’t come as a surprise because he was also an engraver, a printer, an
etcher and a painter. His visual works are often allegorical and highly
symbolic (well, much like his poetry); not surprising in a man of many talents who saw visions all his life.
By way of example, I give you “The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed in Sun”. Even that title is extraordinary. I believe I
would like to be a woman clothed in Sun. (and if the Great Red Dragon is the
price of admission, well, I’ll pay up.)
“The Tyger” absolutely shimmers
with grace and strength, sleek and dangerous in the forests of the night.
This is a creature powerful beyond all understanding—and yet when the poet
asks about the maker of the Lamb, well…there you have it.
The
Tyger
Tyger!
Tyger! burning bright
In
the forests of the night,
What
immortal hand or eye
Could
frame thy fearful symmetry?
In
what distant deeps or skies
Burnt
the fire of thine eyes?
On
what wings dare he aspire?
What
the hand dare seize the fire?
And
what shoulder,and what art
Could
twist the sinews of thy heart?
And
when thy heart began to beat,
What
dread hand? and what dread feet?
What
the hammer? what the chain?
In
what furnace was thy brain?
What
the anvil? what dread grasp
Dare
its deadly terrors clasp?
When
the stars threw down their spears,
And
watered heaven with their tears,
Did
he smile his work to see?
Did
he who made the Lamb make thee?
Tyger!
Tyger! burning bright
In
the forests of the night,
What
immortal hand or eye
Dare
frame thy fearful symmetry?
Blake was also a hymnist, and he wrote one of my
all-time favorites, which you don’t seem to hear all that often (outside of Women’s Institute meetings, of course).
Perhaps because of its symbolism and sense of militancy. But I’ll give it to
you anyhow. Consider it a bonus.
I’m sorry to say that I’m finding it impossible to
find a clean audio of this glorious anthem with the descant on the second
verse. So I’ll link to a clip of the closing scenes of Chariots of Fire, where
it’s being sung at the funeral
of Harold Abrahams.
If that finish doesn’t send chills up your spine, even in the background, you need to have your soul checked.
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