• Source: The Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake, edited by David E. Erdman (Anchor Books, 1988). ... More About This Poem. The Lamb.
  • Blake therefore uses this image to connect the lamb of the poem to the Christian story and to the child, because Jesus became both a child and a lamb.
  • "The Lamb" is the counterpart poem to Blake's poem: "The Tyger" in Songs of Experience.
  • The Lamb’ by William Blake is a warm and curious poem that uses the lamb as a symbol for Christ, innocence, and the nature of God’s creation.
  • So the poem is not just marveling at the lamb itself, but also at the way in which the lamb is God, just as the Bible describes Jesus himself to be God.
  • The Lamb poetry by William Blake. ... A poem can stir all of the senses, and the subject matter of a poem can range from being funny to being sad.
  • Poem The Lamb by William Blake : Little Lamb who made thee Dost thou know who made thee Gave thee life & bid thee feed, By the stream &.
  • A classic poem by William Blake, "The Lamb" is a timeless exploration of innocence and faith.
  • In William Blake’s poemThe Lamb” a child-speaker asks a lamb if it knows its creator, who gave it life and gifts like its woolly clothing and tender voice.