The creature exemplifies characteristics from both The Lamb and The Tyger but it is The Tyger which we see most. In William Blake’s The Tyger, he asks “What immortal hand or eye, could frame thy fearful symmetry?” This refers to God and his creation of a beast so fearful as a tiger which mimics Victor Frankenstein’s creation of a beast that spreads horror amongst actual people. The tiger represents danger, or more so, the fear of danger. People fear both tigers and the creature because they are different than us and one would not know what to expect if they were confronted by these creations. Will they attack, or will they retreat? If they are different than us, we will expect the worst regardless of their true intentions. Of course the creature also relates to the violent lion as he kills multiple people throughout the novel including Frankenstein’s brother, best friend, and wife. There are, however, instances where the creature shows characteristics of the lamb, a soft calm creature with “a tender voice.” For example, Frankenstein’s creature shows signs of sensitivity and even saves a girl from drowning. The people do not see him like the lamb but rather the tiger, so he still only faces hatefulness and violence in return. In the second to last stanza of William Blake’s The Tyger, he asks “Did he who made the Lamb make thee,” and the answer is yes. While God created creatures of both violence and peace, Victor Frankenstein created one being of both with both characteristics. Frankenstein’s creature is still a violent killer who spreads fear which is why he relates more closely with The Tyger.