“The Lamb” by William Blake took my attention when I first read through it, the poem was written in such a way that the questions are being asked and the answers are being given, I found it really interesting because the poet honors Lord Christ who was blameless and unadulterated like a kid and tame and gentle like a sheep. Its first stanza is enlightening and country, the second focuses on dynamic profound matters and comprises of similarity and clarification. By offering responses to his own inquiry, the child prevails with regards to changing over it into an expository one, therefore countering the underlying unconstrained feeling of the poem. In the first stanza readers are furnished with a genuine representation of a sheep. In the poem, the offspring of blamelessness more than once asks the sheep concerning who made him. The child delivers Little Lamb to ask him who made him and needs to discover whether he realizes who made him. The youngster needs to realize who gave the Lamb his life, who took care of him while living along the stream on the other said of the knoll , leading back to the nature of God’s creation.
Minahil, once again I am finding it very difficult to understand your writing. I have two suggestions. First, do not rely on internet searches to help you complete the homework. When you include sentences like “By offering responses to his own inquiry, the child prevails with regards to changing over it into an expository one, therefore countering the underlying unconstrained feeling of the poem,” which you have clearly cobbled together by copying phrases you have encountered elsewhere, you are plagiarizing. This is a form of cheating and is a serious academic offense with serious consequences. Second, you need to work on expressing your own thoughts as simply and as clearly as possible. Worry less about what will sound “academic,” and focus more on clear and effective communication.