This line from William Blake's poem "The Tyger" reflects the poet questioning the origin and intensity of the creator's power and artistic vision. It suggests a metaphorical furnace where the powerful and imaginative process of creation takes place.
TIGER, tiger, burning brightIn the forests of the night,What immortal hand or eyeCould frame thy fearful symmetry? If it is this English version then it would be William Blake.
Never seek to tell thy love / Love that never told can be / For the gentle wind does move / Silently invisibly.by William Blake
"The Tyger" by William Blake utilizes powerful imagery to convey a sense of awe and wonder. The image of the Tyger is vividly depicted as a fierce and majestic creature, symbolizing the raw power and beauty of nature. The contrast between the Tyger's ferocity and its creator's gentle hands prompts reflection on the mysteries of creation and the duality of good and evil.
In William Blake's poem The Land of Dreams a father is comforting his son who, in his sleep, is crying for his lost mother.A modern English interpretation could be "Why do you cry in your sleep (... wake up, your father is here)"
The line "Frailty, thy name is woman!" is from William Shakespeare's play "Hamlet".
William Bakewell has written: 'Hollywood be thy name' -- subject(s): Biography, Motion picture actors and actresses
thy were robert,william,edward,and tad.
if you think about it boys are ok but if you think about it more they arepathetic because thy dont have a brain trust me
The cast of Thy Will Be Done - 2009 includes: William Baldwin as Hank Clark Seymour Cassel as Mendell Austin Hines as Bradley Grainger Hines as Scott
William Wirt Harvey has written: 'The making of a Messih' -- subject(s): Biography 'Put up thy sword' -- subject(s): Drama
Thy food is thy medicine and thy medicine is thy food
Farewell, vain world, I've had enough of thee,And Valies't not what thou Can'st say of me;Thy Smiles I count not, nor thy frowns I fear,My days are past, my head lies quiet here.What faults you saw in me take Care to shun,Look but at home, enough is to be done.- Epitaph,epitaph over William Harvey in Greasley Churchyard, England