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The Tropes & Facts of William Blake's "The Tyger"

Teacher: Mr Sindlinger's Idiosyncratic Puzzles
Horizontales
What personified stars "throw down..."
The book that William Blake studied as a boy...
The third & fourth words of "The Tyger"...
William Blake taught himself to read these languages in order to read work as it was originally written, & not just through English translations of it.
The water that comes from crying, personified stars...
This poet was 13 years younger than the poet who wrote "The Tyger."
The home town of the artist, engraver, and poet who created "The Tyger"
It is an adjective or descriptive phrase expressing a quality characteristic of the person or thing mentioned.
Verticales
A simpler but more advanced word for "figurative language..."
The last two words of "The Tyger"
Because he was difficult and a nonconformist in his religion, many people called William Blake this negative term.
The quality of being made up of exactly similar parts facing each other or around an axis.
William Blake taught his wife Catherine Boucher to read because she had this situation or mental condition...
... pieces of tough fibrous tissue uniting muscle to bone or bone to bone; a tendon or ligament...
This 1916 song is an unofficial anthem of the United Kingdom and it takes a stanza from one of Blake's poems as part of its words...
The occupation of William Blake that helped him pay bills...
Working with the fumes of this chemical element probably killed the poet of "The Tyger..."