William Blake's poem The Lamb is very interesting. You can tell that it is written in a child's point of view because of the way it is written. In this poem it is referencing The little lamb as Jesus. William Blake asks a question at the beginning of the poem and as the poem goes on he seems to answer the question himself.
In the first stanza William Blake asks the question "dost thou know who made thee". To me that is in reference to who and how Jesus was made and everything else in the world was made. Even though William asks the question in this stanza he also answers it in this stanza. The rhyming pattern in this stanza goes AA, BB, CC, DD, AA. The first and last 2 lines are the same exact lines which is interesting because it's like William is trying to get a point across that way.
In the second stanza William Blake doesn't ask a question but he talks about the lamb and in this case the lamb is Jesus. William Blake talks about the characteristics of the lamb and what makes the lamb "the lamb". This is the stanza where you really figure out that it is a child's point of view because it says "I a child..." The rhyming pattern in this stanza is different. This stanza goes AA, EF, GG, FE, AA. Even though the rhyming pattern is different in this stanza the repetition of the first and last two lines is the same as the first stanza.
In the poem you can tell that it is song like which is a refrain.