“The Lamb” and “The Tyger” represent opposite sides of human existence in such a way as “The Lamb” urges passive control, while “The Tyger” glorifies dominance of man over nature.
Answer: A
Explanation
In William Blake's “Songs of Innocence and of experience”, he introduces to two chapters distinctively, one is “The Lamb” and other is “The Tyger”.
Through this, he shows many aspects of a single soul.
He praises God and shows his audience that the same God who can make a serene and calm animal like the lamb is also capable of making the ferocious and powerful tiger.
It suggest something violent or dangerous
The correct answer is D. Grendel.
Although the same characters appear in both Beowulf and Grendel, their characteristics are not the same. Whereas in Beowulf, the round character would be Beowulf, in Grendel that would be Grendel.
A round character is one who is fully characterized, who changes over the course of the play, who shows real and deep human emotions that we can empathize with. Having that in mind, the obvious answer is Grendel - unlike in Beowulf, where he is just a brainless monster, in Grendel he is something more, akin to a human almost, and even more than that.