The speaker of a poem tells this animal, "Here I am" and asks it to "let me kiss your soft face" before repeating the refrain, "Merrily, merrily we welcome in the year." In the introduction to a collection, a child weeps with joy after asking a piper to "pipe a song about" this animal. In another poem, a mother tells her son that they will "round" a "golden tent" like these animals. A poet drew two intertwined trees to illustrate a poem about this animal that describes its "tender voice, making all the vales rejoice." In that poem, a figure who "became a little child" gives this animal its "clothing of delight," and this animal is asked, "Dost thou know who made thee?" For 10 points, name this animal that titles a William Blake poem contrasted with "The Tyger." ■END■
ANSWER: lamb [or sheep or ewe]
<Nathan Zhang , Literature - British poetry>
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