A Poison Tree

William Blake, 1757 - 1827

I was angry with my friend:

I told my wrath, my wrath did end.

I was angry with my foe:

I told it not, my wrath did grow.

And I watered it in fears

Night and morning with my tears,

And I sunned it with smiles

And with soft deceitful wiles.

And it grew both day and night,

Till it bore an apple bright,

And my foe beheld it shine,

And he knew that it was mine,--

And into my garden stole

When the night had veiled the pole;

In the morning, glad, I see

My foe outstretched beneath the tree.

A Poison Tree Analysis

A Poison Tree· is a poem written by William Blake. The poem contains four stanzas each including one quatrain and various stylistic devices. He works with a simple rhyme scheme (A,A,B,B) that keeps the poem flowing. This poem deals with the concepts anger, hatred andrevenge.In the first quatrain William compares how he deals with his feelings of anger towards his friends versus his foe. When he expressed his wrath to his companion, his anger and poison tree· withered away easily due to the fact that he was able convey his feelings openly. However, when he buried his wrath away from his enemy, it grew and enlarged maliciously. In this quatrain he used one stylistic device, which is rhyme. As for the second quatrain, he describe show his anger is mounting by comparing it to a small poisonous plant that is budding and growing very rapidly. This is what happens when feelings are not expressed. The plant is watered with ´fears and ´tears and is nourished with ´fakesiles and ´deceitful wiles. This stanza includes a few stylistic device some of them are rhymes and metaphors. An example of metaphoris,

And I watered it with fears·. Just like a plant is watered to grow, his wrath is watered with tears and fears. The tale continues in quatrain number three, where the poet’s anger increases to the extent that the poisonous tree produces bright and shiny apples. This is similar to the story of The Garden of Eden. The fruit seemed tempting to eat at first; however, Eve got punished for eating it. Likewise, the speaker seems gracious towards his opponent, when actually he has been hiding evil intentions all along. With regards to the last quatrain, the author begins to speed up the climax when the foe trespassed into the speaker’s garden, in other words his trap, and was tempted by the apple’s shiny appearance. When the poet says, ´My foe outstretched beneath the treeµ he either means that the foe has consumed the poison while pleasing the speaker, or that the foe is just lying underneath the tree and has realized his opponents anger. These two stanzas enclose a variety of stylistic devices that are rhyme and metaphors. This poem teaches a moral lesson of great value. He metaphorically describes how anger can be dismissed by kindness or nourished to become a deadly poison. I think the message of the poem is very powerful because it relates to human nature. By not expressing one’s true feeling of anger, it can grow and lead to severe consequences such as jealousy, vengeance and conspiracy. This is why we should always be honest and open about our feelings with others.

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