Poison Tree Essay

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    POEM COMMENTARY A POISON TREE BY WILLIAM BLAKE A Poison Tree is a poem written by William Blake which is themed around hate, anger and revenge. The poem is basically a metaphor or a piece of pathetic fallacy wherein the speaker has ascribed his feelings and state of mind to the form of a tree. William Blake wrote a series of poems called Song of Experiences, which were a collection of texts in which he shows the human spirit when it is confirmed to rules, resulting in strong emotions of anger

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    The Poison Tree by Andres Medina The poison tree the author speaks about the containment of emotion.The author is angry at his friend but forgives him so his anger ends.”I was angry with my friend:I told my wrath, my wrath did end.”(Blake)."I was angry with my foe:I told it not, my wrath did grow."(Blake)The author gets angry with his enemy but doesn't tell him so it doesn't end , and grows into a tree.The tree then produces a fruit, “Till it bore an apple bright.”(Blake)The enemy steals

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    Running head: Analysis of William Blake’s A Poison Tree (1794) Analysis of William Blake’s A Poison Tree (1794) Jayne Courtney Kendall Brandman University Abstract This analysis is going to explore each segment to better understand the meaning the author was trying to express and the lessons that we in these words that transcends through all ages. The exploration and analysis will look further in to what we can take away from this writing and lesson we can learn in order for our soul’s

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    collection of poems titled Songs of Innocence and of Experience. This collection portrays the two different states of the human soul, good and evil. Many poems in the Songs of Innocence have a counterpart poem in the Songs of Experience. The poem “A Poison Tree” is found in the Songs of Experience and it delves into the mind of man tainted with sin and corruption that comes with experience. In a simple and creative style, the religious theology of the Fall of Man is brought to life. The poem tells the

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    When reading the amazing poem a Poison Tree it show some good values in life. I really think it is about a friendship and they go through problems together. Have you ever had a friend that betrayed you? Betrayal is a bad thing, but it is possible to get it over it. A lot people do not really do not know how to handle it or what to do in that tough situation. Most people do not like confrontation or they avoid the problem. This why people do get mad, but they are sometimes scared to speak up because

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    “A Poison Tree” by William Blake is written as a part of the Songs of Experience in the “Songs of Innocence and Experience” published in 1794. William Blake is an English poet born in 1757 in London. He was a poet and a painter. Songs of Experience is one of the most important Blake’s works along with Songs of Innocence. These Blake’s works are interesting from the painter’s perspective too, as he not only wrote the poems but made paintings along with them. In his works he developed an extensive

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    When people make a mistake they have to learn to forgive them and not to dwell on it. This idea can be seen in the following poems “A Poison Tree” by William Blake and “A total stranger one black day” by e.e. Cummings. Both of these poems convey the message that People need to learn to love someone and not to hate them and to forgive their mistakes. Through “A Poison Tree” William Blake conveys that do not hate someone learn to get over it and forgive the person that made a mistake. The use of allusion

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    Masterful poets can make the ordinary artful, find deeper meaning in simplicity, and draw hopeful conclusions from the darkest of events. William Blake is no exception to this, and his mastery of poetry becomes apparent in “A Poison Tree”, the best poem ever written. In this poem, Blake creates a masterful metaphor, strengthened by his use of simple language, sound devices, and choice of meter, conveying an impactful message at the end. The simplistic yet pleasant style in which Blake conveys an

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    “A Poison Tree”, by William Blake, relates the experiences of a speaker who bottles his emotions up, instead of letting them be known. Consequently, the speaker’s rage brews within him—festering and boiling his very being. Eventually, this fury cannot be contained, and so, he unleashes it upon his foe—the object of his rage. Throughout the poem, William Blake wishes to convey to the reader the consequences of a self-imposed gag order on your emotions. In order to achieve his goal, Blake utilizes

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    The meaning of the poem A Poison Tree is how hatred can be a powerful weapon that can lead to both physical and mental injuries if not controlled on time. In the first stanza of the poem the speaker gets angry with a friend and a foe. The speaker seizes their wrath with the friend, however, the speaker allowed their wrath to grow with their foe, “I was angry with my foe; / I told it not, my wrath did grow.” Throughout the second stanza, the speaker grows their wrath with mixed emotions, “And I water’d

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