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  • A Poison Treeby: William Blake
  • 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.
  • My friend made me mad, but since he is my friend, I will forgive him. But my enemy, I will never forgive him for his actions
  • I won't speak with him, I will only speak with my friend.
  • And I watered it in fears,Night morning with my tears: And I sunned it with smiles,And with soft deceitful wiles.
  • I will grow this evil plan with my tears and wrath, pretend i am friends with him but secretly I am just manipulating him
  • Irony: the foe beneath the tree of hatred.Metaphor: the tree (extended)Symbolism: The tree represents his fury and rage, while the garden represents the place in his heart where his hatred is nurtured.Imagery: Throughout the poem, William Blake uses vivid imagery to help the reader see certain scenes, such as And it grew both day and night, Till it bore an apple bright, and My foe outstretched beneath the tree.
  • 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.
  • In this poem, the speaker, who is upset with his companion, offers two situations. When he told his friend, his anger faded. In contrast, he the speaker of the poem informs us that he just expressed to his friend that he was upset when he was furious with him, which ended the negative feeling. However, he didn't express his resentment toward his opponent when he was upset with them, which caused the hatred to grow.Ryhme scheme:In this poem, the rhyme scheme is:AABB. This means that in each four-line stanza, the first two lines rhyme (A), and the last two lines rhyme (B). These rhyming pairs are called couplets, probably because they are like little verbal couples.
  • And into my garden stole, When the night had veild the pole; In the morning glad I see; My foe outstretched beneath the tree.
  • Comparing his anger to a tree that he had watered with hatred and terror. Then, curiously, he claims that the fake smiles he put on whenever he saw his enemy acted like sunlight encouraging a tree to grow: by holding in his rage, he made it worse, and by using soft deceitful wiles (covering up his true feelings) his rage grew and developed into something more villainous: the desire for revenge. While he is grinning at his enemy, he is secretly planning his revenge. A major theme in this story is wrath, the speaker is filled with wrath throughout the whole poem which grows the apple on the tree. Alliteration: Sunned it will smiles
  • Rhyme Scheme and Structure of the Poem
  • An apple appears to grow from this anger's poison tree in the third stanza. When the speaker discovers his enemy the next morning, his enemy is laying dead under the tree after consuming the poisoned fruit. This bright apple attracted the enemy's attention, who therefore crept into the speaker's garden one night and stole it.Alliteration: Till it bore an apple bright
  • The apple is seen as tasty by the Speaker's enemy. He enters the speaker's garden secretly one night, but things don't go so well for him. The speaker is pleased to see his enemy dead beneath the apple tree when he wakes up the next morning. irony: the foe beneath the tree of hatred.
  • Ryhme scheme: In this poem, the rhyme scheme is: AABB. This means that in each four-line stanza (Quatrian), the first two lines rhyme (their rhyming sound is indicated with an A), and the last two lines rhyme (B). These rhyming pairs are called couplets, probably because they are like little verbal couples.
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