Friday, October 25, 2019
Explication of William Blakes A Poison Tree Essay -- Poison Tree Essa
Explication of William Blake's A Poison Tree     Ã       William Blake's "A Poison Tree" (1794) stands as one of his most intriguing  poems, memorable for its vengeful feel and sinister act of deceit. This poem  appears in his famous work Songs of Innocence and Experience: Shewing the Two  Contrary States of the Human Soul (1794), placed significantly in the "Songs of  Experience" section. As with many of his poems, Blake wants to impart a moral  lesson here, pointing of course to the experience we gain in our human existence  at the cost of our innocence. With this poem, he suggests that holding a grudge  (suppressed anger left unchecked) can be fatal to the self as well as the object  of wrath. Through images, punctuation, and word choice, Blake warns that  remaining silent about our anger only hinders personal and spiritual growth,  making us bitter, and that a grudge left unchecked becomes dangerous, even  murderous.     In the first stanza, Blake comments on the need to confront a problem if  peace and happiness are to prevail. When the speaker "tells" his wrath, it  "ends," but when he "tells it not," his anger "grows." Like an apple seed  falling onto fertile soil, the speaker's repressed anger germinates and becomes  the one obsession in his life. In the first couplet, Blake conveys the image of  a plant being uprooted, nipping in the bud (as it were) a misunderstanding  between the speaker and his friend. In sharp contrast, the speaker holds back  from admitting anger to his foe in the following couplet, allowing it to fester  within. With simple language, Blake neatly establishes the root of the poem,  ending this first stanza with the foreshadowing "grow" (4).      The second stanza depicts the speaker's treatment and nur...              ...ional  anger. The speaker realizes he is morally wrong, but gets so caught up in the  moment and the seeming brilliance of his scheme that cannot stop himself from  seeing it through. Unchecked anger drives the speaker to commit this murderous  act, anger he cannot or refuses to acknowledge from the start of the poem. The  mortal sin of murder will forever stain his hands - he cannot go on with living  unless he suppresses the event, as he did his wrath.      "A Poison Tree" suggests to me a prisoner's confession without actually  naming or describing the crime itself. The speaker takes the time to brag about  how he implemented his plan, without admitting his crime. Thus this poem's  impact lies in the dangers that can arise from allowing one's anger to grow  unchecked and take over our minds, hearts, and souls, like a wild plant in the  garden of our experience.                          
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