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A Poison Tree
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Blake originally gave A Poison Tree the title Christian Forbearance. In summary,
the speaker of the poem tells us that when he was angry with his friend he simply told
his friend that he was annoyed, and that put an end to his bad feeling. But when he
was angry with his enemy, he didnt air his grievance to this foe, and so the anger
grew.
In the third stanza, an apple sprouts from this poison tree of anger. This apple bright
attracts the attention of his enemy, who then sneaked into the speakers garden one
night and ate the apple from this tree; when the speaker finds his enemy the next
morning, his foe is lying dead under the tree, having eaten the poisoned fruit.
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This powerful and curious little poem is about the power of anger to become
corrupted into something far more deadly and devious if it is not aired honestly. The
enemy may have stolen the apple (and trespassed on the speakers property he
stole into his garden, after all), but he was deceived into thinking that something
deadly and poisonous (the speakers anger) was something nice and tasty (the apple).
What are we to make of this rather involved metaphor? One possible interpretation is
as follows: Blake is saying that repressing our righteous anger makes us scheme into
finding underhand ways to get back at our enemies, and consciously or
unconsciously we end up setting traps for our enemies in order to bring them down.
The apple represents such wily and devious vengeance: it is significant that it is an
apple that grows from Blakes poison tree, and that the speakers enemy steals the
apple, because this conjures up the Genesis story of Adam and Eve being deceitfully
persuaded to eat the fruit from the forbidden Tree of Knowledge. Satan, disguised as a
serpent, is the one responsible for cajoling Eve into eating the fruit, which is
commonly depicted as an apple, like the apple in Blakes poem. The Fall of Adam and
Eve takes place, of course, in the paradise that is the Garden of Eden; Blakes Edenic
garden is where his enemy meets his end. These parallels raise Blakes parable of
repressed anger and vengeance to Biblical heights.
Continue to explore the world of Blakes poetry with our analysis of The Lamb,
our overview of his poem known as Jerusalem, and his scathing indictment of
poverty and misery in London.
Image: William Blakes illustration for A Poison Tree, via Wikimedia
Commons.
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Overview
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A reading of 'A Poison Tree'
A Poison Tree is a short and deceptively simple poem about repressing anger and
the consequences of doing so. The speaker tells of how they fail to communicate their wrath to
their foe and how this continues to grow until it develops into poisonous hatred.
The speaker describes how when they were angry with a friend, they talked to their friend about
the issue which helped them to overcome their anger. However, the speaker was unable to do the
same with an enemy and this leads to developing resentment and an even stronger degree of
hatred. An extended metaphor of a tree growing in the speaker's garden demonstrates how the
anger continues to grow. In the lines 'And I water'd it in fears' and 'And I sunned it with smiles'
the speaker actively cultivates the tree/anger.
Eventually the anger blossoms into a poisoned fruit, the enemy eats the fruit and dies and the
speaker seems to be glad of this. However, there is also a sense that they see the destructiveness
of what has occurred. As the first lines acknowledge, we can easily overcome our anger if we
communicate it properly.
Read the poem here.
Analysis
"The Poison Tree" consists of four sets of rhyming couplets. Each stanza continues into the next,
giving the poem a hurried, almost furtive tone that matches the secretive deeds done in darkness
of the poem's content.
The obvious moral of this poem is that hidden wrath becomes more dangerous behind the deceit
that hides it from its object. Possibly, the Friend mentioned in the first stanza is a friend simply
because the speaker respects him enough to voice his anger face to face, whereas the enemy
may be a potential friend who remains an enemy because the speaker keeps his wrath secret and
nurtures it. There is a touch of irony, however, in that the poem ends with the speakers gladness
over his foes death by poison. No final line refutes the secret nurturing of wrath, and in fact, the
poem may be read as a guide for taking vengeance upon ones enemies.
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Some critics suggest that the apple symbolizes Blakes creative work, which another of his
contemporaries may have stolen and used as his own. If so, it appears the theft of Blakes
intellectual property ended badly for the thief (or at least Blake hopes it will).
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