A Poison Tree
A Poison Tree
William Blake
William Blake (1757 – 1827) was an English Poet, painter and print maker. Blake
is now considered a seminal figure in the history of English poetry.He was born
in London. He was a boldly imaginative rebel in both his thought and his art.
Some of his famous poems are “The Lamb” and “The Tiger”.
A Poison Tree
-William Blake
Glossary
Question (a).
Who does ‘I’ refer to?
Answer:
‘I’ refers to the poet, William Blake.
Question (b).
How did the anger of poet come to an end?
Answer:
The poet told the reason of his anger to his friend. The anger came to an
end.
Additional:
Question (c).
Write a synonym for ‘wrath’.
Answer:
A synonym for ‘wrath’ is ‘anger’.
Question (a).
What does ‘it’ refer to?
Answer:
‘It’ refers to anger.
Question (b).
How is ‘it’ watered?
Answer:
It is watered with fears and tears and tears of the poet.
Question (a).
How did the poet feel in the morning?
Answer:
He felt glad in the morning.
Question (b).
Who is the ‘foe’ referred to here?
Answer:
The person on whom the poet is angry with.
Question (c).
Why was the ‘foe’ found lying outstretched beneath the tree?
Answer:
The ‘foe’ ate the apple from the poison tree of anger. So he fell below the
tree.
4. And it grew both day and night,
Till it bore an apple bright
Question (a).
Who does ‘it’ refer to?
Answer:
It refers to anger, that is personified to the ‘poison tree’.
Question (b).
What does ‘apple’ signify?
Answer:
Apple indicates anger.
Question (c).
What grew both day and night?
Answer:
Anger that is personified to the ‘poison tree’ grew both day and night.
In the opening lines, the poet describes how he was angry with his friend.
He told his friend that he was angry and assumably why he was angry.
Due to some bad times, he might have been angry. But as they were
friends already, the poet could have a love for his friend. So he could
approach his friend.
He was in a good state of mind. He could feel free to speak to his friend
openly. Thus there wasn’t much difficulty to tell his friend about his anger.
The moment he told his wrath to his friend, all displeasure disappeared.
Love embraced both of them.
“Love one another”
Question 2.
Describe how his anger kept growing?
Answer:
The poet confessed that when he was angry with his enemy, he did not
reveal his anger to his enemy. He feared that if he expressed his anger to
him, his enemy would do harm to him. So he suppressed his anger. Day
and night he shed tears thinking about the ill or the injustice that had been
caused by his enemy to him. Thus, he watered the tree of anger with his
tears, allowing the anger to grow. He also aroused his anger with his false
smiles and cunning tricks towards his enemy. Since the poet kept his anger
within himself and had his own fear and tears, his anger kept growing
every day.
Question 3.
Describe the effect of the poisonous fruit on the enemy’.
Answer:
Poem: A poison tree
Author: Ruskin bond
Theme: Love your enemies too
Character: Poet, enemy, and tree
The scene begins with the poet and his enemy. The poet was angry with
his enemy. He had no mind to tell his enemy about his anger. The anger
was like a seed. He watered it and it grew well. It became a tree. He
sunned with his smile. The tree blossomed and brought forth fruit. It
attracted the enemy.
He chose the night to steal it and eat it. The next morning the enemy was
found lying dead. The anger kept on growing till the end. The poet grew
the poison tree with an aim to kill the enemy. The fruit proved its worth.
The enemy was killed. Tne poet became happy.
“Love forgives and covers all sins”
Question 1.
Pick out the rhyming words.
Answer:
friend – end; foe – grow
Question 2.
What is the rhyme scheme of the stanza?
Answer:
aabb
Question 3.
Identify the figure of speech in the title of the poem.
Answer:
Personification
Question 1.
What figure of speech is used in ‘watered it in fears’?
Answer:
Personification.
Additional Questions
1. And I sunned it with smiles And with soft deceitful wiles
Answers:
1. (c), 2. (e), 3. (b), 4. (a), 5. (d).
G. Answer the following in about 80-100 words. Take ideas from the
poem and also use your own ideas.
1. Recall a recent situation when you became angry. What were the
consequences of your anger? After listening to the guidelines on anger
management, find out how well you could have handled the situation.
Write your findings.
Answer:
Anger is often viewed by the public as a feeling related to evil. However,
it is actually an innate feeling that every individual feels once in a while.
No one can escape this feeling. Even small children became angry from
time to time.
In the relay of throwing, the cockroach next fell upon the waiter. The
waiter stood firm, composed himself and observed the behaviour of the
cockroach on his shirt. When he was confident enough, he grabbed it with
his fingers and threw it out of the restaurant. Sipping my coffee and
watching the amusement, the antenna of my mind picked up a few
thoughts and started wondering, was the cockroach responsible for their
histrionic behaviour? If so then why was the waiter not disturbed? He
handled it near to perfection without any chaos.
It is not the cockroach but the inability of those people to handle the
disturbance caused by the cockroach. Similarly, situations will make us
angry, but if we could stop, think and then respond, anger can be
controlled.
Additional Questions:
Question 1.
What is the consequence of anger? How is it explained in the poem ‘A
Poison Tree’ by Blake?
Answer:
A Poison Tree is a poem that focuses on the emotion of anger and the
consequences of it. It deals with the darker side of the human psyche. The
poet expressed his anger, everything was fine, but when he kept it inside, it
began to grow, eventually becoming a metaphorical tree with poison fruit.
The foe ends up under the tree, destroyed by the speaker’s pent up anger.
Poet advises the readers to express the anger rather than holding it to
themselves. Anger sustained damages both.
Question 2.
What motivated the poet to write on anger?
Answer:
William Blake wrote this poem in 1794 and it first appeared in his book
Songs of Experience. Society at that time was encouraged to bottle up
emotions and to present a polite and unruffled person to the world. Blake
thought this approach unhealthy and advocated a more expressive mode of
being, especially with regards to potentially festering emotion. His ideas
were against the prevailing attitudes of the church and state. The original
title Blake had for this poem, Christian Forbearance, reflects this.
Question 3.
Has the figure of speech been used effectively in the poem? Justify
Answer:
A Poison Tree uses metaphor, antithesis and biblical associations to
highlight the self-damage that can proceed from suppressing anger. The
emphasis is on letting go on negative emotions and moving on with life
before this energy impacts on the health and wellbeing of others.
The poem carries with it a potent message, anger management which is the
focal issue for many in society. Blakes’s prescient poem hits the nail on
the head with its antithetical argument for letting go of negative energy.
A Poison Tree by William Blake About The Poet:
William Blake was an English poet, painter and printmaker. His thoughts
and art were a depiction of his bold imagination. He is held in high regard
by later critics for his expressiveness and creativity and for the
philosophical and mystical undercurrents within his work. Notable works
of Blake are ‘Songs of Innocence and of Experience’, ‘The Marriage of
heaven and Hell’, ‘The Four Zoas’, ‘Jerusalem’, etc.
In the history of the poetry and visual arts of the Romantic Age, Blake is
considered as a seminal figure. Blake lived and worked in the teeming
metropolis of London at a time of great social and political change that
profoundly influenced his writing. Blake worked to bring about a change
both in the social order and in the minds of men.
In ‘A Poison Tree’ William Blake describes how to handle anger both with
a friend and an enemy. The poet has given the readers a very valuable
lesson how to handle conflict. Blake also helps the readers by clearly
explaining the ill effects of holding malice inside oneself.
The first stanza speaks about two types of anger. One that was against a
friend and one against an enemy. When the anger was against a friend, he
took pain to explain his feelings and so the conflict was resolved. The
anger ended. The other was against his enemy. He did not like him. He
held the anger inside and did not express it. He also did not try to express
it to others and find a solution. Resentment began to grow inside.
The second stanza talks about the anger which grew as a poison tree. The
poet cultivated his anger, watered his budding tree with fear and tears
every day and night. The enemy did not know of this growing fury.
Deceptively the poet employed his smiles as though it was sun to this toxic
tree.
In the final stanza, the enemy was lured by the fruit of that poison tree.
Without the knowledge of the poet, the enemy ate the fruit of fury and was
found dead the next day under the tree. The poet does not seem to worry
about the loss. Blake uses the poem as a warning to those who harbour
grudges and allow the feelings of resentment to stay inside without dealing
with them. Expressing the feelings is the only Way to avoid the fruit of
poison tree.
He ‘suns’ the anger, i.e., gives it light and heat to grow better, by
indulging in hypocritical behavior. He pretends to be friendly with
the enemy, and fools him about his own feelings with smiles and
soft deceitful wiles.
Here the poet brings in a concrete image of the anger. The hatred
that the speaker nurtures in his heart towards his enemy takes the
form of an apple tree. It bears a bright apple which tempt the
enemy to come at night and steal the apple.
However, since the tree had been nurtured by the speaker’s angry
mind, it has become a poison tree bearing poisonous fruits. Thus,
when the enemy eats the apple, he dies immediately. When the
speaker comes near the tree in the morning, he sees the enemy’s
body stretched out beneath the tree. He is ‘glad’ to see this sight.
Thus, the hatred that the speaker nurtures towards his enemy kills
the enemy indirectly by making even the apple tree poisonous,
These are the effects of evil thoughts.