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A Poison Tree by William Blake - OCRForm, structure and language

A Poison Tree deals with a key human emotion - anger. The poem鈥檚 content, ideas, language and structure are explored. Comparisons and alternative interpretations are also considered.

Part of English LiteraturePoems

Form, structure and language

A Poison Tree with annotations, highlighting its language, structure and form

Form

A Poison Tree is written in . This straightforward grouping of sets of four lines is one of the simplest and most recognisable poetic forms.

Structure

The poem has four . Each stanza consists of a pair of in the regular repeated pattern aabb. The rhythm of the poem is also straightforward and regular which makes it very easy to read, though not necessarily to understand. The straightforward and seemingly simple way in which Blake has written this poem contrasts with the very complex human emotions he is describing.

The poem also contains two clear turning points which help the reader to understand the character of the speaker. The first comes after the opening two lines and shows the difference in how the speaker handles a difficult situation in two separate cases. In the second, is introduced in the final two lines and shows the speaker's reaction to what has happened. The wording at this point is . It is a new day and a new beginning but the result of the speaker's untold anger is still there to see. This makes the reader continue to think about the poem after they have finished reading it.

Language

The vocabulary is simple (even if some of the words are unfamiliar today). Notice the following:

  • in the first stanza many of the words are except for the word 'angry', which is repeated twice to emphasise emotion and to contrast with the two different ways the speaker deals with this emotion
  • the lines in the first stanza all start with 'I' which emphasises that this is a personal story told from an individual point of view
  • seven of the other 12 lines in the poem start with 'and' which helps the story to build and increase in intensity

All of the above makes the poem seem like a piece of verse for children and like a simple nursery rhyme with a clear moral message to be learned. The use of 'and' particularly resembles that of a child telling a story. A difficult message is wrapped up in a form and structure which is deliberately simple and using very straightforward vocabulary, to get its point across.