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LITERARY QUEST
An International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Monthly, Online Journal of English Language and Literature
“A Poison Tree” and the Bible
Dr. Chiramel Paul Jose
Professor of English, Department of Foreign Languages, Al Baha University,
Al Bahah, Al Baha, Saudi Arabia
Abstract
If William Blake’s master-piece poem “The Tyger” can be considered to be
his symbolic utterance of the divine wrath, another song of experience by him “A
Poison Tree” together with ‘The Human Abstract’ explores on the theme of human
anger. Delving into many critical opinions about this poem, the present study
tries to establish that this poem is a clear tribute to Blake’s dependence on the
Bible and the imageries from there. Much more than the ‘attributed’ Blakean
criticism of the Bible as some of the scholars have ventured to show, the poem
is in fact a clear cut and subtle psychological dig made by William Blake at the
pretentious and hypocritical double-dealing of the Pharisaic people with whom
Jesus Christ was always at odds throughout His life on earth. The first two lines
of the poem consisting of the first incident of it could belong to the Innocence
State and the rest of the poem consisting of the second incident belongs to the
Experience State.
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Keywords
Wrath; Forbearance; “A Poison Tree”; William Blake.
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If William Blake’s poem “The Tyger” dwells on the theme of the divine
wrath, there are two other poems of Blake which apparently deal with the theme
of human wrath: “The Human Abstract” and “A Poison Tree.” Kathleen Raine
suggested that both the Tree of Mystery bearing the fruit of Deceit in “The Human
Abstract” and the poison tree are the same (II, 32). In the present study the
focus is only on the poem “A Poison Tree.” In “A Poison Tree Analysis Using Post-
Structuralism” posted by Edwig O’Nguik on the Louie’s Corner blog, the author
analyses it in three stages, which contains verbal stage, textual stage, and
linguistic stage and concludes: “The disunity can be found among the first,
second, third, and fourth stanzas which have different process of the tree which
is used as metaphor to symbolize anger. The theme of this poem is ‘suppressed
wrath can harm life’. The deeper meaning is the lack of self-control in humanity.”
The present study is a threefold analysis of the poem: namely, putting it
in the whole context of William Blake’s composite art of poetry and painting
produced and printed by dint of illuminated printing which he invented using
etched copper plates, posing the relationship to Innocence and Experience as
two contrary states of the human soul, and deeming it in the background of the
Bible which for Blake was the Great Code of Art.
Seeing the title, “A Poison Tree” one may think that the poem would be
talking about some sort of flora and fauna. But when the reader goes on to read
the poem in its entirety, one realizes that “A Poison Tree” must be taken as a
symbolic title than depicting any flora or fauna. The structure of the poem is
easily carved out as two incidents written in end-rhyming couplets. The poem
takes on an “AA, BB” end rhyme scheme in that a sentence (in a couplet) will
rhyme with the next. It is interesting to note that the first incident is laconically
expressed in the very first two lines of the poem, whereas the second incident
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runs through the whole of the remaining twelve lines. The beginning incident of
the whole narrative of the poem is compressed into the very first couplet of this
poem. Someone who was angry with his friend speaks out his wrath. Thus, the
first two lines of the poem present the happy settlement of a quarrel and there
is no repression. To quote from Geoffrey Keynes:
I was angry with my friend:
I told my wrath, my wrath did end (K 218).
In the second instance, he was also angry with his enemy. He had never revealed
to his enemy. As a result of this, his anger or hate for him grew leading him to
get implicated in the ‘foe’s’ murder. The narrator speaks of "I" who is identified
by Blake scholars as ‘Yahweh’ of the Old Testament God, whom Blake has
renamed as Urizen appearing in many of his later prophetic writings. Similarly,
the poison tree is his (Yahweh’s) Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Instead
of merely exploring wrath as the consequence of repressed anger, this poem
incarnates wrath as an object. Wrath becomes a poison tree. Or rather, since the
tree represents the body this anger becomes a sick and infectious body, which
has repressed it into hypocritical and thereby perverted honest emotion into
wrath and murder.
The poison tree is the growth of a man’s concealed hatred for his foe, by
which he traps his enemy to death and destroys himself. The first couplet
obviously established how easily the burden of one’s anger could be relieved by
openly conversing with the concerned person. But when the speaker is
suppressing his anger it grows up as wrath. A clear parallel can be seen in the
Bible. In II Samuel Amnon had spoiled Absalom’s sister Tamar, King David was
very angry, but “Absalom spoke Amnon neither good nor bad, for Absalom hated
Amnon, because he had forced his sister” (II Sam. 13. 22). In other words, David
gave vent to the natural human anger at the atrocity done to his daughter, but
Absalom did conceal his anger. Thus Absalom could be very much the prototype
on whom Blake drew out the speaker in “A Poison Tree.” Absalom in guile
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hypocrisy pleaded the king to send Amnon in his company and ordered the
servants to strike Amnon. Paradoxically, Absalom could not be peaceful even
after this. He had to flee away from his own land. This paradox is brought to
light by Blake’s poem. Probably this is highlighted again in Milton when Blake
wrote later, “If you account it Wisdom when you are angry to be silent and/ Not
to show it, I do not account that Wisdom, but Folly” (K 483).
Here there is no settlement or peace both to the speaker as well as to the
foe. For the speaker it becomes a tree to be cultivated carefully. Stealthily
nurturing a tree wishing to eschew the sight of a neighbour can really be a
cumbersome botheration for one who does it. The more he dissembles the more
it grows until finally it produces a poisonous fruit. Consider the lines:
And I water’d it in fears,
Night & Morning with my tears;
And I sunned it with smiles,
And with soft deceitful wiles.
And it grew both day and night,
Till it bore an apple bright (K 218).
Taking this poem as an example of Blake’s use of ‘Objective Syntax’ Donald Davie
commented:
the reason why the action grows so easily out of the logic is that, as
in ‘The Human Abstract’, each stanza, whether narrative or not,
contains two syntactical members, so that every stanza seems to
parallel every other one, in syntax as in metre and in rhyme. But
the ‘growth’ is easy (‘fatally easy’, we might say, for the growth of the
narrative is also the growth of the dreadful tree) in another way. For
in a sense the poem never moves out of the realm of its initial terse
logic. (83)
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Both day and night, repressed anger was growing inside the speaker, bereaving
him of peace of mind. As Linda R. Ranieri of West Chester University observes in
her explication of the poem:
The speaker’s vigilance results in “an apple bright” (10) in the third
stanza – similar to the apple from the Tree of Forbidden Knowledge,
this fruit stands at once as a harbinger of danger and a tantalizing
temptation for the speaker’s unsuspecting foe. The speaker becomes
the Serpent that tempted Eve, capitalizing on and exploiting envy, a
deadly sin by allowing his foe to "behold its shine" (11). The crafty
speaker brags about reading his foe’s mind: "And my foe beheld it
shine, / and he knew that it was mine" (11-12), implying the ease
with which he could fool his enemy by taking advantage of his foe’s
natural curiosity and covetousness. Blake ends this stanza with a
comma instead of a period, accelerating the fatal line of action into
the fourth and final stanza, filling the reader with dread and
anticipation. (Ranieri)
Similarly, for the foe too, this unsettled wrath was a total discomfiture.
Even though they were apparently at peace with each other due to the untold
and repressed wrath, at the core of his heart, the foe wanted to steal the
speaker’s fruit and become his foe indeed. In Linda Ranieri’s words,
The foe falls for the ruse, deceptive in his own right as he stealthily
slips into the speaker’s garden to steal the shiny object (and proving
the speaker’s suspicions right). Blake combines the acts of breaking
and entering and of theft into the word “stole” at the end of Line 13
(an ironic line choice, too, if one is superstitious), with no ending
punctuation that would let the reader hesitate or stop for a breath”
(Ranieri).
He tries to be resolved with his own ill feelings to the speaker by coming
to steal it by the night. The result is obviously the death of the foe:
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And into my garden stole
When the night had veil’d the pole:
In the morning glad I see
My foe outstretched beneath the tree (K 218).
But the speaker himself cannot take pride in it nor be happy about it. He is
getting destroyed himself by this wile hypocrisy. He could have very well averted
or avoided this outcome, had he shown spontaneous frankness in the beginning.
In that event he would never have become an enemy. So the speaker of the poem
is more culpable than the foe. In the words of Linda R Ranieri:
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. (Ranieri)
The idea of graver responsibility to the speaker can be supported by
observing the illustration to the poem. There the poison tree is pictured as if
purposefully taking its root from the suppressed wrath of the speaker (See Fig.
1; retrieved from <www.blakearchive.org>).
The foe is lying dead and outstretched beneath a tree, which seems to be
deriving the tendrils of its roots in earth from a twig starting from the ‘y’ of ‘My’
in the last line of the poem, which “grow up the page, enclosing the title, and
expanding down at the right margin, to become a tree of seventy year’s growth,
rooted in the earth and dying”, as has been pointed out by David V Erdman. As
explained by Linda R Ranieri,
The final image conveyed in the last couplet is of the foe lying
‘outstretched beneath the tree’ (16), breaking the poem’s flow of
action by flashing forward to the following morning. With the dawn
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comes the poem’s resolution: the speaker is “glad [to] see” his foe
dead, apparently from ingesting the poison apple. The speaker
seems satisfied that his scheme of deception has worked, getting rid
of his source of wrath by poisoning it with his unchecked anger and
desire for revenge. (Ranieri)
“A Poison Tree” has obvious allusions to the “Tree of Life” and “Tree of the
Knowledge of Good and Evil” in Genesis chapters 2 and 3. Kathleen Raine has
pointed out that Blake was probably influenced by Jacob Boehme’s idea of the
“Tree of Life” and the “Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil”. According to
Boehme the Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil were one
and the same, but manifest in two worlds; the one perceived as it is in eternity
and the other perceived as it is in this fallen world. After quoting extensively
from Boehme, Kathleen Raine seems to conclude: “Adam instead of feeding upon
the bread of heaven, ‘the fruits of Life’ (So Boehme calls them), ate the earthly
nature of the trees, in which was hidden wrath of God the Father (II, 38).”
Having the complex symbolism at his mental arena, Blake is now
conveying a human theme which is not at all obscure. As Raine suggests, “We
do not need any special knowledge to recognize the force of Blake’s argument
that it is better to clear the air by an honest expression of anger than to
accumulate the far more deadly and insidious poison of concealed wrath which
goes under the name of ‘Christian Forbearance’ (II, 38-39).” It should be noted
that originally Blake’s title for this poem was “Christian Forbearance” as has
been established by R.B. Kennedy. Drawing internal evidence from a cancelled
line written into Blake’s Notebook about 1793, R.B. Kennedy observes in
connection with the change of title, that “the idea of a poisonous tree may owe
something to the upas tree of Java (‘Antiaristoxicaria’, its native-name means
‘poison’)” The cancelled line reads: “There is just such a tree at Java found”
(186).
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In the poem Blake was battling against the traditional Christian teaching
with a sense of deep psychological insight. As Anne K. Mellor observes: “Church
and King join forces . . . to restrict emotion to ‘polite’ discourse (thus preventing
simple anger into murderous frustration, as in “A Poison Tree”) . . . Every sign
of Energy or exuberant physical activity is suppressed as the threat to the
established system” (55). Blake categorically asserts that aggressive feelings in
case suppressed, will certainly destroy interpersonal relationships. Self-
effacement may easily become destructive self-assertion; similarly, humility and
gentleness can degenerate into ‘soft deceitful wiles.’ With the change of title from
“Christian Forbearance” to “A Poison Tree” Blake wanted to emphasize that even
Forbearance, when misguided, can be a poison tree because “Each tree is known
by its own fruit. . . . The good man out of the good treasure of his heart produces
good, and the evil man out of his evil treasure produces evil; for out of the
abundance of the heart his mouth speaks” (Lk. 6. 44-45). Moreover, an actual
practice by the Lamb like Jesus Christ Himself restraining from such a
hypocritical forbearance is recorded by John:
Jesus answered, ‘I have always spoken openly to the world; I have
always taught in synagogues and in the temple, where all the Jews
come together. I have said nothing in secret’. . . When he had said
this, one of the police standing nearby struck Jesus on the face . . .
Jesus answered, ‘If I have spoken wrongly testify to the wrong. But
if I have spoken rightly, why do you strike me’? (Jn. 18. 20-23)
Indeed, this incident not to argue that it expressed the anger of Jesus, but Jesus
did not at all offer his other cheek to the police, waiting for the police to beat him
there too. Certainly His annoyance at the misbehaviour of the police is spoken
out.
There are scholars like Kathleen Raine (II, 38), Philip J. Gallaghar (246-
248) and others who mainly depended on the tradition of Boehme, and consider
that “‘A Poison Tree’, while seeming to criticize only human behaviour, gives
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occasion for a more far-reaching criticism of God.” God is accused of concealing
his wrath in the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil and ensnaring man. But
a close reading of the Bible will reveal that such an accusation is unfounded.
God was from the beginning telling them not to eat of a particular tree. The tree
and the fruit are only symbols. The guilt of Adam and Eve was disobedience or
disloyalty to the God who had been so kind and benign to them. And once they
fell, He did not conceal His wrath, but He cursed and banished them. And in
the curse itself is implied the hope for Salvation. God actually expressed His
wrath and surely did it end at that moment itself. God, the Son undertakes the
task to untie the knots of this curse in due time. If at all one thinks in quite a
human way, Adam’s fall would have been less culpable, had he questioned God’s
prohibition openly, without stealing and eating the forbidden fruit. And
moreover, God, neither before nor after the fall, acts like a hypocritical foe. It is
the men who are hypocritical and twist these truths by their guile plans. So
Blake is battling not against God or Yahweh Himself, but against the false
prophets assuming the role of minor deities and exhorting people for ‘vices’ like
‘Christian Forbearance,’ considered in the traditional verbatim sense.
Blake points out that Christian forbearance, if not properly understood
and practised, will become a poison tree. Instead, Christian forbearance must
be a combination of forgiveness and at the same time wrath with pity. Blake,
who professed himself to have an interest in Jesus, the friend of sinners, affirms
in the prefatory note (To The Public) to Jerusalem, that “the Spirit of Jesus is
continual forgiveness of sin” (K 621). The same idea he reiterated in “The
Everlasting Gospel” (K 745-786). Even in the lamentation of Enion in The Four
Zoas one of her follies lamented over by herself had been “I have planted a false
tree in the earth; it has brought forth a poison tree” (K 290). Finally she
realizes the value of Experience: “what is the price of Experience? do men buy it
for a song? / Or wisdom for a dance in the street? No, it is bought with the price
/ Of all that a man hath, his house, his wife, his children” (K 290). After extolling
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the wrath of God symbolized in the tiger, Blake interprets that in the human
situation especially the wrath should not be concealed. Wrath which speaks out
frankly and settles things, is nothing but wrath with pity and understanding. “A
Poison Tree” is an allegory which implicitly invites us to a sort of synchronising
wrath and forgiveness of sins. Tell the wrath and end the wrath is the clear and
irresistible message of the poem. Centuries ago, Blake probably anticipated one
of the best-selling assertive training books from Transactional Analysis School
authored by Herbert Fensterheim and Jean Baer entitled, Don’t Say Yes When
You Want to Say No: Making Life Right When It Feels All Wrong.
Philip Gallaghar in his article proposes a hypothesis that Blake through
this poem wanted to prove that the Fall Narrative in Genesis is a fraud:
In other words, the writers of Genesis, desiring as they did
(according to Blake) to justify their murderous ways, went so far as
to pronounce that the gods (Yahweh and the serpent) had ordered
events which in the lyric pertain exclusively to the demon wrath,
which resides in the breast of its human narrator. Thus the
destructive repression of unmotivated anger becomes, under the
aegis of the Bible, the occasion for allegedly just punishment of man,
now fallen and therefore subject to the ways of sin which is death:
Blake’s poem is designated to expose the fraud. (246)
John Brenkman also suggests such an understanding of the poem in one of the
footnotes of his article “The Concrete Utopia of Poetry: Blake’s ‘A Poison Tree’”:
If one were immediately to draw the meaning of the image from its
Biblical source to supply what is missing in the conceit [of the poison
tree], the poem could be construed as a satire of the Eden myth. God
would become the speaker, humankind, the foe ensnared by the
temptation of something enviable. (188)
To both of these one may laconically answer that the Genesis account is
not presenting a picture of repression of anger or concealed wrath. Neither is
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the anger of God totally unmotivated, nor did Blake wish to criticise this Biblical
Book by his poem “A Poison Tree”. If Blake really wanted to fulminate upon the
Bible, he would not have inscribed on his Laocoön plate, “The Old & New
Testaments are the Great Code of Art”, and filled the surrounding area of the
whole picture with plenty of inscriptions from the Bible to establish his view
points as an Artist and creative painter and poet committed to the Bible (see Fig
2; retrieved from <www.blakearchive.org>). Decoding these inscriptions in the
possible order in Blake’s mind would be another interesting study which does
not come under the purview of this article.
The anger of God and the anger of the speaker in the poem “A Poison Tree”
are not analogical, nor at the same level. With all respect to the scholarly
inquisitiveness of Gallaghar and Brenkman, the researcher disagrees with them
and aver Gallaghar’s assertive allegation that Blake through this poem “implicitly
uncovers what is perhaps the Bible’s most insidious doctrine”(248) to be
certainly a far-fetched idea, especially, if one considers it in the whole
background of Blake’s life-responses to the Bible. This fact is admitted by
Gallaghar himself in the conclusion of his paper (248, 249). Blake, of course,
did examine and tried to interpret the Bible in his own way. But to say that he
was trying to prove the Books of the Bible as fraudulent, is certainly not well-
founded. In that case Blake would not have depended on the Bible so much.
Nor would he have taken the pains to reach an Oxford Scholar’s level in studying
and mastering the two Biblical languages Hebrew and Greek at the age of 45,
with a view to understand better the core of the Bible which for him was the
Great Code of Art. Moreover, Blake would not have ventured to reproduce the
whole Bible in his own newly invented composite art form of illuminated painting
and engraving, of which, unfortunately, he could only finish the first few
chapters from the Book of Genesis alone. “A Poison Tree” is certainly a subtle
psychological dig made by William Blake against the pharisaic hypocrisy and
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double-mindedness, which Jesus Christ was bent on fulminating, at all costs,
throughout His life here on Earth.
Fig. 1
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Fig. 2
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References:
Anne Kostelanetz Mellor. Blake’s Human Form Divine. California: U of California
P, 1974. Print.
Brenkman, John. “The Concrete Utopia of Poetry: Blake’s “A Poison Tree”.” Ed.
Chavia Hosek & Patricia Parker. Lyric Poetry beyond New Criticism. Ithaca
& London: Cornell UP, 1985. 182-193. Print.
Brown, Raymond E, et al. Ed. The New Jerome Biblical Commentary. Bangalore:
Theological Publications in India, 1990. Print.
Davie, Donald. Articulate Energy. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. 1966. Print.
Erdman, David V. Ed. The Illuminated Blake. London: OUP, 1975. Print.
Fensterheim, Herbert and Baer, Jean. Don’t Say Yes When You Want to Say No:
Making Life Right When It Feels All Wrong. New York: Dell, 1975. Print.
Gallaghar, Philip J. “The Word Made Flesh: Blake’s “A Poison Tree” and “The
Book of Genesis”.” Studies in Romanticism 16 (Spring 1977). 246-248.
Print.
Kennedy, R.B. Ed. Blake: Songs of Innocence & of Experience and Other Works.
London: Collins Publishers, 1970. Print.
Keynes, Geoffrey. Ed. Blake: Complete Writings with Variant Readings. rpt.
1985. Oxford & New York: OUP, 1957. (Blake’s lines has been quoted
from this edition and indicated by K followed with the concerned page
number; e.g. K 218).
O’ Nguik, Edwig. “A Poison Tree Analysis Using Post-Structuralism”. Louie the
Bunny blog. 2010. Web. 31 Dec. 2010.
Raine, Kathleen. Blake and Tradition. Princeton: Princeton UP, I & II. 1968.
Ranieri, Linda R. “Explication of William Blake’s “A Poison Tree”.” 1794.
<http://courses.wcupa.edu/fletcher/britlitweb/lranieria.htm>
The Interpreter’s Bible: A Commentary in 12 Vols. Nashville: Abindon Press, 1957.
Print.
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MLA (7th Edition) Citation:
Jose, Chiramel Paul. ““A Poison Tree” and the Bible.” Literary Quest 1.8 (2015):
1-15. Web. DoA.
DoA – Date of Access
Eg. 23 Aug. 2015. ; 05 April 2017.