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A Poison Tree p.654

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After each quatrain, answer the comprehension questions on the s. ... 1. Describe each of the two scenarios that the speaker conveys in the first quatrain: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Poison Tree p.654


1
A Poison Tree(p.654)
  • William Blake
  • Songs of Experience
  • 1793

2
Pre-Reading Quickwrite
  • Label a piece of lined paper The Poison Tree
  • Label your first section heading Quickwrite
  • Respond (in writing) to this prompt
  • Think of some ways that anger can be
    destructive, not only to the person that the
    anger is directed towards, but to the person
    feeling the anger.
  • When finished with your Quickwrite, open your
    textbook to p. 654.

3
William Blake
  • The author who brought you the worldwide smash
    hits The Tyger (Experience) and The Lamb
    (Innocence)

1757-1827
4
Historical Context
  • Literary Genre Romanticism (European)
  • 17981832
  • A love of nature
  • Focus on the common person
  • Society
  • The Industrial Revolution
  • Factory System
  • Movement to cities

5
Blakes Opinion Industrialization
  • Blake was strongly opposed to the Industrial
    Revolution and the factory system
  • He bound his own books by hand to avoid
    supporting the manufacturers.
  • Blake felt factories alienated workers by turning
    them into machinery.
  • Goods were uniform as opposed to handcrafted, and
    Blake thought this disconnected them from
    humanity.

6
First Reading
  • Listen to and Read
  • The Poison Tree p. 694.

7
A Poison Tree
  • I was angry with my friend  I told my wrath,
    my wrath did end.  I was angry with my foe  I
    told it not, my wrath did grow.
  • And I watered it in fears,   
      Night morning
    with my tears  And I sunned it with
    smiles,  And with soft deceitful wiles
  • a
  • And it grew both day and
    night.  Till it bore an apple bright,            
                        And my foe beheld it
    shine.  And he knew that it was mine.   

  • And into my garden stole,  When the night had
    veiled the pole  In the morning glad I
    see        
  • My foe outstretched beneath the tree.

8
After First Reading
  • Impressions First Reading
  • What did you think of the poem? What stood out
    to you? What themes or symbols might Blake be
    using here?

9
Second Reading
  • Label the next section of your paper Second
    Reading
  • After each quatrain, answer the comprehension
    questions on the slides.

10
A Poison Tree
  • I was angry with my friend  I told my
    wrath, my wrath did end.  I was angry with my
    foe  I told it not, my wrath did grow.

Quatrain One
11
Quatrain One
  • 1. Describe each of the two scenarios that the
    speaker conveys in the first quatrain
  • a.)The speaker wasthen hethen
  • b.)The speaker wasthen hethen
  • 2. What point of view (1st, 2nd or 3rd) is the
    poem written from?

12
A Poison Tree

Quatrain Two
13
Quatrain Two
  • 1. What is being watered? With what 2 things?
  • 2. What is being sunned? With what 2 things?

14
A Poison Tree

Quatrain Three
15
Quatrain Three
  • 1. What does the tree produce?
  • 2. Where in literature have you seen this
  • same kind of fruit used?
  • 3. Who notices the fruit?

16
A Poison Tree
  • And into my garden stole,  When the night
    had veiled the pole  In the morning glad I
    see        
  • My foe outstretched beneath the tree.

Quatrain Four
17
Quatrain Four
  • What happened to the speakers foe?
  • How does the speaker feel about what happened?
  • What kinds of things could cause someone feel
    this way about a close friend?

18
Third Reading
  • Listen and read along carefully.
  • Look for examples of the four literary elements
    on the following slide

19
Listen for these Literary Elements
  • Extended Metaphor
  • A metaphor that continues and/or develops.
  • Allusion
  • A reference to a well-known and/or historical
    person, place, or event. Often biblical.
  • Rhyming couplets
  • Two lines of poetry that are next to each other
    and rhyme with each other.
  • Quatrains

20
A Poison Tree
  • I was angry with my friend  I told my wrath,
    my wrath did end.  I was angry with my foe  I
    told it not, my wrath did grow.
  • And I watered it in fears,   
      Night morning
    with my tears  And I sunned it with
    smiles,  And with soft deceitful wiles
  • a
  • And it grew both day and
    night.  Till it bore an apple bright,            
                        And my foe beheld it
    shine.  And he knew that it was mine.   

  • And into my garden stole,  When the night had
    veiled the pole  In the morning glad I
    see        
  • My foe outstretched beneath the tree.

21
Purple coupletRed quatrain Blue
biblical allusions
  • I was angry with my friend  I told my wrath,
    my wrath did end.  I was angry with my foe  I
    told it not, my wrath did grow.
  • And I watered it in fears,   
      Night morning
    with my tears  And I sunned it with
    smiles,  And with soft deceitful wiles
  • a
  • And it grew both day and
    night.  Till it bore an apple bright,            
                        And my foe beheld it
    shine.  And he knew that it was mine.   

  • And into my garden stole,  When the night had
    veiled the pole  In the morning glad I
    see        
  • My foe outstretched beneath the tree.

22
Literary Elements
  • Extended Metaphor
  • -Poison treeanger
  • -Gardening allowing anger to grow within
  • -Poisonous apple the product of repressed anger
  • Allusion
  • references the Fall of the Garden of Eden from
    Genesis.
  • Rhyming couplets 8 sets of rhyming couplets
  • Quatrains
  • 4 quatrains - (AABB)
  • 2 rhyming couplets per quatrain

23
Themes
  • The Cultivation of Anger
  • The seed of hate will grow
  • Buriedhidden covered up   I was angry with
    my foe   I told it not, my wrath did grow
  • Betrayal and Deceit
  • -Tree and apple images from Genesis (Adam and
    Eve)
  • -Allusions to this story of deceit, wrath, and
    anger.
  • And it grew both day and night.   Till
    it bore an apple bright, 
  • Hypocrisy
  • --Hiding negative feelings to appear virtuous
  • --Hypocrisy poisons the soul
  • And I sunned it with smiles,   And
    with soft deceitful wiles

24
Mini Project (Due two class periods from today)
  • Pick One
  • Create your own Poison Tree illustration.
  • or
  • Compose a poem or story related to one of the
    themes from The Poison Tree.
  • or
  • Record yourself doing a dramatic reading of one
    of The Tyger, The Lamb, or The Poison Tree.
    Present to me and (if you choose) to the class.
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