Personification In A Poison Tree

Words: 526
Pages: 3

Imagine a person’s emotions controlling everything within them and depicting everything they did. When people are younger they are just learning how to control their emotions and understand what they are letting them do things that would not normally happen when you get older. Emotions are a big thing in life that can make people do uncontrollable things. Going off the idea that emotions control people the following poems depict this. In “A Poison Tree” by William Blake and “Do Not Go Gentle Into That Goodnight” by Dylan Thomas both convey the message that releasing emotions can benefit oneself and not hurt other people.
Throughout “A Poison Tree” William Blake demonstrates the theme of not holding on to emotions. The use of personification gives wrath its own person like traits and gives it more meaning. As an emotion demonstrating the theme of holding in emotions can hurt others. In “A Poison Tree” William states, “My wrath did grow” (4). Personification is used as an enforcer of emotions, and expresses the theme by giving importance to those emotions. Personification is also used in giving meaning to the emotion of wrath and how it can have it’s
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The use of repetition with the word rage, . In “Do Not Go Gentle Into that Good Night” Dylan states “Rage, rage against the dying of the light” (Thomas 3,9,12,16). Using repition with the word rage here, and that rage is an emotion being shown and having significance proving the theme of holding in emotions can hurt others. In addition, another literary term Dylan Thomas uses is a simile to compare emotions to objects. From the poem Dylan states, “Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay” (14). This simile compares the emotions and what could happen to meteor fire and how big of an action it is. Which also give connectivity to emotions controlling actions and causing