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"A Poison Tree" is a poem written by William Blake, published in 1794 as part of his Songs of Experience collection. It describes the narrator's repressed feelings of anger towards an individual, emotions which eventually lead to murder. The poem explores themes of indignation, revenge, and more generally the fallen state of mankind.
David Lee (born 1944) is an American poet and the first poet laureate of the state of Utah. His 1999 collection News From Down to the Café was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and, in 2001, he was a finalist for the position of United States Poet Laureate .
A Poison Tree", a 1794 poem by William Blake; Poison Tree, a 2012 novel by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes; The Poison Tree, a play by Robert Glaudini; The Poison Tree, 1994 novel by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles; The Poison Tree, 2009 book by Erin Kelly; Vishabriksha (The Poison Tree), 1873 novel by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay
Lee is the author of nine full-length books of poems and a chapbook. He has published poems in many literary journals, including The Nation, Field, Denver Quarterly, CutBank, Gulf Coast, Green Mountains Review, Barrow Street, Cimarron Review, Pleiades, Chattahoochee Review, Diagram, Sycamore Review, Willow Springs, Quarterly West, Prairie Schooner, and American Literary Review.
Songs and Proverbs of William Blake is a song cycle composed by Benjamin Britten (1913–76) in 1965 for baritone voice and piano and published as his Op. 74. The published score states that the words were "selected by Peter Pears" from Proverbs of Hell, Auguries of Innocence and Songs of Experience by William Blake (1757–1827).
"The Sick Rose" is a poem by William Blake, originally published in Songs of Innocence and of Experience as the 39th plate; the incipit of the poem is O Rose thou art sick. Blake composed the poem sometime after 1789, and presented it with an illuminated border and illustration, typical of his self-publications. [ 1 ]
Seventy-two-year-old Michigan man, David Lee Niles, vanished on Oct. 11, 2006 after walking out of a local bar one night. Niles' body had never been found. In fact, his family lost hope in finding ...
Okay, it's available at s:A Poison Tree, but that's not a speedy deletion criterion. Instead, I'm going to redirect the article to Songs of Experience, the book where this poem was published. If a full article can be written about this poem later, it can be. --Metropolitan90 01:09, 9 March 2007 (UTC)