This English poet described how he was angry with my foe and eventually saw that foe outstretched beneath the title object in his A Poison Tree. That poem is part of a collection entitled Songs of Experience, which followed an earlier collection, Songs of Innocence, written by this English poet. Songs of Experience also contains a poem describing how the title animal burn(s) bright/In the forests of the night. For 10 points, name this English poet of The Clod and the Pebble, The Chimney-Sweep, and The Tyger.
a) William Wordsworth
b) Percy Bysshe Shelley
c) John Keats
d) William Blake

Q&A Education