The anger is presented as his “wrath” and personified as a twisted part of his subconscious. In the first stanza this wrath is unwanted and the speaker seems to be irritated or frustrated with it “I told it not, my wrath did grow” This tells us that his anger is beyond his control yet he still tries to rein it in for the sake of his foe. As the poem progresses the speaker tries less and less to control his anger and accepts it as a part of him and this suggests that it results in his foes’ death or injury. “In the morning glad I see, my foe stretched out beneath the tree”. The use of the word ‘glad’ tells us that he is taking pleasure in his enemy’s death and also makes him seem quite twisted and deranged and this shows the reader a significant progression of the speakers mental stability.
The speakers’ perspective on his own anger also changes throughout the poem. It goes from being a hindrance to being described as something pleasant ; “It bore an apple bright” It is as if his anger is a fruitful tree and the ‘apple’ is his murderous deed, so he is giving into his fury and is pleased at this ‘growth’ in a bid to hurt his foe. Blake also uses the word ‘bright’ and yet one would think that such feelings would be dark or