This is somewhat at odds with more contemporary vocal styles which favour a more conversational tone, but Yeats’ quavering incantation has a unique power of its own.William Butler Yeats is one of Irelands most revered poets and playwrights. The poem, written largely in hexameters, has a tranquil rhythm, something Yeats emphasises in his reading. It’s a music that’s proved popular ever since as Yeats concedes in the introduction to his reading, though he criticises his use of the archaism “arise and go” and the inversion of the final stanza, the kind of poetic flourishes he learned to banish from later work. In his autobiography Yeats identifies the poem as a significant one, “my first lyric with anything in its rhythm of my own music”. He was prompted to write the poem in London where he felt exiled from the rural beauty he captures so brilliantly in the poem. Written in a yearning voice, the poem draws on one of Yeats’ talismanic landscapes, that of Co. ‘The Lake Isle of Innisfree’, first published in his second collection The Rose, is an example of his early lyric style. For more detailed information on Yeats’ life and work, click on the website link below which will take you to the National Library of Ireland’s online Yeats exhibition. He died in France in 1939 and was buried in Drumcliffe Church, Co. His reputation by this time was secure – he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1923. ![]() Later collections The Tower and The Winding Stair are often considered his best. Yeats’ was now entering his poetic maturity in which he developed a symbolism to mediate between the demands of art and life. ![]() Her interest in spiritualism echoed Yeats’ and his explorations in this area informed some of his powerful visionary poems. His personal life was also changing: after a final rejection from Maud Gonne and then from her daughter, Yeats married Georgie Hyde Lees with whom he was very happy. He entered official political life when he was elected to the Senate, the upper house of the new Free State, in 1922. As events in Ireland began to take a bloody turn, Yeats’ poems increasingly addressed public themes as in ‘Easter 1916′, his troubled commemoration of the Easter uprising. Another important influence at this time was Modernism, Ezra Pound in particular, who introduced Yeats to the principles of Japanese Noh theatre. Yeats wrote prolifically for the stage but also continued with his poetry. To this middle period belongs his failed courtship of the beautiful nationalist, Maud Gonne and his founding in 1899 of the Abbey Theatre in Dublin which became a focus for many of the writers of the Irish Revival of which Yeats was a key figure. However, increased involvement with nationalist politics was to have a significant impact on his poetic style: his diction grew plainer, the syntax tighter and the verse structures, whilst retaining their traditional form, more muscular. His earliest books draw on the romantics and pre-Raphaelite ideals and mythologise a ‘Celtic Twilight’. ![]() The Wanderings of Oisin and other poems already showed concerns that were to remain central to his writing – Ireland, spiritualism and love. ![]() Yeats studied at the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art, his first collection of poetry being published in 1889. Sligo kept the connection to Ireland strong. His mother’s traditional Irish songs and stories and holiday visits to Co. Born in Dublin, Yeats’ family moved to London when he was two and he lived there until he was sixteen. William Butler Yeats (1865-1939) stands at the turning point between the Victorian period and Modernism, the conflicting currents of which affected his poetry.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |