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Celtic Poets: W.B. Yeats

William Butler Yeats
Bust of William Butler Yeats. William Murphy from Dublin, Ireland, 
CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

William Butler Yeats, also known as WB Yeats, is one of the most famous Irish poets in history. He dabbled in politics and playwriting as well, but is most known for his poetic works. His upbringing helped shape his fascination with themes that would arise in his later works.

Background

Yeats was born on June 13, 1865, in Sandymount, Co. Dublin, Ireland. He was the oldest of four children and was the son of a famous Irishpainter and lawyer. He was fascinated by the occult and mysticism.

Education

Yeats was homeschooled until he turned 10. He was then educated in Dublin and London, spending his summers at the family’s house in Connaught. He attended Erasmus Smith High School in Dublin and spent a lot of time at his father’s art studio. He spent two years at the Metropolitan School of Art in Dublin, during which time his first two poems were printed in the “Dublin University Review.”

Politics

Throughout his life, Yeats was deeply involved with politics. He was a nationalist and anti-English. Despite this, he despised the hatred that was spewed by the Irish Nationalist movement. In 1922, Yeats was appointed senator of the Irish Free State.

Poetry

Although he was involved in politics, Yeats is most known for his poetry. He was considered a modernist, although he also mastered traditional forms. His work draws heavily from Irish mythology and history. Yeats was influenced by the likes of Shakespeare and Standish James O’Grady.

Like with any poet, there are certain themes that appear again and again throughout Yeats’ work. These include contrast of art and life, masks, cyclical, and beauty in mundane theories of life.

“Lake Isle of Innisfree” is one of Yeats’s earlier lyric poems. The poem is about living a simple life in nature that will bring peace to the troubled speaker. Its feeling is an overall sense of longing for peace. The trip to Innisfree is not a literal trip but an emotional and spiritual escape. In the poem, Innisfree, represents a youth to which the speaker is unable to go back to.

“The Second Coming” is a poem filled with allusions, metaphors, and symbolism. Its overall allusion is the prophecy of Christ’s second coming. There is also an allusion to John’s vision of the Beast of the Apocalypse. The gyre in the poem is a metaphor for the destruction of the current era. The circling falcon is a symbol for circling around a certain point, and the widening of the gyre represents the destructive motion of society.

 He is known for being involved with the Celtic Revival. From there, he went on to be a founder of branches of the National Literary Society. He was also one of the founders of the Irish Literary Revival.  In 1923, Yeats won the Nobel Prize for Literature.

Theatre and Plays

Aside from his poetry, he also helped found the Irish Theatre, which became the Abbey Theatre, where he was a chief playwright. His plays were often about Irish mythology and reflected his fascination with mysticism and spiritualism. His later plays were intended for smaller audiences. These often experimented with masks, dance, and music, and were influenced by Japanese Noh plays.

His best-known plays include “The Countess Cathleen” (1892), “The Land of Heart’s Desire” (1894), “Cathleen ni Houlihan” (1902), “The King’s Threshold” (1904), and “Deirdre” (1907).

Death and Legacy

Yeats died on January 28, 1939, in France. Today, Yeats is still considered one of the greatest Irish poets and has influenced many other poets throughout history. He has commanded a high place in Irish letters and is an internationally renowned poet. 

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