Yeatsâs Poetry
Essay title: Yeatsâs Poetry
OAC English Period 3
Writing for Free Ireland: Yeatsâs Poetry
William Butler Yeats was an Irish poet, a dramatist, and a prose writer – one of the greatest English-language poets of the twentieth century. (Yeats 1) His early poetry and drama acquired ideas from Irish fable and arcane study. (Eiermann 1) Yeats used the themes of nationalism, freedom from oppression, social division, and unity when writing about his country. Yeats, an Irish nationalist, used the three poems, âTo Ireland in the Coming Times,â âSeptember 1913â and âEaster 1916â which revealed an expression of his feelings about the War of Irish Independence through theme, mood and figurative language.
The theme of nationalism dominates in âTo Ireland in the Coming timesâ and in âEaster 1916.â In the former poem, Yeats suggested the idea of Irish brotherhood to achieve justice for Ireland, âTrue brother of a company, that sang, to sweeten Irelandâs wrongâ (Finneran 50). Although he wanted to fight for Irelandâs freedom, he did not participate in any military activities. Instead, he used songs and poems to reflect the situation in Ireland:
I cast my heart into my rhymes,
That you, in the dim coming times,
May know how my heart went with them (Finneran 51)
In the latter poem, he mentioned the names of the national heroes such as MacDonagh who died for the rebellion (Abrams 2308) and said, âNow and in time to be, / Whenever green is worn,â (Finneran 182). Green was the colour of the soldiersâ uniforms and also the national colour of Ireland which alluded that the war was still going on in Ireland.
The theme of freedom from oppression was introduced in âSeptember 1913.â Although Yeats loved his country, he often criticized it. He left Ireland after he published this poem which stated that the Ireland of his imagination no longer existed, âRomantic Irelandâs dead and gone, itâs with OâLeary in the grave.â (Finneran 108). Yeats implied that Irish freedom fighters, such as OâLeary, have died in vain. He also inferred that there were no longer any people who were willing to fight for Ireland:
Yet they were of a different kind,
The names that stilled your childish play,
They have gone about the world like wind, (Finneran 108)
The contemporary Roman Catholic middle classes had defeated the cause for which Yeats fought for at that time; hence Yeats felt oppressed by his own people. (Abram 2303)
The theme of social division appeared in âSeptember 1913â because Yeats detested the middle classes and their Philistine money grabbing (Abrams 2303) as describe in the first three lines:
What need you, being come to sense,
But fumble in a greasy till
And add the halfpence to the pence (Finneran 108)
To Yeats, the middle classes had forgotten their own history. They insulted the memories of the Irish heroes who fought for freedom and the rights to be Catholic. Through this poem, Yeats suggested that the middle classes only cared about money, not the freedom of their country. He tended to romanticize the aristocracy and peasants but hated the middle classes for their indifference to Ireland. (Abrams 2303) Yeats also implied that because of the selfishness, they made everything meaningless, destroying the romantic Ireland.
In contrast, the poems âTo Ireland in the Coming Timesâ and âEaster 1916â carry the theme of unity. In the former poem, Yeats said, âThat you, in the dim coming times, / May know how my heart went with themâ (Finneran 51). He was saying that his dreams for Ireland would live on even when he was dead. Yeats wrote the latter poem after the Easter Rebellion. (Abrams 2307) It expressed the theme of unity by Yeatsâs action of returning to Ireland and reconciling with the middle classes. This happened when he realized that the middle classes was behind the rebellion. He used the word âourâ in both poems, which also revealed a strong idea of unity.
Yeats used different tones in these poems because they were written in three different stages of his career. âTo Ireland in the Coming Timesâ was written in 1896 during the early stage of Yeatsâs career. He created a sentimental and nostalgic mood when he wrote, âAh, faeries, dancing under the moon, / A Druid land, a Druid tune!â (Finneran 50). In his mind, Ireland was an idyllic, enchanted