Research Paper On Yeats

841 Words2 Pages

It’s All Fun and Games Until Someone Decides to Be a Hero Yeats, often considered one of the greatest poets of the early 20th century, is known for his ability to blend his art and opinion to create poetry that expresses this opinion in a manner both elegant and emotional. However, as someone who’s career demands that he continually express his opinion, he must eventually contradict himself because, as time passes and one learns, their worldview will inevitably change; this applies to all people not just famous poets. Throughout Yeats’s career, the poet found himself continually returning to the theme of unrest in Ireland. At the time, the region was being occupied by England and many Irish people did not agree with this, Yeats included. …show more content…

Yeats reflects on the cycle that members of the middle class put themselves in. He criticises the ignorance of most of the population, their lack of concern with morality, and their willingness to confine their concerns entirely to the routine of working and earning money. Yeats looks back at a different time, when he believes that the general population was more idealistic and people were more willing to stand and defend themselves. He says, “Yet they were of a different kind, The names that stilled your childish play, They have gone about the world like wind, But little time had they to pray,” These people, Yeats reflects, were heroes, people he looked up to in his youth, but their heroism and lives were cut short and their nationalism put down by the …show more content…

In this poem, Yeats recounts an event to the reader, one that, in the past would have made him pleased, but now leaves him with a sort of unexpected grief. The piece is a memorial of sorts for a group of Irish nationalists who led a revolt on Easter day and in turn lost their lives. These are the heroes that Yeats, only three years before, claimed no longer inhabited Ireland; given his previous stance on the matter, the reader would expect Yeats to be triumphant, re energized by the sudden appearance of the heroes he so admires. But the poem is nothing like that. Instead the mood is melancholy; in his glorification of heroic actions in “September 1913”, Yeats forgets the humanity of his heroes, but in “Easter 1916” he is painfully reminded of this fact. Yeats knew these new heroes, they were acquaintances that he had seen daily, friends that he had passed time with. Yeats can only reflect on the lives of these people that he finds himself wishing that he had known better, and admire their resolve in the face of impossible odds. In the past, Yeats was willing to call the sacrifice of the hero necessary and admirable, but having lost people close to him, he finds that this opinion no longer stands true. Instead, Yeats mourns, his world has changed and he no longer knows if a sacrifice of this caliber can

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