239- ] English Literature
W. B. Yeats
William Butler Yeats
Irish author and poet
Yeats’s
father, John Butler Yeats, was a barrister who eventually became a portrait
painter. His mother, formerly Susan Pollexfen , was the daughter of a prosperous
merchant in Sligo, in western Ireland. Through both parents Yeats (pronounced
“Yates”) claimed kinship with various Anglo-Irish
Protestant families who are mentioned in his work. Normally, Yeats would
have been expected to identify with his Protestant tradition—which represented
a powerful minority among Ireland’s predominantly Roman Catholic population—but
he did not. Indeed, he was separated from both historical traditions available
to him in Ireland—from the Roman Catholics, because he could not share their
faith, and from the Protestants, because he felt repelled by their concern for
material success. Yeats’s best hope, he felt, was to cultivate a tradition more
profound than either the Catholic or the Protestant—the tradition of a hidden
Ireland that existed largely in the anthropological evidence of its surviving
customs, beliefs, and holy places, more pagan than Christian.
In
1867, when Yeats was only two, his family moved to London, but he spent much of
his boyhood and school holidays in Sligo with his grandparents. This
country—its scenery, folklore, and supernatural legend—would colour Yeats’s
work and form the setting of many of his poems. In 1880 his family moved back
to Dublin, where he attended the high school. In 1883 he attended the
Metropolitan School of Art in Dublin, where the most important part of his
education was in meeting other poets and artists.
Meanwhile,
Yeats was beginning to write: his first publication, two brief lyrics, appeared
in the Dublin University Review in 1885. When the family moved back to London
in 1887, Yeats took up the life of a professional writer. He joined the
Theosophical Society, whose mysticism appealed to him because it was a form of
imaginative life far removed from the workaday world. The age of science was
repellent to Yeats; he was a visionary, and he insisted upon surrounding
himself with poetic images. He began a study of the prophetic books of William
Blake, and this enterprise brought him into contact with other visionary
traditions, such as the Platonic, the Neoplatonic, the Swedenborgian, and the
alchemical.
Yeats
was already a proud young man, and his pride required him to rely on his own
taste and his sense of artistic style. He was not boastful, but spiritual
arrogance came easily to him. His early poems, collected in The Wanderings of
Oisin, and Other Poems (1889), are the work of an aesthete, often beautiful but
always rarefied, a soul’s cry for release from circumstance.
Yeats
quickly became involved in the literary life of London. He became friends with
William Morris and W.E. Henley, and he was a cofounder of the Rhymers’ Club,
whose members included his friends Lionel Johnson and Arthur Symons. In 1889
Yeats met Maud Gonne, an Irish beauty, ardent and brilliant. From that moment,
as he wrote, “the troubling of my life began.” He fell in love with her, but
his love was hopeless. Maud Gonne liked and admired him, but she was not in
love with him. Her passion was lavished upon Ireland; she was an Irish patriot,
a rebel, and a rhetorician, commanding in voice and in person. When Yeats
joined in the Irish nationalist cause, he did so partly from conviction, but
mostly for love of Maud. When Yeats’s play Cathleen ni Houlihan was first
performed in Dublin in 1902, she played the title role. It was during this
period that Yeats came under the influence of John O’Leary, a charismatic
leader of the Fenians, a secret society of Irish nationalists.
After
the rapid decline and death of the controversial Irish leader Charles Stewart
Parnell in 1891, Yeats felt that Irish political life lost its significance.
The vacuum left by politics might be filled, he felt, by literature, art,
poetry, drama, and legend. The Celtic Twilight (1893), a volume of essays, was
Yeats’s first effort toward this end, but progress was slow until 1898, when he
met Augusta Lady Gregory, an aristocrat who was to become a playwright and his
close friend. She was already collecting old stories, the lore of the west of
Ireland. Yeats found that this lore chimed with his feeling for ancient ritual,
for pagan beliefs never entirely destroyed by Christianity. He felt that if he
could treat it in a strict and high style, he would create a genuine poetry
while, in personal terms, moving toward his own identity. From 1898, Yeats
spent his summers at Lady Gregory’s home, Coole Park, County Galway, and he
eventually purchased a ruined Norman castle called Thoor Ballylee in the
neighbourhood. Under the name of the Tower, this structure would become a
dominant symbol in many of his latest and best poems.
In
1899 Yeats asked Maud Gonne to marry him, but she declined. Four years later
she married Major John MacBride, an Irish soldier who shared her feeling for
Ireland and her hatred of English oppression: he was one of the rebels later
executed by the British government for their part in the Easter Rising of 1916.
Meanwhile, Yeats devoted himself to literature and drama, believing that poems
and plays would engender a national unity capable of transfiguring the Irish nation.
He (along with Lady Gregory and others) was one of the originators of the Irish
Literary Theatre, which gave its first performance in Dublin in 1899 with
Yeats’s play The Countess Cathleen. To the end of his life Yeats remained a
director of this theatre, which became the Abbey Theatre in 1904. In the
crucial period from 1899 to 1907, he managed the theatre’s affairs, encouraged
its playwrights (notably John Millington Synge), and contributed many of his
own plays. Among the latter that became part of the Abbey Theatre’s repertoire
are The Land of Heart’s Desire (1894), Cathleen ni Houlihan (1902), The Hour
Glass (1903), The King’s Threshold (1904), On Baile’s Strand (1905), and
Deirdre (1907).
Yeats
published several volumes of poetry during this period, notably Poems (1895)
and The Wind Among the Reeds (1899), which are typical of his early verse in
their dreamlike atmosphere and their use of Irish folklore and legend. But in
the collections In the Seven Woods (1903) and The Green Helmet (1910), Yeats
slowly discarded the Pre-Raphaelite colours and rhythms of his early verse and
purged it of certain Celtic and esoteric influences. The years from 1909 to
1914 mark a decisive change in his poetry. The otherworldly, ecstatic
atmosphere of the early lyrics has cleared, and the poems in Responsibilities:
Poems and a Play (1914) show a tightening and hardening of his verse line, a
more sparse and resonant imagery, and a new directness with which Yeats
confronts reality and its imperfections.
In
1917 Yeats published The Wild Swans at Coole. From then onward he reached and
maintained the height of his achievement—a renewal of inspiration and a
perfecting of technique that are almost without parallel in the history of
English poetry. The Tower (1928), named after the castle he owned and had
restored, is the work of a fully accomplished artist; in it, the experience of
a lifetime is brought to perfection of form. Still, some of Yeats’s greatest
verse was written subsequently, appearing in The Winding Stair (1929). The
poems in both of these works use, as their dominant subjects and symbols, the
Easter Rising and the Irish civil war; Yeats’s own tower; the Byzantine Empire
and its mosaics; Plato, Plotinus, and Porphyry; and the author’s interest in
contemporary psychical research. Yeats explained his own philosophy in the
prose work A Vision (1925, revised version 1937); this meditation upon the
relation between imagination, history, and the occult remains indispensable to
serious students of Yeats despite its obscurities.
In
1913 Yeats spent some months at Stone Cottage, Sussex, with the American poet
Ezra Pound acting as his secretary. Pound was then editing translations of the
nō plays of Japan, and Yeats was greatly excited by them. The nō drama provided
a framework of drama designed for a small audience of initiates, a stylized,
intimate drama capable of fully using the resources offered by masks, mime,
dance, and song and conveying—in contrast to the public theatre—Yeats’s own
recondite symbolism. Yeats devised what he considered an equivalent of the nō
drama in such plays as Four Plays for Dancers (1921), At the Hawk’s Well (first
performed 1916), and several others.
In
1917 Yeats asked Iseult Gonne, Maud Gonne’s daughter, to marry him. She
refused. Some weeks later he proposed to Miss George Hyde-Lees and was
accepted; they were married in 1917. A daughter, Anne Butler Yeats, was born in
1919, and a son, William Michael Yeats, in 1921.
In
1922, on the foundation of the Irish Free State, Yeats accepted an invitation
to become a member of the new Irish Senate: he served for six years. In 1923 he
was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Now a celebrated figure, he was
indisputably one of the most significant modern poets. In 1936 his Oxford Book
of Modern Verse, 1892–1935, a gathering of the poems he loved, was published.
Still working on his last plays, he completed The Herne’s Egg, his most raucous
work, in 1938. Yeats’s last two verse collections, New Poems and Last Poems and
Two Plays, appeared in 1938 and 1939 respectively. In these books many of his
previous themes are gathered up and rehandled, with an immense technical range;
the aged poet was using ballad rhythms and dialogue structure with undiminished
energy as he approached his 75th year.
Yeats
died in January 1939 while abroad. Final arrangements for his burial in Ireland
could not be made, so he was buried at Roquebrune, France. The intention of
having his body buried in Sligo was thwarted when World War II began in the
autumn of 1939. In 1948 his body was finally taken back to Sligo and buried in
a little Protestant churchyard at Drumcliffe, as he specified in “Under Ben
Bulben,” in his Last Poems, under his own epitaph: “Cast a cold eye/On life, on
death./Horseman, pass by!”
Had
Yeats ceased to write at age 40, he would probably now be valued as a minor
poet writing in a dying Pre-Raphaelite tradition that had drawn renewed beauty
and poignancy for a time from the Celtic revival. There is no precedent in
literary history for a poet who produces his greatest work between the ages of
50 and 75. Yeats’s work of this period takes its strength from his long and
dedicated apprenticeship to poetry; from his experiments in a wide range of
forms of poetry, drama, and prose; and from his spiritual growth and his gradual
acquisition of personal wisdom, which he incorporated into the framework of his
own mythology.
Yeats’s
mythology, from which arises the distilled symbolism of his great period, is
not always easy to understand, nor did Yeats intend its full meaning to be
immediately apparent to those unfamiliar with his thought and the tradition in
which he worked. His own cyclic view of history suggested to him a recurrence
and convergence of images, so that they become multiplied and enriched; and
this progressive enrichment may be traced throughout his work. Among Yeats’s
dominant images are Leda and the Swan; Helen and the burning of Troy; the Tower
in its many forms; the sun and moon; the burning house; cave, thorn tree, and
well; eagle, heron, sea gull, and hawk; blind man, lame man, and beggar;
unicorn and phoenix; and horse, hound, and boar. Yet these traditional images
are continually validated by their alignment with Yeats’s own personal
experience, and it is this that gives them their peculiarly vital quality. In
Yeats’s verse they are often shaped into a strong and proud rhetoric and into
the many poetic tones of which he was the master. All are informed by the two
qualities which Yeats valued and which he retained into old age—passion and
joy.
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