Byzantium - profound desire, beyond the age William Butler Yeats wrote two poems. They are collectively called the Byzantine series. The first one is "Sailing to Byzantium", and its sequel is called "Byzantine". The former is thought to be easy to understand. It includes various meanings and emotions, and poets use various literary devices to convey them. The two main themes of this poem are the difficulty of escaping the world and the desire to live forever.
The form of "Sailing to Byzantium" is the ottava rima of eight lines of rabbits abababcc in the form of Italian poetry. The shape of this poem can be traced back to English As its name suggests, Italian poetry is a suitable form of ancient and eternal poetry that transcends a narrow range of human life. This poem is one of Yeats' best poetry and it is worth analyzing and elucidating his difficult images and symbols. One of the wonderful meditations on aging and wisdom, "voyage to Byzantium" is an elusive or even magical one, but a better way.
Past cultural expropriation is a long process. Therefore, between accepting Byzantium as part of the national story and historical real attention to Byzantium, and their use in national symbols and representative fields, There was time. Allocation is performed in stages from various points of view, not only with respect to the specific settings in a particular time period. Thus, the historical unified theory of Greece shifted from the field of political history to the field of language and folklore. For Byzantium, it takes decades to complete this process, and the new image is still working. The delay in the development of Byzantine studies in Western Europe highlights the fact that international historical debate can affect domestic history, but limits the autonomy of the European historical building process It is not something.