Irish troubles: Yate's poem William Butler Yeats was born in Dublin, Ireland [13 June 1865], considered to be one of the greatest British poets of the 20th century. The following discussion is based on the hypothesis that Yeats' poetry is strongly influenced by the political events of this period, and on the political turmoil of that period, excerpts / critical analysis of concrete poetry, and the verification of the hypothesis Provide background information on.
William Butler Yeats' poem William Butler Yeats is an Irish poet, playwright, and essayist - one of the greatest British poets of the 20th century. (Ye Zhi 1) His early poetry and theater got ideas from Irish fables and esoteric studies. (Ellman 1) When Ye Zhi wrote about his country he used nationalism to avoid themes of oppression, social division and solidarity. - William Wordsworth can better understand his view on the destruction of nature in his poem "A line written in early spring." Through anthropomorphization, he shows nature life-like and entertains life. However, human beings are still destroying what they call "the sacred plan of nature" (8). The whole poem is about the interaction between nature and man. Wordsworth is obviously not satisfied with human beings making it to the world.
William Butler Yeats is an Irish poet, a dreamer, foresighted people, fascinated by folklore, folk songs and superstitions about Irish farmers. His poetry has a Celtic flavor with mixed mysticism and melancholy. The purpose of his poem is to inform the world of the beauty of Celtic literature. As he grew older, he departed from pleasant lyrics, as well as more stringent discipline and deep thought. The stolen children of W. B Yeats were included in the 1889 poem collection called Crossways. It was written in 1886 and published in 1889. When he wrote this poem William Butler Yeats was 21 years old. This poem celebrates the story of Ireland the mother loves. It develops mainly around the fairy group to attract the children away from his house to the fairytale world.
Yeits' participation in the Irish political system arises from his interest in Irish mythology and folklore. Irish myths and folklore are restrained by the teachings of the church and the UK school system. Yeats used his poem as a tool to reeducate the people of Ireland's legacy as a strategy to develop Irish nationalism. We talked about the entire folk tales such as "The Wandering of Osin" (1889) and "The Death of Guchulan" (1939) in epic and theater, and in short stories we used pieces of stories such as "stealing". "I came" (1886), metaphor for fairies to keep children away from the house, and Irish folk hero who fought over the beach with the lost son at the beach, painting the epic of curettrain "1925 Year". It is part of it. Other verses cover topics, images and themes deleted from folklore studies. Most importantly, Yeats injected a rich sense of Irish culture into his poem.