At the Second Coming and the End of the World Cummings Yeats, the Fire and Sulfur of the Strong Hell of Hell, Large Scale Environmental Hazard, How do you do in the Third World War? How is the world over? This question can stop talking, start an hour's debate, start a religion, people can abandon faith. The answer to the ubiquitous question of how the world will ultimately end is a paradox. To know the answer means that the last hour has arrived. E. E. Cummings and William Butler Yeits expressed their emotions about the timing and causes of this amazing event.
William Butler Eat's "Second Coming" Poem "Second Coming" was founded in 1919 by William Butler Yeats. Yeats is a versatile Irish poet known for the social and religious beliefs of poetry. In "Second Coming", his thinking was developed with three important metaphors. The first metaphor ties falcon and its eagle to the destruction of society. There are two possible explanations for this analogy. There is also the idea that the hawk represents a society, and that Eagle represents God and morality.
William Butler Yeats: The next poem which is the source of the new title of Acehbe, Reading "Second Coming" (1921) It is attracted to the spirit and mystery of the world, and it works well for himself to explain human experience I created a myth of designed. After writing the rise of the First World War disaster and communism and fascism it is a glimpse of the convincing power of the future birth of the "second coming" inhuman world. Yeats believes that history moved partly during the two week cycle. It represents an unlucky period trying to give way to the ancient world of poetry with the same rough as the Christian era, ruthless beasts. Turn on the power and turn the expanded circulation (1) Falcon Falcon can not hear the sound; things crash, the center can not hold. The only anarchic state and the tide of bloodshed are released, in all places where an innocent ceremony is drowned. The best is the lack of all beliefs, the worst being the strength of passion. note:
WB Yeits wrote "Second Coming", but Europe and many other countries tried to recover from the First World War. The phrase "Jew who was born in Bethlehem" is definitely an important element in writing this poem. Ye saw a lot of social problems around him and wrote a world that I could not control. The second line of the poem means that the advancement of technology has exceeded human capabilities. This problem was apparent in Yeats 100 years ago, but it has been getting worse since then. Mr. Yez said he is concerned that technology is evolving so much that human beings are likely to cause serious damage relatively easily. The world has never seen the destruction of the First World War, and most people are shocked by the extensive loss of human life during the war. Yeats expanded with the imperialism of power and the rulers of the world to the circle said they could do almost anything to achieve their goals and said at that time.