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Yeats's Poetry William Butler Yeats
"Adam's Curse"
Summary
Addressing his beloved, the speaker remembers sitting with her and "that
beautiful mild woman, your close friend" at the end of summer, discussing
poetry. He remarked then that a line of poetry may take hours to write,
but if it does not seem the thought of a single moment, the poet's work
has been useless. The poet said that it would be better to "scrub a
kitchen pavement, or break stones / Like an old pauper, in all kinds of
weather," for to write poetry is a task harder than these, yet less
appreciated by the "bankers, schoolmasters, and clergymen" of the world.
The "beautiful mild woman"--whose voice, the speaker notes, is so sweet
and low it will cause many men heartache--replied that to be born a woman
is to know that one must work at being beautiful, even though that kind of
work is not discussed at school. The speaker answered by saying that since
the fall of Adam, every fine thing has required "labouring." He said that
there have been lovers who spent time learning "precedents out of
beautiful old books," but now such study seems "an idle trade enough."
At the mention of love, the speaker recalls, the group grew quiet,
watching
"the last embers of daylight die." In the blue-green sky the moon rose,
looking worn as a shell "washed by time's waters as they rose and fell /
About the stars and broke in days and years." The speaker says that he
spoke only for the ears of his beloved, that she was beautiful, and that
he strove to love her "in the old high way of love." It had all seemed
happy, he says, "and yet we'd grown / As weary-hearted as that hollow
moon."
Form
"Adam's Curse" is written in heroic couplets, which is a name used to
describe rhyming couplets in iambic pentameter. Some of the rhymes are
full (years/ears) and some are only partial (clergymen/thereupon).
Commentary
"Adam's Curse" is an extraordinary poem; though it was written early in
Yeats's career (appearing in his 1904 collection In the Seven
Woods), and though its stylistic simplicity is somewhat atypical for
Yeats, it easily ranks among his best and most moving work. Within an
emotional recollection of an evening spent with his beloved and her
friend, Yeats frames a philosophical argument: that because of the curse
of labor that God placed upon Adam when He expelled him from the Garden of
Eden, every worthwhile human achievement (particularly those aimed at
achieving beauty, whether in poetry, physical appearance, or love)
requires hard work. The simple, speech-like rhythms of the iambic
pentameter fulfill the poet's dictate that a poetic line should seem "but
a moment's thought," and the bittersweet emotional tone appears wholly
organic, a natural result of the recollection. The speaker loves the woman
to whom the poem is addressed, and speaks "only for [her] ears"; but
though
the scene seems happy, their hearts are as weary as shells worn by the
waters of time.
Behind the natural, unsophisticated feel of the poem, of course, lies a
great deal of hard work and structure--just as the poem's speaker says
must be true of poetry generally. (One of the most charming aspects of
this poem is its mirroring of the aesthetic principles laid out by the
speaker in the first stanza.) The discussion of work and beauty is divided
into three progressive parts: the speaker's claims about poetry, the
friend's claims about physical beauty, and the speaker's claims about
love. This last claim affords Yeats the chance both to hush the trio and
to soften the mood of the poem, and the speaker looks outward to the
rising moon, which becomes a metaphor for the effects of time on the
human heart, a weariness presumably compounded by the labor of living
"since Adam's fall."
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