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Yeats's Poetry William Butler Yeats
"The Wild Swans at Coole"
Summary
With the trees "in their autumn beauty," the speaker walks down the dry
woodland paths to the water, which mirrors the still October twilight of
the sky. Upon the water float "nine-and-fifty swans." The speaker says
that nineteen years have passed since he first came to the water and
counted the swans; that first time, before he had "well finished," he saw
the swans mount up into the sky and scatter, "whelling in great broken
rings / Upon their clamorous wings." The speaker says that his heart is
sore, for after nineteen autumns of watching and being cheered by the
swans, he finds that everything in his life has changed. The swans,
though, are still unwearied, and they paddle by in the water or fly by in
the air in pairs, "lover by lover." Their hearts, the speaker says, "have
not grown cold," and wherever they go they are attended by "passion or
conquest." But now, as they drift over the still water, they are
"Mysterious, beautiful," and the speaker wonders where they will build
their nests, and by what lake's edge or pool they will "delight men's
eyes," when he awakes one morning to find that they have flown away.
Form
"The Wild Swans at Coole" is written in a very regular stanza form: five
six-line stanzas, each written in a roughly iambic meter, with the first
and third lines in tetrameter, the second, fourth, and sixth lines in
trimeter, and the fifth line in pentameter, so that the pattern of
stressed syllables in each stanza is 434353. The rhyme scheme in each
stanza is ABCBDD.
Commentary
One of the most unusual features of Yeats's poetic career is the fact that
the poet came into his greatest powers only as he neared old age; whereas
many poets fade after the first burst of youth, Yeats continued to grow
more confident and more innovative with his writing until almost the day
he died. Though he was a famous and successful writer in his youth, his
poetic reputation today is founded almost solely on poems written after he
was fifty. He is thus the great poet of old age, writing honestly and with
astonishing force about the pain of time's passage and feeling that the
ageless heart was "fastened to a dying animal," as he wrote in "Sailing to
Byzantium." The great struggle that enlivens many of Yeats's best poems is
the struggle to uphold the integrity of the soul, and to preserve the
mind's connection to the "deep heart's core," despite physical decay and
the pain of memory.
"The Wild Swans at Coole," part of the 1919 collection of the same name,
is one of Yeats's earliest and most moving testaments to the heart-ache of
living in a time when "all's changed." (And when Yeats says "All's
changed, changed utterly" in the fifteen years since he first saw the
swans, he means it--the First World War and the Irish civil war both
occurred during these years.) The simple narrative of the poem,
recounting the poet's trips to the lake at Augusta Gregory's Coole Park
residence to count the swans on the water, is given its solemn serenity by
the beautiful nature imagery of the early stanzas, the plaintive tone of
the poet, and the carefully constructed poetic stanza--the two trimeter
lines, which give the poet an opportunity to utter short, heartfelt
statements before a long silence ensured by the short line ("Their hearts
have not grown old..."). The speaker, caught up in the gentle pain of
personal memory, contrasts sharply with the swans, which are treated as
symbols of the essential: their hearts have not grown old; they are still
attended by passion and conquest.
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