William Butler Yeats
March 23, 2008
It’s Easter, and somehow I woke up thinking of Yeats and his poem Easter, 1916. There was a period in my life when Yeats was a cornerstone poet for me. I think, among other things, I was fascinated with how his life and work bridged the Victorian and Modern eras—he lived from the end of the U.S. civil war (1865) to the outbreak of the second World War (1939). But I also was attracted to his melancholy in poems like “The Lake Isle of Innisfree” and “Sailing to Byzantium” (and yes, that opening line of Byzantium, “That is no country for old men” is indeed the source of the title of the book and the movie).
Not surprisingly, the Web is full of terrific Yeats resources. The Wikipedia article is excellent and chock full of citations and outbound links. I also found a voice recording of Yeats reading Innisfree, and you can find a wonderful short video about the genesis of “Byzantium.”
Posted by Bill Trippe at March 23, 2008 8:31 AM
Comments
Post a comment
Comments for this entry have been closed.









Great post, just like always. When I'm entering your blog I'm always sure I won't regret it. Continue writing.
Posted by Dave Davis at April 11, 2008 3:28 AM