Romanticism in Yeats Poetry
Romanticism in Yeats Poetry
Romanticism in Yeats Poetry
British poet.
Introduction:
William Butler Yeats, the winner of Noble Prize for literature (1924) and one of the greatest
modern poets, is regarded as a romantic poet by many critics. His poetry comprises of different
features_ Occultism, symbolism, as love poet and romanticism etc. in all, his occupation of
poetic art is reveals in very flash way. He believed in art for art’s sake in his early age and
became the advocate of this notion_ art for art’s sake in his later period. He defined poetry as:
“The commonsense of the soul: it distinguishes greatness from triviality, mere fancifulness
from beauty that lights up the deeps of thoughts.”
Romanticism:
Regarding to the romanticism in Yeats poetry, he was, like poets of nineteenth century also
inspired by a profound romantic urge. Due his marvelous romantic works_ The Lake Isle of
Innisfree, When you are Old, Among the School Children, The Wild Swans at Coole, having all
the characteristics of romanticism which can be distinctly found in pure romantics_ Wordsworth,
Shelley, Keats and Coleridge, such as subjectivity, imagination, emotion, love for Nature, love
for art and beauty, nostalgia, escapism, idealism, symbolism, mysticism, myth maker art for art’s
sake etc. He is also known is the last romantic poet. He was also a great myth maker which is
evident in all his romantic works.
According to Cleanth Brooks:
“(Yeats was) the most ambitious attempt made by any poet of our time to set up a myth.”
To elucidate the romanticism let us have any eye on different traits of romanticism in Yeats
poetry.
Lake Isle of Innisfree is the greatest and most widely read romantic poem of Yeats. Having
almost all the features of romanticism_ imagination, love for nature, love for beauty and
emotions, it also has been regarded as the pure romantic poem like “Tintern Abbey” by
Wordsworth.
“I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the road way, or on the pavements grey,
I hear it in the deep heart’s core.
A sense of melancholy is a common subject in most of the romantic poets. A kind of lamentation
on the disappearance of the good things is found in most of the romantic poets. This sense of
melancholy is also found in Yeats’ poetry. He was in love with Maud Gonne but could not win
her. So, all through his life, he suffered from his sense of melancholy. He says in “The Wild
Swans at Coole” and feels himself defeated;