Monday, June 18, 2007

Poem Mania

Dear Sumant,

I am very happy today I got up like 5:30 in the morning and since then I have updated my PMS. Right now Kitaro's pure mood is playing and I am enjoying this beautiful piece of Music. I am looking forward to memorize 32 poems for my 32 birthday :). That would mean that almost every week I have to memorize at least one poem and in the end I may have to accelerate it to catch up. I am planning on some all time favorite poems. In this week I am going to memorize this poem.

The Wild Swans at Coole by W.B Yeats

The trees are in their autumn
beauty,
The woodland paths are dry,
Under the October twilight the water
Mirrors a still sky;
Upon the brimming water among
the stones
are nine-and-fifty swans.

The nineteenth autumn has come
upon me
Since I first made my count;
I saw before I had well finished,
All suddenly mount
And scatter wheeling in great
broken rings
Upon their clamorous wings.

I have looked upon those
brilliant creatures
And now my heart is sore.
All's changed since I, hearing
at twilight,
The first time on this shore,
The bell-beat of their wings above
my head,
Trod with a lighter tread.

Unwearied still, lover by lover,
They paddle in the cold
Companionable streams or climb
the air;
Their hearts have not grown old;
Passion or conquest, wander where
they will,
Attend upon them still.

But now they rest on the still water,
Mysterious, beautiful;
Among what rushes will they build,
By what lake's edge or pool
Delight men's eye when I awake
some day
To find they have flown away ?

I also found a good explanation at some website by Richard Bizot and I am reproducing it here verbatim for my own note

The Poem
'"'The Wild Swans at Coole'"' consists of five six-line stanzas rhymed abcbdd. The meter is iambic, but loosened to accommodate the irregular cadences of speech. Odd-numbered lines have four stressed syllables, even-numbered lines three. The stanza, then, is a modified ballad stanza plus a rhymed couplet. Although William Butler Yeats uses six-line stanzas in many other poems, nowhere else does he employ exactly this stanza, which is stately but not stiff, well-suited to the poem"'"s reflective tone and melancholy mood.
It is a lyric poem both because of its musicality (in the oldest sense of '"'lyric'"') and because it is a direct expression of personal feelings, which may be identified as the author"'"s. It is a dramatic lyric in that the poem"'"s physical setting, particularly in the opening stanza, serves as an objective correlative to these feelings—representing, reflecting, '"'dramatizing'"' them.

'"'Coole'"' in the title refers to Coole Park, the estate in Ireland"'"s County Galway of Lady Augusta Gregory, Yeats"'"s friend, collaborator, and benefacter. Yeats spent a considerable part of each year there for many years, beginning in 1897; he often walked paths through the woods on the estate and to Coole Lake, with its swans.

On its first appearance, the poem was dated October, 1916, a time when Yeats"'"s spirits were at a low ebb. Still unmarried and childless at age fifty-one, he felt that life was passing him by. Over the years, his friend Maud Gonne had rejected several proposals of marriage from him, and in 1916 she had done so again; even her daughter Iseult had declined a proposal from him that summer. (In 1917, Yeats would marry Georgia Hyde-Lees; their daughter would be born in 1919, their son in 1921. This poem, then, unknown to Yeats, was a farewell song to lonely bachelorhood.)
The speaker in the poem draws two contrasts: On the one hand, between himself now and himself when first he walked '"'on this shore'"'; on the other hand, between himself and the swans. '"'All"'"s changed,'"' he says, since first he came there; and the change is in him: He walks with a heavier tread and his heart has '"'grown old.'"' This sets up the second contrast, for the swans—energetic, '"'Unwearied,'"' passionate—exhibit the very traits that he finds diminished, or lacking, in himself. The apparent lack of change in the swans underscores the changes that the poet feels, at age fifty-one, recollecting himself at age thirty-two.

Forms and Devices
The poem"'"s opening lines describe a scene of '"'autumn beauty'"' and also objectify Yeats"'" depressed state of mind. '"'October twilight'"' establishes at the outset a sense of things—a day, a year—coming to an end. Yeats"'"s mood, as it emerges over the course of the poem, is correspondingly autumnal, reflecting his awareness of the mortality he shares with everything terrestrial and temporal. That the '"'woodland paths are dry'"' is significant because Yeats characteristically associated dryness with physical and imaginative sterility. No less than '"'water/ Mirrors a still sky,'"' land&dh;scape mirrors mood.

Yeats often thought in terms of the four traditional elements: earth, air, fire, and water. (See, for example, '"'The Song of Wandering Aengus,'"' 1897, and '"'Sailing to Byzantium,'"' 1927.) '"'The Wild Swans at Coole'"' omits fire but makes conspicuous use of the other three, particularly by associating air with water and by distinguishing the two of them from earth.

Water mirrors sky (air) not only literally but also figuratively. In the Yeatsian cosmology, air and water are spiritual, earth is physical. '"'What"'"s water but the generated soul?'"' Yeats would ask in '"'Coole Park and Ballylee, 1931'"'; and '"'spirit'"' means breath (or air). Earth is solid, shaped, fixed—hence (paradoxically) mortal; air and water are amorphous, unstable—hence (paradoxically) immortal. Earth is temporal; air and water are eternal. There is no '"'autumn'"' for air or water, as there is for earth and terrestrial organisms, such as trees and poets. Swans hold dual citizenship of the spirit: '"'They paddle in the cold/ Companionable streams or climb the air'"' with equal ease and grace. At a practical level, Yeats"'"s inability to complete his count of the swans enables him to sustain the illusion that the ones he sees now are the same swans, unchanged, that he saw nineteen years earlier.
The most profound paradox relating to the swans, which makes them '"'Mysterious'"' indeed, is how they can be so completely engaged in life yet not subject to mortality. The solitary man wistfully watches the paired swans, still passionate, '"'lover by lover,'"' and wonders why he is alone and feeling his age. The poem does not attempt to resolve this paradox. It remains an enigma, like the '"'still sky'"' and the '"'still water,'"' their surfaces smooth and untroubled, with no indication of what might be beneath or beyond them. '"'Still,'"' though unobtrusive, is one of the key words in the poem. Not only does the word describe the two spiritual elements—tranquil, apparently motionless—in the opening and closing stanzas (thus again mirroring each other), but it also appears twice in the penultimate stanza, in a different sense: '"'Unwearied still … Attend upon them still.'"' Here '"'still,'"' meaning '"'now, as before,'"' refers to duration in time. The swans are at once in and out of time. The paradox deepens.

Themes and Meanings
A word often overlooked in discussion of this poem, perhaps because it appears only in the title, is '"'Wild.'"' Yeats called the swans wild, first of all, to indicate that they are in no way domesticated. They do not nest at Coole; thus, as the poem"'"s ending suggests, they may fly away at any time. Yeats also called them wild because of a set of admiring associations he had with that word. He habitually called all manner of flying things wild, and he had done so since he began publishing in the mid-1880"'"s.

He associated the quality of wildness with the power and freedom of flight, and he recognized it in certain people—rebels, for example—who led active, independent lives. In '"'September 1913,'"' he applied the traditional Irish term '"'wild geese'"' to exiled heroes from history. Although he did not always approve of Maud Gonne"'"s firebrand political activities, as early as 1910 he compared her with Helen of Troy, offspring of Leda and Zeus-as-swan, thus one of the '"'daughters of the swan.'"' Yeats also associated the quality of wildness with passion and mating, and in this respect too Maud Gonne came to his mind; passionate herself, the object of his passion, yet unwilling to mate with him.

The wild swans at Coole are independent, vigorously active, and passionate. The second stanza provides a powerful image of the whole flock of swans taking off in unison:

I saw, before I had well finished,
All suddenly mount
And scatter wheeling in great broken rings
Upon their clamorous wings.

The verb '"'mount'"' does double duty, clearly referring to the swans"'" ascension into the sky, but also bearing with it overtones of its other meaning: to copulate. The verb pulls together—admirably, for Yeats"'"s purposes—his main associations with wildness: power, freedom, and passion.
The power and passion that Yeats finds wanting in himself are imaginative as well as physical. He was in a dry spell as a poet in 1916–1917. Of the 374 lyrical poems in Yeats"'"s Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats (1956), only ten (totaling 273 lines of verse) were composed during these years. In contrast, twenty-three poems (963 lines) come from the following two years. While two or three of the 1916–1917 poems could be considered major poems, as many as eight or nine poems from 1918–1919 could be placed in that category. '"'The Wild Swans at Coole'"' reflects Yeats"'"s discouragement as a poet as well as a lover. He was shrewd enough, however, in uncreative periods of his life, to write poems about the difficulties of writing poems. It was a good strategy, for it helped Yeats get through dry spells with something to show for them.

Richard Bizot


Best regards
Sumant Sumant

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