Yeats, William Butler - Charles A. Raines (essay date 1959)
Charles A. Raines (essay date 1959)
SOURCE: "Yeats' Metaphors of Permanence," in Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 5, No. 1, 1959, pp. 12-20.
[In the following excerpt, Raines examines Yeats's later poems and arques that they contain metaphors which represent order amid chaos and which consequently unify Yeats's later work.]
One of the constant themes in modern poetry, the search for permanence, grows primarily out of the idea that the twentieth century is a time of utter chaos and continual disruption, both spiritual and material, or, as Yeats describes it in a note to his poem "The Second Coming," "our scientific, democratic, fact-accumulating, heterogeneous civilization." Yeats, as a modern poet, is primarily concerned with the need to synthesize chaotic and disruptive elements in our civilization with permanent elements toward the end of attaining perfection, and, therefore, order. Certain metaphors of the later poems reveal Yeats'...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Lionel Johnson (review date 1892)
- William Butler Yeats (essay date 1900)
- William Archer (essay date 1902)
- Times Literary Supplement (review date 1919)
- William Butler Yeats (essay date 1937)
- Louis MacNeice (review date 1940)
- Donald A. Stauffer (review date 1951)
- Max Wildi (essay date 1955)
- Charles A. Raines (essay date 1959)
- Yvor Winters (essay date 1960)
- A. G. Stock (essay date 1965)
- Marjorie G. Perloff (essay date 1969)
- Joyce Carol Oates (essay date 1969)
- Desmond Pacey (essay date 1970)
- Thomas L. Byrd, Jr. (essay date 1978)
- William O'Neill (essay date 1983)
- Elizabeth Butler Cullingford (essay date 1993)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
