Yeats, William Butler - William O'Neill (essay date 1983)
William O'Neill (essay date 1983)
SOURCE: "Yeats on Poetry and Politics," in The Midwest Quarterly, Vol. XXV, No. 1, Autumn 1983, pp. 64-73.
[In the following excerpt, O'Neill suggests that Yeats's poetical interpretation of political events evolved from bitterness to acceptance as Yeats tried to impose order on chaos by applying the theories of historical cycles which he explains in his collection of poems entitled A Vision.]
William Butler Yeats came of age during the Parnell era, a time of great political excitement in Ireland. By the mid-eighties Charles Stuart Parnell and his supporters had, by obstructionist tactics, forced the issue of home rule upon the English Parliament. Seven hundred years of English presence in Ireland seemed about to end. Then Captain O'Shea filed his famous suit for divorce, naming Parnell as corespondent. The tragi-comic debacle that brought Parnell to defeat and ended, for the time, all hope of home rule,...
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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
