Jan 2, 2010

Sailing to Byzantium | Sailing to Byzantium

At a glance:

The Poem

“Sailing to Byzantium” is a short poem of thirty-two lines divided into four numbered stanzas. The title suggests an escape to a distant, imaginary land where the speaker achieves mystical union with beautiful, eternal works of art.

“Byzantium” is a loaded word for William Butler Yeats, a word rich with meaning. “Byzantium” refers to an earlier Yeats poem by that title and to the ancient name for Istanbul, capital of the Byzantine empire of the fifth and sixth centuries. In his prose work A Vision (1925), Yeats wrote that Byzantium represents...

[The entire page is 1550 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:

©2000-2010 Enotes.com Inc.
All Rights Reserved