Short Stories, Irish literature, Classics, Modern Fiction and Contemporary Literary Fiction, The Japanese Novel and post Colonial Asian Fiction are some of my Literary Interests





Showing posts with label Yeats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yeats. Show all posts

Sunday, October 8, 2017

“Ozymandias” by Percy Shelly and “The Second Coming” by William Butler Yeats







Poetry can help us understand history and our feelings to contemporary events.  In my recent readings of classic poems I have found two poems that seem almost a prophecy of political events in America, “Ozymandias” by Percy Shelley an “The Second Coming” by William Butler Yeats.  

“Ozymandias” (first published January 11,1818), The Greek name for the Egyptian Pharaoh Rameses II, struck me deeply in the perception the sculptor had of arrogant strutting buffonary of Ozymandias.  I wonder How long America’s fourth rate imitation will be remembered, will he 
cause great destruction before his end comes?  This is probably Shelly’s most read and taught  poem.  I hope to read more of his work and read Richard Holme’s highly regarded biography.



After the terrible results of the American Presidential election of November 2015 horrified all in the book Blog World, numerous posts quoting “The Second Coming”  (first published November 23, 1920) by William Butler Yeats were made on social media websites, suggesting, of course, the incomimg president was to be seen as The Rough Beast.  Like “The Wasteland”, this poem is partialy a vision of The post WW One world. Like that work,it makes use of ancient references.

 Of course other Ozymandias figures and other rough beasts will emerge.

Mel u




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Saturday, October 7, 2017

“The Stolen Child” by William Butler Yeats (1889, in The Wanderings of Oisin and other Poems)






an Elegant reading, includes scrolling text




William Butler Yeats (1865 To 1939) was the first poet I read.  At age thirteen or so I was captivated by his “Sailing to Byzantium”, it took me to a world far from the mundanity of my childhood.  I have been reading in his poetry on and off for the decades that have passed.  I recently heard a YouTube lecture on Yeats in which he was described as the greatest poet of old age.  I see it now.  Yeats was highly influenced and deeply steeped in Irish history and folk beliefs.  He also as he aged became involved with what most would call occult theories.  Yeats created a mythology out of his life and from that created some of the most sublimely beautiful poetry ever written.  

“The Stolen Child”, reading time under three minutes, is one of his more popular works.  I love it.  In part this is a poem arisen from the famine days in which dead children were described as taken by Fairies.  Sheridan le Fanu has written about this.  Fairies are not pure beings, they are stealing children for their own world.  Images of water abound in the poem, the faery is presenting a powerful temptation to the child.

Is there a poet you return to over and over? 

Do you have a favourite poem by Yeats?

Mel u



Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Kenzaburo Oe and William Butler Yeats

"When He Himself Will Wipe Away My Tears" by Kenzaburo Oe (1972)

Irish Short Story Week Year Two
March 11 to July 1
Nobel Prize Winners Only Week
April 6 to April 13



My Prior Posts for ISSW Year Two

My Prior Posts on Kenzaburo Oe

Please consider joining us for Irish Short Story Week Year Two.   All you are asked to do is to post on one or more Irish short stories (or a work of non-fiction that related well to this topic) and let me know about it.

I decided to include Kenzaburo Oe in Nobel Prize winners only Week on Irish Short Story Week  Year Two because he is one of my core authors, he is a genius, and he is so influenced by William Butler Yeats that he mentioned him eight times in his 1994 Nobel Lecture.  As far as I know I have posted on all of Kenzaburo's translated works of fiction.  Here is what Oe says in his Nobel Speech (and if a writer ever wants to tell the world something, a Nobel Prize Speech would be the place to do it!)


To tell you the truth, rather than with Kawabata my compatriot who stood here twenty-six years ago, I feel more spiritual affinity with the Irish poeWilliam Butler Yeats, who was awarded a Nobel Prize for Literature seventy one years ago when he was at about the same age as me. Of course I would not presume to rank myself with the poetic genius Yeats. I am merely a humble follower living in a country far removed from his. As William Blake, whose work Yeats revalued and restored to the high place it holds in this century, once wrote: 'Across Europe & Asia to China & Japan like lightnings'.
During the last few years I have been engaged in writing a trilogy which I wish to be the culmination of my literary activities. So far the first two parts have been published and I have recently finished writing the third and final part. It is entitled in Japanese A Flaming Green Tree.I am indebted for this title to a stanza from Yeats's poem Vacillation:
Is half all glittering flame and half all green
Abounding foliage moistened with the dew ...
('Vacillation', 11-13)
In fact my trilogy is so soaked in the overflowing influence of Yeats's poems as a whole. On the occasion of Yeat's winning the Nobel Prize the Irish Senate proposed a motion to congratulate him, which contained the following sentences:
... a race that hitherto had not been accepted into the comity of nations.
... Our civilization will be assesed on the name of Senator Yeats.
... there will always be the danger that there may be a stampeding of people who are sufficiently removed from insanity in enthusiasm for destruction.
(The Nobel Prize: Congratulations to Senator Yeats)
Yeats is the writer in whose wake I would like to follow. I would like to do so for the sake of another nation that has now been 'accepted into the comity of nations' but rather on account of the technology in electrical engineering and its manufacture of automobiles. Also I would like to do so as a citizen of such a nation which was stamped into 'insanity in enthusiasm of destruction' both on its own soil and on that of the neighbouring nations.
His wonderful novel, Rouse Up Oh Young Man is almost a gloss on the poetry of  Blake which Oe discovered through reading Yeats.

In deciding what to post on Oe, I selected one of my first posts on Oe and rewrote it a bit.  I When He Himself Shall Wipe Away My Tears goes to the heart of Oe and I enjoyed it tremendously.


The Day He Himself Shall Wipe Away My Tears  by Kenzaburo Oe was first published in Japan in 1972 and translated into English by John Nathan in 1977.  .

The Day He Himself Shall Wipe Away My Tears is an exceedingly bizarre narrative by a 35 year old man lying in a hospital bed wearing underwater goggles covered in cellophane.    This man, whose name we never learn,   may or may not have cancer but he believes and seriously hopes he does.   This work is more than passing strange.     The narrator is unreliable, to put it mildly.    His perception and memory of past events are at best confused.   The novel is set in hospital in post war Tokyo.    Maybe the narrator saw too much at too young an age and it drove him mad.   Something for sure did!   At more than one point in the
work I felt like yelling out to him "What are you crazy or something?"    I simply have to quote a bit of the opening few lines of the book

"Deep one night he was trimming his nose that would never walk again into sunlight atop living legs, busily
feeling each hair with a Rotex rotary nostril clipper as if to make the nostrils as bare as a monkey's, when suddenly a man, perhaps escaped from the mental ward..or perhaps a lunatic who happened to be passing with a body abnormally small and meagre for a man save only for a face as round as a Dharma's and covered in hair, set down on the edge of his bed and shouted, foaming,  What in God's name are you?  WHAT?...I'm cancer, cancer LIVER CANCER it is me".

In the world of this book, passing lunatics screaming the truth at us, or is  it,  perfectly ordinary.   When one is possibly dying of cancer, of course,  your top priority might be to trim your nose hairs.

The vast majority of the work consists of an interior monologue spoken out loud..   For brief periods the person who the narrator has designated as the administrator of his will comment on the monologue  and once and a while even his mother has a comment or two to make.   He flashes back in time from the times of the Japanese Invasion of Manchuria (where someone very important to him may have been killed-maybe his brother or stepbrother), to the period right after the Emperor of Japan in August of 1945 came on the radio and advised the Japanese people he was not a god .   As conveyed indirectly in The Day He Himself Shall Wipe Away My Tears   this affects the narrator and the Japan as a culture much as if the Pope were to say he had been advised by God to inform the people of the world that Christianity was a fraud.    Perhaps the impact was worse as the Emperor of Japan was seen as divine himself.   He himself was seen as God, not God's messenger.     The more one believes in old ways the harder is becomes to accept new ones.

Through out the narrative we hear about "a certain person" who may be the narrator's brother or step- brother.   He may have died a hero's death in Manchuria or he may be a deserter hiding away while plotting to kill the Emperor.   Just to muddy the waters a bit more, the Emperor may also be confused at times with the narrator' s father.   He seems never to have known his father.   Here is how the narrator sees his cancer, real or not

"When he began to feel cancer growing in his body cavity with the vigor of fermenting malt...his cancer appeared to him as a flourishing bed of yellow hyacinths or possibly chrysanthemums bathed in a faint, purple light."

Everything matters in this narrative.   It seems as carefully crafted as  a work of Flaubert.    Hyacinths grow with extreme rapidity and chrysanthemums are sacred  to the Emperor.      

Here are some words from the administrator  about another chrysanthemum
"blind to all things  in reality but the colossal chrysanthemum topped with a purple aurora illuminates the 
darkness behind his closed lids more radiantly than any light he has ever seen". 

Maybe we know now why he wears underwater goggles with cellophane on them.

Part of the story is about the narrator's hatred of his mother which seems to stem either from her preference for his brother or issues with the narrator's never seen by him father.   We learn enough about the narrator to partially reconstruct his interior world.

"My mother was isolated...from the days those ashes returned...she began to ignore every man, woman and child in the valley even when they were right under her nose.   Which left me, a kid to run around the valley..collecting our rations ...and making sure a certain party, who was gradually becoming obsessive over his food, had enough to eat."     

I cannot really begin to convey the strange and wonderful qualities of this work.   Imagine if Rabelais (Oe was a student of French literature and philosophy at the University of Tokyo), Jean Paul Sarte and William Burroughs collaborated on a work right after eating some very bad blow fish and you have an idea of what 
 The Day He Himself Shall Wipe Away My Tears   feels like as you read it.   

This book is about a lot of things and it is about itself.   It is about loss of faith, feelings of profound loss,
survivor's guilt,   and the destruction of old values.   We feel the effects of the war everywhere.
The Japanese culture provided  no role models or cultural archetypes to help them cope with what could not happen, total defeat.   
There is a long established literary tradition of using the insane to say what cannot be accepted by those in fully sunlit worlds.    The narrator of  The Day He Himself Shall Wipe Away My Tears has very deep roots in western culture.    His ancestors were in the plays of Euripides, his great grandfather was Dostoevsky's  underground man,   he speaks through Crazy Jane.   Oe has stated that he has come to understand the meaning of his own works through reading the poetry of William Butler Yeats.   

I do not mean to convey  that The Day He Himself Shall Wipe Away My Tears is a closed work that cannot be enjoyed or even followed without great effort.   It can be enjoyed just as a narrative of a crazy person.  As such we will pick up a lot about the aftereffects of the war on Japan.    We will see how the Japanese people felt when they heard the Emperor speak on the radio, and we will learn something about the home front in rural Japan.   The book is also funny-imagine the very straight laced executor of the narrator's estate being threatened with the loss of his work as administrator of the narrator's estate (who appears to have nothing to pass along anyway and probably is not going to die soon either) by a man in underwater goggles.    

My  judgment is that Oe is as deep as the Russians and as careful as Proust and Flaubert and knows as much about people as Dickens.  

Added note-since I first wrote this post, I read lots more work by Oe and I think he belongs among the great writers of the world.   I think it took a lot of courage and honesty on his part to acknowledge Yeats as one of his masters rather than refer to Japanese antecedents.   Given that Yeats was heavily influenced by the great Indian writer  Rabindranath Tagore who I will post on next for this event we can see a circle from Asian to Western Nobel Prize Winners.   Given the powerful influence of Oe on Japanese literature we can see how the writers of Irish stories are shaping even now the worlds of people who have never even heard of them.  

I thank who ever reads as far down as here. 

Mel u








Tuesday, April 10, 2012

"The Wisdom of the King" by William Butler Yeats (1893, six pages)

Irish Short Story Week Year Two
March 11 to July 1
Nobel Prize Winners Only
April 8 to April 15






My Prior Posts for ISSW Year Two

Please consider joining us for Irish Short Story Week Year Two.   All you are asked to do is to post on one or more Irish short stories (or a work of non-fiction that related well to this topic) and let me know about it.  I am also now opening the event up for writers from New Zealand and South Africa of Irish descent.  I very recently began to become aware of the large number of Latin American writers of Irish ancestry, the biggest concentrations are in Mexico and Argentina.   There are very serious groups in both these countries studying and honoring their heritage.   Mexico and Argentina have both had a president with Irish Grandparents.  There will  be an Irish/Argentine day in May.  It just shows the vast cultural reach of  the Irish Short Story.  Any and all posts on Latin American writers of Irish Heritage (stick to an Irish grandparent as your minimum tie, just like the Irish National Football team) are very welcome.
"I am a changeling but
I prefer this form"-
Ruprecht




I have been reading the poetry of William Butler Yeats (1865 to 1939-Nobel Prize 1923) on and off for decades.   I regard him as the greatest of all English language poets and I shrug off his political and social views.   As we have already seen during the event, Yeats was very into the traditional Irish folktale.  To some Irish Folktales are an absorbing hobby, to others they are just something for fun while to many they are seen as the basic cultural structure psyche of the Iirsh and an as older religion that was displaced by the Christians.   Many believe in these tales just as others believe in the fundamental texts of their religion.

"The Wisdom of the King" is a short story beautiful enough to be worthy of the world's greatest poet.  It is set in the days of ancient Ireland.   It is meant to evoke Christian themes (and this is a common religion short story) suggesting great wisdom to be found in the words of a very young man.   When he is born he is visited not by three wise men but by "three crones of the gray hawk".   Everyone is terrified by them an do not understand why they have come and they are too ignorant to know properly value their standing.  In an ancient blood ritual going back to the Druids, one of the crones mixes her blood with the boy.  When the hawk crones leave, the nurse of the boy goes at once to the king and tells him his wife has died giving birth to his first son.

As the boy age, he develops a reputation for great wisdom.   His council is sought by everyone.   There is one big problem, he does not have hair on his head but eagle down.  Everyone is told not to mention this and when they are around the boy they must mix feathers in their hair.  In time the boy becomes the King but he still has not known love and does not know there is something very different about himself.   The ending is very wonderful and very deep and I will not spoil it for you.

You can read this story here

I  will next post on one of our guest, Rabindranath Tagore from India, a mentor of Yeats and a very close friend. His influence on Irish Literary culture is very well documented and was quite strong.


"Welcome to my Event!)-Carmilla
Mel u




Monday, March 14, 2011

William Butler Yeats-"Hanahan and Cathleen the Daughter of Hoolihan"-

"Hanahan and Cathleen the Daughter of Hoolihan" by William Butler Yeats (1918, 6 pages)
Irish Short Story Week
Day One
The View from Mount Parnassus
William Butler Yeats

My first post for Irish Short Week was on the important and influential writer of the 20th Century, James Joyce.   My second post was on the most important playwright of the 20th Century,Samuel Beckett.   Both wrote marvelous short stories.    My third post keeps us firmly among the literary greats of all time.

To me William Butler Yeats, in the narrow range of my reading, is the greatest English language poet of all time.  I think the very best of his work is among the greatest literature of all times.   Yeats won  Nobel Prize in 1923.   Yeats deeply loved Ireland, its history, its people, and its mythology.   His work is deeply rooted in the Irish experience.   Like Beckett and Joyce, he created from the Irish experience, universal works.   I have been reading the poetry of Yeats on and off for all my adult life.   I know his political views and his philosophical constructions do not stand up to much scrutiny.    His giant ego makes him seem like a hard person to like.    I wanted to include one of his short stories on Day One just to make it clear the extreme high standard Irish Short Story writers have to live up to.  


"Hanahan and Cathleen the Daughter of Hoolihan"  is a story about a teller of tales, a wandering poet who makes his living from his tales and keeps the traditions of Ireland alive.     It is set in  a  time of hardship for the common people of Ireland.    The prose style is lyrical.


"Greetings to my old friend, as
one Nobel Prize Winner to
another I wish you happy
St Patrick's Day"-
Rabindranath Tagore
"It was travelling northward Hanrahan was one time, giving a hand to a farmer now and again in the hurried time of the year, and telling his stories and making his share of songs at wakes and at weddings." 


Hoolihan encounters a woman he knew in his younger days who has gotten a bad name.   The priest had driven her out of her home community.   She makes her living by selling herring and lives with another woman who has also gotten a bad name.    They invite Hoolihan to stay with them and he is happy to do so.   Mary Grace, one of the women, had some of his songs by heart as he was  well known singer of songs.   He made a bit of money singing his songs and saying his poems at weddings and celebration       The women fear that he has in mind leaving them.   Upon hearing this he recites one of poems and the women see him not just as man that had made them happy and brought people to their house but as one of the kings of poetry of Gael, a Celtic reference that  goes deep to the heart of the Irish literary tradition.   I will let the poet have his last words here  -the tears are for all of Ireland:


"While he was singing, his voice began to break, and tears came rolling down his cheeks, and Margaret Rooney put down her face into her hands and began to cry along with him. Then a blind beggar by the fire shook his rags with a sob, and after that there was no one of them all but cried tears down."


"Hanahan and Cathleen the Daughter of Hoolihan" probably is still read because Yeats wrote it, which is not a bad reason to read something.   I wanted to include it because it is so self-consciously Irish.


You can read it online here (along with of number of stories by Yeats)

Everyone is more than welcome to participate in Irish Short Story week-all you have to do is just post on one short story by an Irish author during the week and send me a comment.    


Tomorrow we will start out with a story by Oliver Goldsmith.    


"William, I am sure my beauty will
inspire your greatest work"-Carmilla
Mel u



Resources and potential ideas for the week