РефератыИностранный языкSeSecond Coming Essay Research Paper Surely the

Second Coming Essay Research Paper Surely the

Second Coming Essay, Research Paper


?Surely the Second coming is at hand;? when a vast image out of Spiritus


Mundi Troubles my sight:? A shape with a lion body and the head of a man, / A


gaze blank And pitiless as the sun,?(2.9-15). Is the world actually coming to


an end? Is this sphinx-like creature truly our inevitable savior? Or, is Yeats?


life and things surrounding it coming to chaos? Is the war and restless spirit


of Ireland influencing Yeats? work? On the other hand, is Yeats trying to help


one to understand the frustrations of their own lives on a more personal level?


The depth of Yeats?s work, among many other great poets, is immeasurable. Many


surrounding emotions, and intentions may go into this poem, along with various


other subsidies the poet may not even be aware of. This is precisely why the


literature department, or lack of, in many schools is weakening. Too many


teachers, professors, and now students focus either solely on rhyme and meter or


the ?obvious? reason a poet might compose a poem, such as personal


relationships, failures, earthly surroundings, or mental distress. The educators


of students today need to be more open-minded on the interpretations one has for


a particular poem. Literature has been a very strong Darr2 foundation for any


prosperous civilization. For centuries poets will be immortalized in classes and


books. However, as their words are remembered their spirit has been lost. When


analyzing a great poet?s work such as Yeats, the most obvious interpretation


is usually not the correct one. Literature helps open minds to endless


possibilities in every possible aspect. If students are taught to just accept


explanations and are discouraged from questioning or even thinking for


themselves, then the world will soon become full of conformed, mindless robots.


Future leaders of the world must be taught to analyze everything. They must be


taught to use their imaginations and logical thinking together. That is a most


powerful combination in the hands of a determined student. The process must be


in the root of this thinking. It must begin with literature. Throughout Yeats?


life he has produced numerous controversial poems. Many people hold their own,


very strong, opinions about poems. The truth is, there is not only one. Yeats


had many different influences when writing ?The Second Coming?, and it is


important for the reader to know each of them before they can even begin to


understand the many meanings and interpretations of this poem. Yeats?s poetry


has three major influences. The more obvious one is the fact that Yeats was from


Ireland, and at the time that this poem was written, World War II was affecting


Ireland. However, WWII was not something knew to the Ireland?s culture because


for the past 300 years Ireland had been involved in many other wars and at the


same time trying to gain their independence. Another influence on Yeats?s


writing was his personal religion, Gnosticism. According to Harold Bloom, Yeats


believed Christianity to be ?the barbarian theosophy,? and declined to


distinguish it form Gnosticism (1). Gnosticism Darr3 has to do with searching


for self-knowledge and rejecting the society of their time. This seems to have


been quite appropriate for Yeats and his writing. The third influence on


Yeats?s writing was the work of other philosophical writers such as Shelley,


Blake, and Nietzsche. Yeats used some of the imagery and context of their


previous works to help describe the meaning of ?The Second Coming.? When


reading ?The Second Coming? one?s first impression might be of someone who


felt as though they had no control of their life and therefore life was about to


come to an end. That interpretation was not well thought out and very


narrow-minded. The meaning is much more complex than that. ?The Second


Coming? is a very powerful piece of poetry, and one of the most universal


admired poems of the 20th century. Attempting to understand William Butler


Yeats?s work is almost impossible unless you let one to become completely


open-minded on every aspect of the poem. There are many different theories as to


what the true meaning of ?The Second Coming? really is. The fact of the


matter is that Yeats purposefully has more than one interpretation of ?The


Second Coming.? He wants the average person to open his or her creative mind


and to analyze every influence, language, and imagery to understand the message


he is trying to get across. When reading the opening lines of ?The Second


Coming? there are two meaning Yeats is trying to portray. In the opening


figuration, the center is man, unable as the falconer to no longer maintain


control over a ?turning and turning? movement. Man is going through constant


chaos that is affecting all of society. It is described, as ?Things Darr4 are


falling apart; the center cannot hold;?(1.3). However, there is evidence also


suggesting that the falconer is also the poet himself. The poet is loosing


control of his own creativity. He has a powerful and creative message to get


across but struggles to put it on paper. This presentation, either way, is


breaking down, or falling apart. At the end of the first stanza Yeats describes


and uses imagery when stating, ?The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and


everywhere / The ceremony of innocence is drowned;? (1.5-6). This of course


refers to the biblical story of Noah and the great flood. Yeats is painting a


picture of an ocean of blood, which symbolizes the ?last wave?, or the end


of the world. In the beginning of the second stanza words are crucial here, for


Yeats ?surely? is showing us how insure he is, the repetition of


?surely? betraying his uncertainty. When Yeats repeated the words ?the


Second Coming? he is either referring to the Christian Second Coming of Christ


or the Gnostic Second Birth of their Demigod. Either interpretation is a great


change and uncertainty. Next Yeats describes the spirit of the world or


?Spiritus Mundi.? This image is identical with ?Anima Mundi,? the second


part of Per Amica Silentia Lunae, written also by Yeats just two years before (Cowell


15). In the second half of the last stanza Yeats states: ?somewhere in the


sands of the desert A shape with lion body and head of a man, A gaze blank and


pitiless as the sun, Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it Reel shadows


of the indignant birds? (2.5-9). Yeats is describing a male Sphinx, Egyptian


rather than Greek; also there is evidence that the Sphinx is associated with the


sun god. The literary representation here is of Shelley?s Darr5 famous sonnet


?Ozyman-dias,? which described a monument that was in the shape of a male


Sphinx (Donoghue and Mulryne 68). This is evidence clearly shows how other


philosophical writers influenced Yeats?s work. Another example of this takes


place in the third and final part of this poem. These last few lines are


extremely confusing but very powerful. Yeats goes on to say: ?The darkness


drops again; but now I know Those twenty centuries of stony sleep Were vexed to


nightmare by a rocking cradle, And what rough beast, its hour come round at


last, Slouches twards Bethlehem to be born??(2.17-21). The ?stony sleep?


of the Sphinx associates him with the ?stony sleep? of Blake?s Urizen in


The Book of Urizen. According to Donoghue and Mulryne, those twenty


?Christian? centuries can be taken as the outside term in this metaphor;


they represent nature, the fallen object-world. The ?rocking cradle? is the


inside term, standing for the subjective unconsciousness that is aware of the


Incarnation (24). Yeats’s vision in the end seems to be that the Christian age


is over and the Gnostic?s are waiting at Bethlehem for the Second Birth of the


Sphinx. Summarizing the experience of ?The Second Coming? reveals a


successful representation of other philosophical writers such as Shelley, and


Blake. It portrays many of the characteristics of the Gnostic religion. The poem


demonstrates how Yeats is waiting for his Sphinx to come again in ?The Second


Coming?. Lastly, Yeats uses imagery and the influences of the Irish wars to


depict the chaos and intensity throughout the poem. It is with theses influences


that Yeats is able to express the many meaning of ?The Second Coming?. Darr1


Christin Darr Dr. Arthur Edward Salmon Eng.II 9:45a.m. 25 May 2000 The Spirit of


William Butler Yeats and ?The Second Coming? ?Surely the Second coming is


at hand;? when a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi Troubles my sight:? A


shape with a lion body and the head of a man, / A gaze blank And pitiless as the


sun,?(2.9-15). Is the world actually coming to an end? Is this sphinx-like


creature truly our inevitable savior? Or, is Yeats? life and things


surrounding it coming to chaos? Is the war and restless spirit of Ireland


influencing Yeats? work? On the other hand, is Yeats trying to help one to


understand the frustrations of their own lives on a more personal level? The


depth of Yeats?s work, among many other great poets, is immeasurable. Many


surrounding emotions, and intentions may go into this poem, along with various


other subsidies the poet may not even be aware of. This is precisely why the


literature department, or lack of, in many schools is weakening. Too many


teachers, professors, and now students focus either solely on rhyme and meter or


the ?obvious? reason a poet might compose a poem, such as personal


relationships, failures, earthly surroundings, or mental distress. The educators


of students today need to be more open-minded on the interpretations one has for


a particular poem. Literature has been a very strong Darr2 foundation for any


prosperous civilization. For centuries poets will be immortalized in classes and


books. However, as their words are remembered their spirit has been lost. When


analyzing a great poet?s work such as Yeats, the most obvious interpretation


is usually not the correct one. Literature helps open minds to endless


possibilities in every possible aspect. If students are taught to just accept


explanations and are discouraged from questioning or even thinking for


themselves, then the world will soon become full of conformed, mindless robots.


Future leaders of the world must be taught to analyze everything. They must be


taught to use their imaginations and logical thinking together. That is a most


powerful combination in the hands of a determined student. The process must be


in the root of this thinking. It must begin with literature. Throughout Yeats?


life he has produced numerous controversial poems. Many people hold their own,


very strong, opinions about poems. The truth is, there is not only one. Yeats


had many different influences when writing ?The Second Coming?, and it is


important for the reader to know each of them before they can even begin to


understand the many meanings and interpretations of this poem. Yeats?s poetry


has three major influences. The more obvious one is the fact that Yeats was from


Ireland, and at the time that this poem was written, World War II was affecting


Ireland. However, WWII was not something knew to the Ireland?s culture because


for the past 300 years Ireland had been involved in many other wars and at the


same time trying to gain their independence. Another influence on Yeats?s


writing was his personal religion, Gnosticism. According to Harold Bloom, Yeats


believed Christianity to be ?the barbarian theosophy,? and declined to


distinguish it form Gnosticism (1). Gnosticism Darr3 has to do with searching


for self-knowledge and rejecting the society of their time. This seems to have


been quite appropriate for Yeats and his writing. The third influence on


Yeats?s writing was the work of other philosophical writers such as Shelley,


Blake, and Nietzsche. Yeats used some of the imagery and context of their


previous works to help describe the meaning of ?The Second Coming.? When


reading ?The Second Coming? one?s first impression might be of someone who


felt as though they had no control of their life and therefore life was about to


come to an end. That interpretation was not well thought out and very


narrow-minded. The meaning is much more complex than that. ?The Second


Coming? is a very powerful piece of poetry, and one of the most universal


admired poems of the 20th century. Attempting to understand William Butler


Yeats?s work is almost impossible unless you let one to become completely


open-minded on every aspect of the poem. There are many different theories as to


what the true meaning of ?The Second Coming? really is. The fact of the


matter is that Yeats purposefully has more than one interpretation of ?The


Second Coming.? He wants the average person to open his or her creative mind


and to analyze every influence, language, and imagery to understand the message


he is trying to get across. When reading the opening lines of ?The Second


Coming? there are two meaning Yeats is trying to portray. In the opening


figuration, the center is man, unable as the falconer to no longer maintain


control over a ?turning and turning? movement. Man is going through constant


chaos that is affecting all of society. It is described, as ?Things Darr4 are


falling apart; the center cannot hold;?(1.3). However, there is evidence also


suggesting that the falconer is also the poet himself. The poet is loosing


control of his own creativity. He has a powerful and creative message to get


across but struggles to put it on paper. This presentation, either way, is


breaking down, or falling apart. At the end of the first stanza Yeats describes


and uses imagery when stating, ?The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and


everywhere / The ceremony of innocence is drowned;? (1.5-6). This of course


refers to the biblical story of Noah and the great flood. Yeats is painting a


picture of an ocean of blood, which symbolizes the ?last wave?, or the end


of the world. In the beginning of the second stanza words are crucial here, for


Yeats ?surely? is showing us how insure he is, the repetition of


?surely? betraying his uncertainty. When Yeats repeated the words ?the


Second Coming? he is either referring to the Christian Second Coming of Christ


or the Gnostic Second Birth of their Demigod. Either interpretation is a great


change and uncertainty. Next Yeats describes the spirit of the world or


?Spiritus Mundi.? This image is identical with ?Anima Mundi,? the second


part of Per Amica Silentia Lunae, written also by Yeats just two years before (Cowell


15). In the second half of the last stanza Yeats states: ?somewhere in the


sands of the desert A shape with lion body and head of a man, A gaze blank and


pitiless as the sun, Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it Reel shadows


of the indignant birds? (2.5-9). Yeats is describing a male Sphinx, Egyptian


rather than Greek; also there is evidence that the Sphinx is associated with the


sun god. The literary representation here is of Shelley?s Darr5 famous sonnet


?Ozyman-dias,? which described a monument that was in the shape of a male


Sphinx (Donoghue and Mulryne 68). This is evidence clearly shows how other


philosophical writers influenced Yeats?s work. Another example of this takes


place in the third and final part of this poem. These last few lines are


extremely confusing but very powerful. Yeats goes on to say: ?The darkness


drops again; but now I know Those twenty centuries of stony sleep Were vexed to


nightmare by a rocking cradle, And what rough beast, its hour come round at


last, Slouches twards Bethlehem to be born??(2.17-21). The ?stony sleep?


of the Sphinx associates him with the ?stony sleep? of Blake?s Urizen in


The Book of Urizen. According to Donoghue and Mulryne, those twenty


?Christian? centuries can be taken as the outside term in this metaphor;


they represent nature, the fallen object-world. The ?rocking cradle? is the


inside term, standing for the subjective unconsciousness that is aware of the


Incarnation (24). Yeats’s vision in the end seems to be that the Christian age


is over and the Gnostic?s are waiting at Bethlehem for the Second Birth of the


Sphinx. Summarizing the experience of ?The Second Coming? reveals a


successful representation of other philosophical writers such as Shelley, and


Blake. It portrays many of the characteristics of the Gnostic religion. The poem


demonstrates how Yeats is waiting for his Sphinx to come again in ?The Second


Coming?. Lastly, Yeats uses imagery and the influences of the Irish wars to


depict the chaos and intensity throughout the poem. It is with theses influences


that Yeats is able to express the many meaning of ?The Second Coming?. Darr1


Christin Darr Dr. Arthur Edward Salmon Eng.II 9:45a.m. 25 May 2000 The Spirit of


William Butler Yeats and ?The Second Coming? ?Surely the Second coming is


at hand;? when a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi Troubles my sight:? A


shape with a lion body and the head of a man, / A gaze blank And pitiless as the


sun,?(2.9-15). Is the world actually coming to an end? Is this sphinx-like


creature truly our inevitable savior? Or, is Yeats? life and things


surrounding it coming to chaos? Is the war and restless spirit of Ireland


influencing Yeats? work? On the other hand, is Yeats trying to help one to


understand the frustrations of their own lives on a more personal level? The


depth of Yeats?s work, among many other great poets, is immeasurable. Many


surrounding emotions, and intentions may go into this poem, along with various


other subsidies the poet may not even be aware of. This is precisely why the


literature department, or lack of, in many schools is weakening. Too many


teachers, professors, and now students focus either solely on rhyme and meter or


the ?obvious? reason a poet might compose a poem, such as personal


relationships, failures, earthly surroundings, or mental distress. The educators


of students today need to be more open-minded on the interpretations one has for


a particular poem. Literature has been a very strong Darr2 foundation for any


prosperous civilization. For centuries poets will be immortalized in classes and


books. However, as their words are remembered their spirit has been lost. When


analyzing a great poet?s work such as Yeats, the most obvious interpretation


is usually not the correct one. Literature helps open minds to endless


possibilities in every possible aspect. If students are taught to just accept


explanations and are discouraged from questioning or even thinking for


themselves, then the world will soon become full of conformed, mindless robots.


Future leaders of the world must be taught to analyze everything. They must be


taught to use their imaginations and logical thinking together. That is a most


powerful combination in the hands of a determined student. The process must be


in the root of this thinking. It must begin with literature. Throughout Yeats?


life he has produced numerous controversial poems. Many people hold their own,


very strong, opinions about poems. The truth is, there is not only one. Yeats


had many different influences when writing ?The Second Coming?, and it is


important for the reader to know each of them before they can even begin to


understand the many meanings and interpretations of this poem. Yeats?s poetry


has three major influences. The more obvious one is the fact that Yeats was from


Ireland, and at the time that this poem was written, World War II was affecting


Ireland. However, WWII was not something knew to the Ireland?s culture because


for the past 300 years Ireland had been involved in many other wars and at the


same time trying to gain their independence. Another influence on Yeats?s


writing was his personal religion, Gnosticism. According to Harold Bloom, Yeats


believed Christianity to be ?the barbarian theosophy,? and declined to


distinguish it form Gnosticism (1). Gnosticism Darr3 has to do with searching


for self-knowledge and rejecting the society of their time. This seems to have


been quite appropriate for Yeats and his writing. The third influence on


Yeats?s writing was the work of other philosophical writers such as Shelley,


Blake, and Nietzsche. Yeats used some of the imagery and context of their


previous works to help describe the meaning of ?The Second Coming.? When


reading ?The Second Coming? one?s first impression might be of someone who


felt as though they had no control of their life and therefore life was about to


come to an end. That interpretation was not well thought out and very


narrow-minded. The meaning is much more complex than that. ?The Second


Coming? is a very powerful piece of poetry, and one of the most universal


admired poems of the 20th century. Attempting to understand William Butler


Yeats?s work is almost impossible unless you let one to become completely


open-minded on every aspect of the poem. There are many different theories as to


what the true meaning of ?The Second Coming? really is. The fact of the


matter is that Yeats purposefully has more than one interpretation of ?The


Second Coming.? He wants the average person to open his or her creative mind


and to analyze every influence, language, and imagery to understand the message


he is trying to get across. When reading the opening lines of ?The Second


Coming? there are two meaning Yeats is trying to portray. In the opening


figuration, the center is man, unable as the falconer to no longer maintain


control over a ?turning and turning? movement. Man is going through constant


chaos that is affecting all of society. It is described, as ?Things Darr4 are


falling apart; the center cannot hold;?(1.3). However, there is evidence also


suggesting that the falconer is also the poet himself. The poet is loosing


control of his own creativity. He has a powerful and creative message to get


across but struggles to put it on paper. This presentation, either way, is


breaking down, or falling apart. At the end of the first stanza Yeats describes


and uses imagery when stating, ?The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and


everywhere / The ceremony of innocence is drowned;? (1.5-6). This of course


refers to the biblical story of Noah and the great flood. Yeats is painting a


picture of an ocean of blood, which symbolizes the ?last wave?, or the end


of the world. In the beginning of the second stanza words are crucial here, for


Yeats ?surely? is showing us how insure he is, the repetition of


?surely? betraying his uncertainty. When Yeats repeated the words ?the


Second Coming? he is either referring to the Christian Second Coming of Christ


or the Gnostic Second Birth of their Demigod. Either interpretation is a great


change and uncertainty. Next Yeats describes the spirit of the world or


?Spiritus Mundi.? This image is identical with ?Anima Mundi,? the second


part of Per Amica Silentia Lunae, written also by Yeats just two years before (Cowell


15). In the second half of the last stanza Yeats states: ?somewhere in the


sands of the desert A shape with lion body and head of a man, A gaze blank and


pitiless as the sun, Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it Reel shadows


of the indignant birds? (2.5-9). Yeats is describing a male Sphinx, Egyptian


rather than Greek; also there is evidence that the Sphinx is associated with the


sun god. The literary representation here is of Shelley?s Darr5 famous sonnet


?Ozyman-dias,? which described a monument that was in the shape of a male


Sphinx (Donoghue and Mulryne 68). This is evidence clearly shows how other


philosophical writers influenced Yeats?s work. Another example of this takes


place in the third and final part of this poem. These last few lines are


extremely confusing but very powerful. Yeats goes on to say: ?The darkness


drops again; but now I know Those twenty centuries of stony sleep Were vexed to


nightmare by a rocking cradle, And what rough beast, its hour come round at


last, Slouches twards Bethlehem to be born??(2.17-21). The ?stony sleep?


of the Sphinx associates him with the ?stony sleep? of Blake?s Urizen in


The Book of Urizen. According to Donoghue and Mulryne, those twenty


?Christian? centuries can be taken as the outside term in this metaphor;


they represent nature, the fallen object-world. The ?rocking cradle? is the


inside term, standing for the subjective unconsciousness that is aware of the


Incarnation (24). Yeats’s vision in the end seems to be that the Christian age


is over and the Gnostic?s are waiting at Bethlehem for the Second Birth of the


Sphinx. Summarizing the experience of ?The Second Coming? reveals a


successful representation of other philosophical writers such as Shelley, and


Blake. It portrays many of the characteristics of the Gnostic religion. The poem


demonstrates how Yeats is waiting for his Sphinx to come again in ?The Second


Coming?. Lastly, Yeats uses imagery and the influences of the Irish wars to


depict the chaos and intensity throughout the poem. It is with theses influences


that Yeats is able to express the many meaning of ?The Second Coming?.

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