How to Analyze a Poem: a close reading of W.B. Yeats' poem "Lake Isle of Innisfree"

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  • Опубликовано: 23 дек 2024

Комментарии • 168

  • @rathodkaran6190
    @rathodkaran6190 10 месяцев назад +16

    It was orson welles who had said, a film is not good unless the camera is an eye in the head of a poet, sir i would like to give you my deepest thanks for opening my eyes in a very new and interesting way, not only my respect for poetry and you have arised but also my filmmaking understanding has deepened, i will get into poetry and pretty soon start writing my own for it seems to be the mother of all art, and will help me tremendously in my filmmaking journey, thank you sir once again and i wish you never stop making these videos!

  • @tuwlaets
    @tuwlaets Год назад +8

    Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant introduction to poetry and a particular poem. By the way, core is from the same root as "coeur", from the Proto Indo-European -kerd. And, if you think of the lake isle as a core within the lake that is surrounded by land, a heart within a heart, then the core of the heart is also a heart within the heart. The brilliant explication by Dana Giolia has opened this poem to me both intellectually and deeply emotionally. Thank you.

  • @mainstreet3023
    @mainstreet3023 Год назад +12

    Goosebumps as soon as you began introducing him. This makes history so glorious. Us Irish poets love him, innit 😄
    My modern-day parody that I wrote
    I will arise and go now
    And go to the late-night mall
    And pop-tarts I’ll buy there
    And a jar of hair gel
    Or maybe mousse or fixing spray
    As gel dries dripping slow
    And worse, it takes away the glow
    Of natural, healthy hair
    I will arise and go now
    For whether night or day
    The mall is always open
    With products on display
    I love the second floor
    This Yeats poem is expressing nostalgia for a simple Irish natural retreat
    as a distant city dweller.

  • @tomgoff6867
    @tomgoff6867 3 года назад +61

    A highly accomplished close reading. With an understanding of the parable alluded to, this poem is no longer a merely wistful expression of longing for rustic simplicity, but a driving and urgent prayer for a misspent life to be redeemed. We experience the prodigal's squandered inheritance as the severed connection with an Irish heritage (or any spiritual birthright).

  • @simonestreeter1518
    @simonestreeter1518 Год назад +9

    Wonderful to find this. It is also double proof that no matter how gifted, how subtle, how sensitive or how intelligent one is, the art of reciting poetry well is a separate art indeed.

  • @Christian-fp9bq
    @Christian-fp9bq 3 года назад +23

    Fantastic lecture Mr. Gioia, thank you so much for sharing and analyzing this beautiful and timeless poem.

  • @philipcarpenter6430
    @philipcarpenter6430 3 года назад +10

    Wow! I wish I had received this type of education in AP Literature. Thank you!

  • @hadriankun
    @hadriankun Год назад +3

    i can feel this video will change my life, thank you very much.

  • @charlesvanhorn1560
    @charlesvanhorn1560 Год назад +4

    Thank you Mr. Giola for opening my mind to an art form that eluded me. Because of your passion, I will look at poetry in an entirely different way.

    • @DanaGioiaPoet
      @DanaGioiaPoet  Год назад +1

      You have paid me (and the art) the highest compliment.

  • @KayClarity
    @KayClarity 3 года назад +8

    I'm so glad to see you posting these! A gift for many.

  • @Jonjzi
    @Jonjzi Год назад +12

    That reading by Yeats was chilling. I never heard anyone recite poetry like that.

    • @DanaGioiaPoet
      @DanaGioiaPoet  Год назад +8

      I agree. Yeats doesn't recite the poem, he chants it. Almost sings it. I wonder if that is how classical poets read their work 2000 years earlier.

    • @tchaivorakfauresohnsieg9532
      @tchaivorakfauresohnsieg9532 Год назад

      ​@@DanaGioiaPoetthere's also Robert Frost video recording available

    • @Air_Dan
      @Air_Dan 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@DanaGioiaPoet Yeats was heavily influenced by the Dada movement as well as enjoyed the more formal, classical poetry of the past so this is why he chanted his poems.

    • @Jonjzi
      @Jonjzi 8 месяцев назад +1

      @toribukofske3929 Sometimes life really is that theatrical and over the top; they are moments we will remember forever, and others are ones we wish we could forget.

  • @marinatestolin7386
    @marinatestolin7386 10 месяцев назад +2

    So enlightning. Thanks from the core of my heart.

  • @georgelaing2578
    @georgelaing2578 2 года назад +4

    This is a superb example of
    the ART of exposition!!!

  • @harmoniabalanza
    @harmoniabalanza 11 месяцев назад +2

    excellent beginning. I'll watch the rest!

    • @harmoniabalanza
      @harmoniabalanza 11 месяцев назад +1

      this is one of my favorite poems--if you like it, listen to Judy Collins's version of it as a song. Yeats's poem bears a bit a resemblance to Blake's London.

  • @jakkelway
    @jakkelway 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic, wonderous walk through! Beautifully paced, wonderfully inspiring of reflection. Thanks.😊

  • @damianntaganzwa316
    @damianntaganzwa316 4 месяца назад +1

    Oh my God! This gentleman explains poetry so,so well! Now I will arise and go poetry with greater joy! He has pulled me off the grey pavement of battling poetry.Sometimes,let's know how to contact these great teachers on emails,etc; if only to appreciate them.

  • @IsmailHossain-dh3fs
    @IsmailHossain-dh3fs Год назад +1

    Oh, I am totally absorbed by the analysis of thus masterpiece. This is the first video which brought me to Mr. Dana Gioia. Now I am the fan of his chamnel. His musical voice also brought me to a greater hight. Thanks Gioia, please keep on up loading such as many as you can.
    Would you please recite more famous poems along with your own.

  • @StevenWithrow
    @StevenWithrow 3 года назад +7

    Phenomenal series of videos!

  • @Air_Dan
    @Air_Dan 8 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for this wonderful video. This is excellent material for me to assign my students to watch at home for the British Literature Class I teach.

  • @preparearoom
    @preparearoom Год назад +4

    From an aspiring poet, I thank you for this wonderful teaching!

  • @patchthesinclair5896
    @patchthesinclair5896 3 года назад +9

    Thank you so very much. My comprehension of this, my all time favourite poem is, thanks to you , at a new height. It truly represents the yearning of my heart's inner core!

  • @ivyfenix
    @ivyfenix Год назад +1

    Very good, excellent !!Thank you so much for this beautiful lesson in WB Yeats poem 🙏

  • @jamiecampbell2637
    @jamiecampbell2637 Год назад +1

    Thank you. This reminds me of the intensely captivating and spell-binding lectures I heard 50 years ago at University from my favourite lecturers.

    • @DanaGioiaPoet
      @DanaGioiaPoet  Год назад +1

      You and I had the good luck of having a few great teachers.

  • @EvaStenskar
    @EvaStenskar Год назад +3

    This is just beautiful and did in fact untie Yeats's poem for me. Thank you so much.

  • @richardvorwald5478
    @richardvorwald5478 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you, had to go thru similar untieing & appreciating of Keats's 'To Autumn' - it's nice to do this process with another while at a place like the poem describes.

  • @nonretrogradable
    @nonretrogradable Год назад +3

    This (as someone who is entirely foreign to poetry) was wonderful and illuminating. Thank you

  • @keithhigh7773
    @keithhigh7773 Год назад +2

    Thank you, Sir, for a wonderful exposition.
    We had to learn this poem at school some 62 years ago. However, the meaning of the verse was never explained to us.
    I have always loved the poem and your analysis of it has given it a whole new life for me.

    • @DanaGioiaPoet
      @DanaGioiaPoet  Год назад +1

      I learned to love poetry by hearing by Mexican-American mother recite the poems she had learned in elementary school. They meant a great deal to her. And they eventually changed my life.

  • @Geemeel1
    @Geemeel1 10 месяцев назад +1

    Stunning lecture, and I know nothing of poems....I am so inpired to do so by you. Thanks SO much✨

  • @SilaliS
    @SilaliS 3 года назад +4

    Thank you for this great video Mr. Gioia

  • @patricksullivan4329
    @patricksullivan4329 Год назад +1

    This is excellently well done, and is the best answer I've ever heard to the question, 'Why does it matter who wrote Shakespeare's works, as long as we have them?'
    If you don't have the background information right, you won't correctly understand the poem (or other literary work). That's why we need to know who the beautiful young man is, who is being compared to a summer's day in Sonnet #18. Why Polonius's verbosity is made fun of, why he is called a fishmonger and why Hamlet dispenses with him by a sword while he is spying on Hamlet and his mother.

  • @ashwanikumarsharma15151
    @ashwanikumarsharma15151 Год назад +6

    not the Lecturer we deserve, The Lecturer we need.......
    Thankyou so so much sir, your lectures helped me first time in my life to understand what poetry is and how to read and actually enjoy it. Now I can confidently start my Masters in English Literature.

    • @DanaGioiaPoet
      @DanaGioiaPoet  Год назад

      I'm glad to provide some small help as you further your career in literature.

  • @jainilsheth7996
    @jainilsheth7996 Год назад +1

    So lucky to have found this video. Brilliant analysis and thank you for making this video

  • @harmoniabalanza
    @harmoniabalanza 10 месяцев назад +2

    The Lake Isle lives in the poet's imagination and in his heart. There are millions of people today in big cities who long for the same thing the poet does in this poem. I certainly do. The poet equates himself with the prodigal son in the sense that his true self originates in the rural natural places not in a big dirty evil city. He has been led away by vice and selfishness and illusion and now seeks to return in a kind of penance-- seeking peace in the simple life removed from the world's corruption. He arises, gets up and goes , but also rises in a spiritual sense by changing his life.

  • @MMastiZone
    @MMastiZone 10 месяцев назад +2

    Beautiful explanation sir!💞

  • @zita-lein
    @zita-lein 10 месяцев назад +1

    Perfect for me. Loved it!

  • @ShiriShotz
    @ShiriShotz Год назад +3

    Thank you for the insightful lecture. Yeat's reading reminded me for some reason of Jefferson Airplane's song "White Rabbit". It has similar musical energy and trance-like quality. Also, you mentioned the way the poem is graphically organized, with the shorter line at the end of every stanza. It might look like the soft waves of the lake, which is the sound that the speaker so longs for

  • @jeffhunt2475
    @jeffhunt2475 2 года назад +15

    Such an informative and well presented interpretation. Thank you. Two things that worried me about the poem that weren’t commented on - not a criticism as there simply isn’t time to cover every possibility !
    Firstly, why 9 bean rows? Would any other monosyllabic number have done? Taking the view that a poet always uses words carefully I looked up the numerology of 9 and it represents completion. The highest value single digit number associated with experience and wisdom. In Victorian England at this time there was a fad for the occult and Yeats was interested in this area so would have known.
    Secondly, ‘ where the crickets sing’. I’m not sure if there are crickets in Ireland, they’re relatively rare in the UK. As someone who speaks a reasonable level of Italian I know of the Italian phrase ‘ where the crickets sing’ as being associated with cemeteries and death.
    Also, veils of the morning may hold morning and mourning together. Possibly, Yeats is alluding via a natural description to both the natural daily cycle and the cycle of human life and death which is part of the world of Innisfree and, as such, is registered with a calm acceptance.

    • @barrym3651
      @barrym3651 Год назад +2

      9 is the number of the Ancient Greek muses

    • @kathleenmckenzie6261
      @kathleenmckenzie6261 Год назад +2

      @jeffhunt2475 I don't know where you now live or where you grew up, but I was born and grew up in the Midwest. There is no dearth of crickets there. Before a record-breaking cold and snowy winter, my home was invaded by crickets that I always picked up and relocated outdoors. As I picked up each one, I kept thinking, 'I hope you're not telling me that we're going to have a really bad winter.' That was exactly what came to pass.

    • @KeithMcdowell-xn5xq
      @KeithMcdowell-xn5xq Год назад

      Your lecture was a masterpiece!

    • @omerosdaskalos7708
      @omerosdaskalos7708 Год назад

      Perhaps it's not right to over analyse poetry either , for meanings that just don't exist. That's only overthinking what should primarily be an emotional experience . Nine bean rows is possibly an alliterative effect ? While the crickets are just rural crickets , making a noise in the evening.

  • @alyswilliams9571
    @alyswilliams9571 3 года назад +5

    Wonderful, very enlightening. More please Mr Gioia.

  • @dgillane
    @dgillane 3 года назад +7

    I never got Yeats’s poetry. I still don’t. I’m quite fond of Heaney’s prose but have had issues with his verse. I remember studying this poem, and I struggled. While I still don’t think I got it, I did like Dana’s explanation. I remember my years as an undergraduate English major , I don’t remember such a patient approach. This was a very pleasant revisiting of why I studied literature

    • @winstonmiller9649
      @winstonmiller9649 3 года назад +3

      Patience describes Dana's approach to literature. How, just nice, it is when a somewhat daunting subject can be made more accessible and I dare to say, more simple. Dana, your restrained joy is infectious. So that if one loves literature, but for whatever reason, has strayed. Your lecture would revived a waining faithfulness. Just Wonderful!

  • @looknseeit
    @looknseeit Год назад +1

    A helpful explanation of this poem (and others). Thank you. I wish I'd had you as my English teacher; it would have made lessons more interesting, meaningful, and enjoyable.

  • @crystalclear6864
    @crystalclear6864 Год назад +2

    Enlightening! Tks

  • @geradobocanegra6156
    @geradobocanegra6156 3 года назад +6

    Thank you master, in my town we try and try to understand poetry in some way (almost any way), and it´s quite a mess when we start to read and say some "poems", we don´t get any light sometimes. Your speech tend to enlighten our doubts, Thank you very much

  • @olumuyiwalafe7768
    @olumuyiwalafe7768 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so so much Mr Dana Gioia, for this magnificent analysis of this poem. Best wishes, Sir.

  • @winstonmiller9649
    @winstonmiller9649 3 года назад +18

    Thank you for a liberating lecture. It was like you were distilling a fine tasting wine. To me an accessible lecturer knows how to make the topic less confusing to those who want to learn how to do the same. I'll be looking out for more of your fine wines/lectures in future.

  • @Gizgirl70
    @Gizgirl70 Год назад +1

    Such a wonderful channel, this will be my go-to study class on Saturday nights :) x

  • @tzaph67
    @tzaph67 Год назад +4

    Thanks for this , it was interesting and made me think more about a poem I have loved for many years. I was familiar with the parable of the prodigal son but had never before recognised the reference to it in the poem. It made a lot of sense.
    Another reference I’ve always felt Yeats was making with the beauty and peace of the lake isle was to a higher state of consciousness, a more authentic state of inner being. The “rising” of the soul to divine realms where peace and beauty are intrinsic to being. Yeats was a member of the Golden Dawn and was interested in the metaphysical and the esoteric, and I feel there’s a bit of that going on here too, someone in a tormented mental and emotional state who longs for the simple peace - who is longing for the great heart’s core (or coeur!)!
    Thanks again for a really interesting look at a wonderful poem

  • @springinfialta106
    @springinfialta106 2 года назад +2

    Wow. The analysis at the ending is a twist greater than the ending of "The Sixth Sense". Thank you.

  • @Mister_Sosotris
    @Mister_Sosotris Месяц назад +1

    This is so wonderful! Thank you for this video!

  • @mikeomalley8570
    @mikeomalley8570 2 месяца назад +2

    Best lesson on analysis ever

  • @earthperson79153
    @earthperson79153 Год назад +2

    Thank you so much. How wonderful and miraculous!

  • @nusratjahankhan4954
    @nusratjahankhan4954 Год назад +3

    Thank you so much for such analysis of this poem Sir !
    From Bangladesh 🇧🇩

  • @josie_posie809
    @josie_posie809 2 года назад +3

    Yeats ❤️
    This was a beautiful unraveling. Thank you!!

  • @kimyj.m.knight9174
    @kimyj.m.knight9174 3 года назад +2

    Thanks, Dana! I just shared this video with my team at Cæsura!

  • @greatgatsby6953
    @greatgatsby6953 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is a brilliant exposition!

  • @Islaras
    @Islaras 7 месяцев назад +1

    So grateful for this. Thank you prof.

  • @lukemcinerney7458
    @lukemcinerney7458 11 месяцев назад +1

    A wonderful analysis. There is but one extra level of anlaysis to note and that is of topography. Inisfree or in Irish (an Ghaeilge) Inis Fraoigh, is a lake that situates in Co Sligo. This is important ss Yeats was intimately linked with Sligo and the topography of that county is recounted in his references in other poems to Ben Bulben. His final resting place is at Drumcliff also in Sligo. Another thing to note is that in the Irish language we have two main words for isle/island. One is oileán and the other inis. Now, inis is usually anglicised as 'inish' hence the pronounication of Yeats' poem The Lake Isle of Innisfree shoukd be 'Inishfree'. This, then, more closely reflects the original language pronounciation of Inis Fraoigh (-igh in Irish is almost wholly silent or palatized).
    An inis (isle) has a meaning of a small lake or wet area between rivers and thus a kind of watery meadow. It can also mean a proper lake, but in placenames it usually denotes a watery area between rivers, as in the case of Ennis, the main town in Co Clare, where the name derives from a dry area between tributaries of the Fergus river, making it like a dry patch in a wet landscape.
    Go míle maith agat, tá sé álainn dán! Beir bua ó Bhaile Átha Cliath!

  • @Ozgipsy
    @Ozgipsy 2 месяца назад +1

    This is a brilliant analysis.

  • @gabicreightonbooksetc.
    @gabicreightonbooksetc. Год назад +2

    I enjoyed this unknotting. Thank you Dana Gioia.🙏🏽🌸

  • @writereducator
    @writereducator Год назад

    Wow! I will be using this as part of an introduction to a high school sophomore English unit on poetry. I have a MA in English literature and have admired this poem but I never noticed the allusion to the Parable of the Prodigal Son in many readings. Thank you.

  • @אורישטייגמן
    @אורישטייגמן Год назад +2

    Thank you so much. It was beautiful.

  • @mariacuachon3906
    @mariacuachon3906 Год назад +1

    Seeking the quiet and peace of being close to nature and being settled in one's self, in one's flow of thoughts, in the play of sounds of surrounds I feel my feelings and being closer to my God.

  • @519djw6
    @519djw6 3 года назад +3

    I thank you for this analysis of Yeats's poem--but I can never appreciate him, because after he had become "an institution," he said of Wilfred Owen's poetry that it was “unworthy of the Poets Corner of a country newspaper.” Owen was the greatest poet to emerge from the First World War, and his poems touch me in a way that Yeats's never have.

  • @Gustolfo
    @Gustolfo 3 года назад +6

    Wonderful explanation. Thank you, Mr. Gioia.

  • @lite1776
    @lite1776 Год назад +1

    This was beautiful and brilliantly done.

  • @threefootpole
    @threefootpole Год назад +1

    Loved this, thank you. I wonder too if there is a contrast of England to Ireland, with all the political implications?

  • @diogenesagogo
    @diogenesagogo Год назад +3

    For me good poetry is never prescriptive; it suggests, points in many directions, which makes it dense with possibilities of different lives, different worlds, firing the imagination.

  • @ancanemoianu6935
    @ancanemoianu6935 3 года назад +4

    All undergraduates should listen to this "unknotting" of The Lake Isle of Innisfree!

  • @harmoniabalanza
    @harmoniabalanza 8 месяцев назад +1

    though I do adhere to the precept that " a poem should not mean, but be" I must praise Prof Gioia for his lucidity, depth of insight, and non-didactic yet expert style of instruction.

  • @TimGreig
    @TimGreig 2 года назад +2

    Wonderful 😊

  • @Gary-fk9pu
    @Gary-fk9pu Год назад +1

    Wonderful, thank you.

  • @austinb9460
    @austinb9460 Год назад +1

    This was immensely interesting, thank you!

  • @janedexter2869
    @janedexter2869 Год назад +1

    Very good !

  • @VinodSharma-lm6yz
    @VinodSharma-lm6yz Год назад +23

    In a poem even if you don’t know the meaning of some word, just invent your own meaning. You will never be wrong. Poem is understood by the reader and not by the poet. Just go and enjoy.

    • @Degjoy
      @Degjoy Год назад +4

      I write poetry and I hope people look up the meanings if they don’t know them.

    • @VinodSharma-lm6yz
      @VinodSharma-lm6yz Год назад

      @@Degjoy people seldom do it.

    • @faede-rc7um
      @faede-rc7um 11 месяцев назад

      Funny. Why dont youMake your own poems,,?

    • @cadamiller
      @cadamiller 3 месяца назад

      No. This is wrong. Poets want to communicate. Word meaning is more important in poetry than in other types of writing.

    • @eel7157
      @eel7157 2 месяца назад

      T.S Eliot's impersonal look at poetry?

  • @theoldkitbag
    @theoldkitbag 9 месяцев назад +2

    Just a note from an Irish person: Innisfree is natively pronounced InnISH-free; i.e. with a slight emphasis on the end of 'Innis' (and with an 'ish' rather than an 'iss' sound) instead of the 'free'. You can't really hear it in Yeat's recording (unless you're listening for it) due to the poor quality and his forced cadence. Innisfree is the Anglicisation of the Gaelic word ''Inis Fraoch' (pronounced Innish-Free-uch, Inis being the Irish for island), meaning, as mentioned in the video 'Island of Heather'.
    Innisfree is on Lough Gill, by which Yeat's grandfather lived. The Hill of Grianan forms the lake's eastern shore - Grianán being an Irish word describing a sunny place, or (more relevantly) a place of outstanding natural beauty. Yeat's isn't just talking about returning to any old natural place; he's talking about returning to a place where nature is in her glory - the antithesis of the speaker's condition.

  • @louie2470
    @louie2470 Год назад +1

    When I first read the poem (40 years ago), I also thought that Lake Isle of Innisfree referred to a place of "inner free"dom, a place of inner peace.

  • @docmix
    @docmix Год назад +1

    Marvellous! Thank you. 🙏

  • @helenamcginty4920
    @helenamcginty4920 Год назад +2

    Ive heard a radio recording of Yeats talking about this poem. He said he had come to hate it. It was a product of his fanciful youth and not, in his opinion a good poem. He read it in the very odd stilted way people read poetry back then.

    • @DanaGioiaPoet
      @DanaGioiaPoet  Год назад +1

      Yeats did not come to dislike the poem. He felt imprisoned by its fame when so much of his other work was less recognized. He recorded the poem three times. All the rest of his poems with one exception went unrecorded. A great loss.

  • @CarterCurricula
    @CarterCurricula 2 года назад +2

    Excellent unknotting of a poem.

  • @leonyame2254
    @leonyame2254 2 месяца назад +2

    " I will arise and go to the supermarket on a rainy day, when the sky is grey and i shall walk down the isle number six and stare at the cold cut meats..."

  • @bobbressi5414
    @bobbressi5414 Год назад +2

    I have never been able to get into poetry outside of its use in song lyrics. I love the written word. I adore fiction, but poetry always makes me zone out mentally. I am not sure why I have never gotten into it. I appreciate it as an art form but I am rarely entertained by it. It seems somehow pretentious a lot of times. Im not sure if its the flowery phrasing or the over use of metaphor. Maybe it is all these things. Or perhaps I am not terribly sophisticated. That is a real possibility.

    • @DanaGioiaPoet
      @DanaGioiaPoet  Год назад +2

      Song is where all poetry began. Perhaps song will lead you deeper into poetry.

  • @masivax6607
    @masivax6607 2 года назад +2

    watching the video gave me joy and peace.. thank you for this nice analysis 🙏🏻😌(tek Türk benim sanırım..)

  • @ManifestWistful
    @ManifestWistful Год назад +1

    What is term we can use for sound of mosquito 🦟 when we desperately want to sleep and it makes sure to disturb you with that noise.. well in a part of planet where we live it's a common thing we started looking with "Bhin-bhi-na-na" 😅 I like the episode . Quote informative.

  • @kholoud9423
    @kholoud9423 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you very much 👍🏻🧡

  • @harmoniabalanza
    @harmoniabalanza 10 месяцев назад

    Would you please do The Wild Swans at Coole?

  • @bobanabadisang5487
    @bobanabadisang5487 2 года назад +1

    Thank you.

  • @TheBullhannigan
    @TheBullhannigan Год назад +2

    Absolutely fascinating stuff, and well read and interpreted. One thing, though: Innisfree is pronounced 'Innish Free'
    Thanks

  • @مرادمحمدصبري
    @مرادمحمدصبري Год назад +1

    Thanks a lot

  • @999reader
    @999reader Год назад

    I would have welcomed some discussion of the meter of the poem. As Ezra Pound said, poetry begins to die when it gets too far from Music.

  • @tcdrx
    @tcdrx Год назад +1

    Thank you

  • @ja2pin
    @ja2pin 3 года назад +5

    I always thought that Yeats's aspiration to plant "bean-rows" was a reference to Thoreau's Walden, where Henry David writes, Meanwhile my beans, the length of whose rows, added together, was seven miles already planted, were impatient to be hoed, for the earliest had grown considerably before the latest were in the ground; indeed they were not easily to be put off. What was the meaning of this so steady and self-respecting, this small Herculean labor, I knew not. I came to love my rows, my beans, though so many more than I wanted. They attached me to the earth, and so I got strength like Antaeus.

    • @reimannx33
      @reimannx33 2 года назад

      Methinks he was alluding to the stinking farts that would follow from chowing on so much beans - from the core of color's core.

  • @jennyaskswhy
    @jennyaskswhy Год назад +1

    The wattle and clay (daub) house is an allusion to a type of dwelling place - the Iron Age Celtic roundhouse - so there is a Celtic revivalist aspiration to the image of Inisfree Yeats imagines here. It is a calling for Irish immigrants to return home as the prodigal son willing to serve the highly idealised rural lifestyle offered by some republicans at the time. That is the lesson we were taught to read in it during lessons in school.

  • @GaryAskwith1in5
    @GaryAskwith1in5 Год назад +2

    Why is it that presenters so often don’t look at the camera; the viewer?

    • @davidschmidt5507
      @davidschmidt5507 6 месяцев назад

      Was wondering too. They probably felt that would be too intense. Like the viewer was being stared at and talked down too.

  • @davidtrindle6473
    @davidtrindle6473 2 года назад +3

  • @barbararussell9757
    @barbararussell9757 Год назад +1

    Not only the story of the Prodigal Son, but also Psalm 55:6 mirrors the message of this poem.

  • @JosephDuvernay
    @JosephDuvernay Год назад +1

    HALF A VERSE
    (For one (D. Gioia's 03-25-2021) appreciated W. B. Yeats presentation.)
    One may see need of both: wild, lone;
    and this blind and tame
    that is not so hard to understand. (c)JMD!

  • @MaryJosephine-i4f
    @MaryJosephine-i4f 4 месяца назад

    Make note of what 2nd line of 2nd stanza implies...

    • @MaryJosephine-i4f
      @MaryJosephine-i4f 4 месяца назад +1

      Allusion part of it was awesome eye opener❤

  • @Ann-lg3su
    @Ann-lg3su 2 месяца назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @sean_d
    @sean_d Год назад

    Its just a small point, maybe made already, but the pronunciation of Innisfree in Ireland would be Innishfree, and that is how everyone there says it. The recording by Yeats is indistinct at that point but here is Adrian Dunbar reading it: ruclips.net/video/1VgV8_mQaw4/видео.html
    The reason is to do with Irish place names being anglised hundreds of years ago and ending up approximating an original Irish phrase, but looking English. Eg Cnoc Mór or big hill would have been turned into Knockmore by British mapmakers, but people knew the original Irish words so often kept the Irish language pronunciations, in this case Inis is a word that means island, and is pronounced Inish.

  • @SingleMalt77005
    @SingleMalt77005 Год назад

    I would love to hear you analyze "Howl" by Allen Ginsberg.

  • @paulfogarty7724
    @paulfogarty7724 Год назад +2

    ...and although he longs to go back to Ireland, he wishes for isolation from its people. Implying he finds both equilly tiring weather English or Irish, it's only his native land he longs for.