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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. Love poetry is inspired by an onslaught of emotion that is often difficult to contain, which is why love poems are also some of the most symbolically rich of all literary prose. Indeed, the extent to which love poetry strives to unleash the bubbling emotion of its author is both grand and far-reaching; that William Yeats's reputation for reaching these grand heights makes him one of the most renown in his genre speaks to the measure of symbolic mastery readily generated by this particular poet. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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File: LM1_TLCYeats.rtf
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to which love poetry strives to unleash the bubbling emotion of its author is both grand and far-reaching; that William Yeatss reputation for reaching these grand heights makes him one
of the most renown in his genre speaks to the measure of symbolic mastery readily generated by this particular poet. Yeats believed the concept of permanence could be had in
what he deemed art, an inference he supported with the prominent presence of rocks in his love poetry. Prior to this symbolic component, however, was his use of the
rose to represent the painted picture every good poem reflects; to Yeats, the rose embodied the characteristics of a woman, not the least of which was the likes of Yeats
great love, Maud Gonne. As his personal and professional life progressed, the simplistic nature of the rose soon gave way to the more permanent impact of rocks (Ellman).
As such, the abstract symbolism he employed by way of the rose ultimately proved unfit to describe the deeper sensations he developed with each passing love poem, finally giving way
to the more solid representation of his perspective of art and love. "With this inspiration, and development and maturity, Yeatss poetry grew in form and lessened in abstraction.
Yeatss once short, rhyming poems transformed into more lengthy poems that were less concerned with rhyme scheme. However, the poems became much more complex in nature. Yeats left
the roses behind and began to focus more on concrete imagery such as rocks and stone, symbolizing the stability in his life..." (Yeats and Style). This metamorphosis away from
the airy symbolic nature of roses toward the more mature impression left by his implication of permanence, Yeats illustrates the transformation an individual experiences during different phases of his life.
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