L2L W. B. Yeats (ft. Carol Andrews, pt. II)

William Butler Yeats

The poetry of W. B. Yeats defies categorization. There are the bucolic scenes with “bee-loud glades,” the pointed commentary of Crazy Jane, and the horror of the beast slouching toward Bethlehem. There are the lyrical wishes for his daughter, the reflections of a rejected lover, and the mourning of the Easter dead. Yeats lived through difficult years … can his poetry somehow instruct us how to survive the current ugliness? Dr. Carol Andrews, associate professor emerita of literature and L2L scholar-in-residence, joins Leigh and P. T. for the second of a two-part discussion of Yeats, his poetry, and possible lessons for today.

Poems discussed in this episode include:

  • “September 1913”
  • “Easter, 1916”
  • “The Second Coming”
  • “Under Ben Bulben”
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October 25, 2019

  • 12:06pm Default User by Live
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