Yeats Creative Proces
Yeats Creative Proces
Yeats Creative Proces
Chapter Title: W. B. Yeats and the Creative Process: The Example of ‘Her Triumph’
Chapter Author(s): Phillip L. Marcus
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The Living Stream
Phillip L. Marcus
169
But the specific detail involving the speaker’s ‘evil’ life was obscured
in revision, much of it subsumed into the generalized ‘I did the drag-
on’s will’; and ‘I had fancied love a casual | Improvisation or a settled
game’ metamorphoses what nowadays would be called casual sex
into something apparently more benign.4 Even what are apparently
the earliest extant drafts incorporate the protective distancing and
generalizing effect provided by the legendary stories of Saint George
and Perseus. Some lines at this stage go better with the Christian
saint than with the pagan hero: ‘In your companionship I turn to
3 W. B. Yeats, The Winding Stair: Manuscript Materials, ed. David R. Clark
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1995), 122-23; hereafter abbreviated WS and cited
parenthetically in the text.
4 This change is noted by Elizabeth Butler Cullingford, Gender and History in
Yeats’s Love Poetry (1993; rpt. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1996), 213.
When a man writes any work of genius, or invents some creative action, is
it not because some knowledge or power has come into his mind from
beyond his mind? It is called up by an image, as I think…but our images
must be given to us, we cannot choose them deliberately (Au 272, CW3
216).
6 Two other relevant studies are Joseph A. Kestner, Mythology and Misogyny:
The Social Discourse of Nineteenth-Century British Classical-Subject Painting
(Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989) and Bram Dijkstra, Idols of
Perversity: Fantasies of Feminine Evil in Fin-de-Siecle Culture (1986; rpt. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1988).
13 See James M. Olney, The Rhizome and the Flower: The Perennial Philosophy–
Yeats and Jung (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1980), 6; Olney is certain
that Yeats was referring to Jung but also that ‘he only half understood what he was
talking about and that [his] information came from what someone told him rather
than from a reading of Jung’. My own view is that Yeats’s comments in the passage
in question do show a clear understanding of Jung’s approach.
14 Erich Neumann, The Origins and History of Consciousness, with a Foreword by
C. G. Jung, trans. R. F. C. Hull (originally published in German in 1949; English
edition 1954; rpt. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1970), xiv; hereafter abbre-
viated as OHC and cited parenthetically in the text.
16 Jung offered an early version of this paradigm in a lecture given in 1916 and
available in English translation in 1917: ‘It is precisely the strongest and best among
men, the heroes, who give way to their regressive longing and purposely expose
themselves to the danger of being devoured by the monster of the maternal abyss.
But if a man is a hero, he is a hero because, in the final reckoning, he did not let the
monster devour him, but subdued it, not once but many times. Victory over the col-
lective psyche alone yields the true value–the capture of the hoard, the invincible
weapon, the magic talisman, or whatever it be that the myth deems most desirable’.
See Two Essays on Analytical Psychology, 2nd ed., trans. R. F. C. Hull (1966; rpt.
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1972), 287.
Every culture hero has achieved a synthesis between consciousness and the
creative unconscious. He has found within himself the fruitful center, the
point of renewal and rebirth which, in the New Year fertility festival, is
identified with the creative divinity, and upon which the continued exis-
tence of the world depends (OHC 212).
18 The goal, as Neumann makes clear in his companion study The Great Mother,
is a balance of male and female elements: ‘the peril of present-day mankind springs
in large part from the one-sidedly patriarchal development of the male intellectual
consciousness, which is no longer held in balance by the matriarchal world of the
psyche. In this sense the exposition of the archetypal-psychical world of the
Feminine that we have attempted in our work is also a contribution to a future ther-
apy of culture’ (xlii-xliii).
23 Gender and History, 214. Elsewhere in her discussion of the poem Cullingford
notes that ‘[p]sychoanalytic critics… celebrate literary cross-dressing… and Jung
exhorts men to discover and liberate the anima’ (203), but she does not apply that
approach herself.
24 The painting is reproduced in Gilles Néret, Tamara de Lempicka 1898-1980
(Köln: Benedikt Taschen, 1993), 27.
25 Psychology and Religion: West and East, 2nd ed., trans. R. F. C. Hull
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1969), 547-55.
26 The Spirit in Man, Art, and Literature, trans. R. F. C. Hull (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1966), 81-82; hereafter abbreviated SMAL and cited
parenthetically in the text. I have discussed this material in a different context in
Yeats and Artistic Power, xvi-xxiii.
27 This transition is reflected in ‘Aedh Laments the Loss of Love’, which Allen
R. Grossman relates to another of Burne-Jones’s paintings in the Perseus Series,
‘The Baleful Head’; see his Poetic Knowledge in the Early Yeats: A Study of ‘The Wind
among the Reeds’ (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1969), 157.
28 The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, 2nd ed., trans. R. F. C. Hull
(1968; rpt. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1979), p. 6.
29 The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, 133; see also VSR 128-29.
30 Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self, 2nd ed., trans. R. F. C. Hull
(1968; rpt. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1979), 151-53.