Unit 13 WH Auden in Memory of W B Yeats
Unit 13 WH Auden in Memory of W B Yeats
Unit 13 WH Auden in Memory of W B Yeats
Yeats” Unit–13
UNIT STRUCTURE
13.1 Learning Objectives
13.2 Introduction
13.3 W. B. Auden: The Poet
13.3.1 His Life
13.3.2 His Works
13.4 The Text of the Poem
13.4.1 Explanation of the Poem
13.5 Poetic Style
13.6 Let us Sum up
13.7 Further Reading
13.8 Answers to Check Your Progress
13.9 Model Questions
13.2 INTRODUCTION
In this unit you will study a tributary poem “In Memory of W.B. Yeats”
by W.H. Auden, written on the loss of the great poet William Butler Yeats.
Auden wrote the poem, a three section elegy in February1939, shortly after
Yeats’s death. It first appeared in his 1940 collection Another Time.
English Poetry from Medieval to Modern (Block 2) 197
Unit–13 W.H. Auden: “In Memory of W.B. Yeats”
Did you come across any poem by the poet W. H. Auden? Have you
read, Auden’s tributary poem to one of the greatest modern poets and
playwrights W.B. Yeats, titled “In Memory of W.B. Yeats? Do not get confused
with the names. This unit will introduce you, to both the important poets and
help you to appreciate the prescribed poem, which is a tribute offered by the
modern poet W.H. Auden to another legendary and foremost figure of English
literature W. B. Yeats.
To make you familiar with the poets, W.H. Auden was a 20th century
Anglo-American poet who was born in England and became an American
citizen. On the other hand, W.B. Yeats, who belonged to the same century,
was an Anglo-Irish poet and playwright who was born in Ireland and
established himself as a foremost literary figure in both Ireland and England
after winning the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1923.
The Encyclopedia Britannica notes that “by the time of Eliot’s death
in 1965…a convincing case could be made for the assertion that Auden
was indeed Eliot’s successor, as Eliot had inherited sole claim to supremacy
when Yeats died in 1939".
Wystan Hugh Auden (21 Feb 1907-29 Sept 1973) was born
in York, England to George Augustus Auden, a physician and
Constance Rosalie Bicknell. He was the third of three sons, of whom
the eldest George Bernard Auden was a farmer and the second
John Bicknell Auden, a geologist. Auden’s grandfathers were both
and content from Icelandic sagas and this mixture of tragedy and
farce, with a dream play-within-a -play, introducing the mixed styles
and content of much of his later work. A recurrent theme in these
early poems was what Auden termed as the “family ghosts”, the
powerful, unseen psychological effects of preceding generations on
any individual life.
LET US KNOW
Auden's poem "In Memory of W.B.Yeats" has
influences of the traditional elegiac form. An elegy
in literature is a poem that expresses mourning and
grief, especially as a funeral song or a lament for the dead. The
word 'elegy' is derived from the Greek term 'elegeia' and this was
originally referred to any verse written in elegiac couplets and
covering a wide range of subject matter, including the epitaphs for
tombs.
This form is a very ancient literary tradition that began with
Theocritus and Moschus, defined by Virgil, developed and enriched
by the great Renaissance poets and popularly reinvented by P.B.
Shelley and Matthew Arnold in the 19th century.
The learner will do well to first read the text of the poem and
interpret it on your own. Having tried interpreting it on your own, you
may relate to the given analysis and explanation of the poem.
When Auden wrote the poem, Europe was under the shadow
of World War II and so the sense of an impending catastrophe is
present throughout the poem. The elegy form may be written to evoke
the thought of living after death in religious terms, in terms of
cherished memories or by transforming grief into an inner resolution
to go on with life. Auden mimics the form to express his lament and
at the same time deviates from the typical use of such a composition.
The function of poetry or any work of art is such that its longevity and
social presence has the capacity to unite the minds of readers across
Epitaph: words written
time and space. The three sections of Auden’s elegy begins with a
in memory of a person
reflection to a final epitaph and invocation. who has died
Section I begins with the lines: Nostalgia: longing for
“He disappeared in the dead of winter the happy times of the
past
The brooks were frozen, the airports almost deserted
Remnants: a small
And snow disfigured the public statues:
remaining quantity
The mercury sank in the mouth of the dying day. Transcended: go
What instruments we have agree beyond the range or
(Lines 1-6)
The poem reflects the cold, dry and barren month of winter,
the last phase of the seasonal cycle; just like the final phase of a
human being’s life. The pronoun “He” refers to William Butler Yeats
on whose death, the poem is written. During that cold season the
brooks were frozen and it snowed heavily, people deserted the
roads, the changing air pressure made the mercury of barometers
sink in the deadening cold.
Thus, the day Yeats died is described as a dark cold day, a
February afternoon in the year 1939.
“Far from his illness
The wolves ran on through the evergreen forests
The peasant river was untempted by the fashionable
quays;
By mourning tongues
The death of the poet was kept from his poems”
(Lines7-11)
Here the contrast is drawn between the urban world as
against the wilderness of nature. Faraway from his illness, there
was another world amidst the evergreen forests where the river
continued to flow on its course, the wolves ran about and everything
English Poetry from Medieval to Modern (Block 2) 207
Unit–13 W.H. Auden: “In Memory of W.B. Yeats”
Here the poet talks of the last hours of Yeats’s life and he
imagines him battle with death on that fateful afternoon. The nurses
were doing everything that they could do and by then it was the talk
of the town. His mental powers to hold on, to the last remnants of
his bodily strength, finally gave way and the flowing current of life in
him was drained out. These were his last minutes in this world before
he breathed his last.
“Now he is scattered among a hundred cities
And wholly given over to unfamiliar affections,
To find his happiness in another kind of wood.
And be punished under a foreign code of conscience
The words of a dead man
Are modified in the guts of the living.”
(Lines 18-23)
to remember the poet and his contribution, life will carry on.
follows:
“Time that is intolerant
Of the brave and the innocent
And indifferent in a week
To a beautiful physique,
Worship language and forgives
Everyone by whom it lives;
Pardons cowardice, conceit,
Lays its honours at their feet.
Time that with this strange excuse
Pardoned Kipling and his views
And will pardon Paul Claudel
Pardons him for writing well”
LET US KNOW
At the Downs School where Auden was a
teacher, he experienced what he later described
as a “Vision of Agape” in June 1933. This was while
he was sitting with three fellow teachers at the school when he
suddenly found that he loved them for themselves and that their
existence had infinite value for him. This spiritual experience he
said later influenced his decision to return to the Anglican Church in
1940.
Doggerel: roughly Like many of his generation, Auden was inspired by the poetic wit
written verse which can and irony of T.S. Eliot, and the metrical and verbal techniques of Gerard
sometimes be Manley Hopkins and Wilfred Owen. His study of English influenced his
intentional
versifications and made him familiar with the rhythms and long alliterative
Ballad: a poem or song
lines of Anglo-Saxon poetry. He was also inspired by John Skelton’s use of
telling a popular story,
usually an old love story the rapid and short-lined doggerel. He learned much from the English music
Limerick: a humorous and American blues singers. Auden published about 400 poems and 7 long
five lined poem with a poems of which two were book-length. His poetry ranged from 20th century
rhyme scheme aabba
modernism to the traditional forms such as ballads and limericks, short
Haiku: a Japanese
poem of seventeen haiku and villanelles to Christmas oratorio and a baroque eclogue in
syllables Anglo-Saxon meters.
The central themes of his poetry are love, politics and citizenship,
religion and morals and the relationship between human beings and the
world of nature. The style of his poems written in the late 1920s and early
Villanelle: a nineteen
1930s alternated between modern and traditional styles, written in an intense
lines long poetic form
and dramatic tone and this established him as a left-wing political poet. His with a complex rhyme
poems in the 1940s explored religious and ethical themes in a less dramatic scheme.
manner. In the 1950s and the 1960s many of his poems concentrated on Oratorio: a large-scale
musical work on a
the ways in which words revealed or concealed emotions and he used the
religious theme for
form of opera librettos which was suited to direct expression of strong
orchestra and voices.
feelings. He was admired for his abilities to write in nearly every verse form, Baroque -eclogue:
draw from a wide range of his intellect, including his interests in socio- political very ornate European
theories. His poetry often literally or symbolically recounts a journey or quest classical style in which a
poem is written on a
and his experiences of travel itself provided enough material for his verses.
pastoral subject.
W.H. Auden’s 1939 elegy for W.B. Yeats acknowledges the loss of
a great poet who also was his contemporary. In step with John Milton’s
“Lycidas” or Thomas Gray’s “Elegy written in a Country Churchyard”, the
traditional elegiac form serves the commemorative function, in which death
Opera librettos: the
is not the only loss treated in the poem. The poem represents a period
words of an opera or
when Auden began to lose faith in what poetry could accomplish and the other long vocal work.
loss of faith in the political power of art.
In a way, the poem also resists convention, as one finds the absence
of mourning. Although, a dark and reflective tone is present, a lamentation
of a loss does not seem to occur. Auden also asserts that Yeats did not
immortalise his art rather he was immortalised by his art. In understanding
the poetic afterlife of a poet, his poem is an additional step towards preserving
Yeats’s memory and works.
The 63-lined poem is divided into three sections and the first two
sections are written in the form of free verse. The third section consisting of
six paragraphs (lines 41-63) is written in lines of four with the ‘a, a, b, b’
rhyme scheme.
Auden’s reputation and his stature as a poet and writer has been
disputed with a range of critical opinions. Geoffrey Grigson in an introduction
to a 1949 anthology of modern poetry, wrote that Auden “arches over all”.
His stature was suggested by book titles such as Auden and After (1942) by
Francis Scarfe and The Auden Generation (1972) by Samuel Hynes. In his
later collected editions, Auden rewrote or discarded some of his most
famous poems like “Spain” or “September 1, 1939”. He wrote that he rejected
poems that he found boring or dishonest that lacked his sense of conviction
and were used only for rhetorical effectiveness. John Ashbery was of the
opinion that in the 1940s Auden “was the modern poet”. In the 1950s and
1960s writers like Philip Larkin and Randall Jarrell lamented that Auden’s
work had declined from his earlier promise.
You have just finished reading about the poem “In Memory of W.B.
Yeats” by W.H. Auden. The poem is based on the great modern poet W.B.
Yeats and is written in a tributary form, with a reflection on the foreshadowing
events of World War II.
The poem focuses on the poetic afterlife and also the function of
poetry as an art to unify the collective minds of the readers in a world crippled
with modern technology and warfare. The lament in the poem is not just
directed to the death of Yeats but also towards a world that is threatened by
its own destructive potential. The repute and fame of W.B. Yeats was such
that for his admirers, it crossed all borders of nations. For Auden while
memory was to do with the past, it took place in the present. And the only
way a poet could honour the dead, was to write an elegiac poem about the
present. You have also gained sufficient knowledge of the elegiac form to
understand the essence of the poem.
Ans to Q No 1 a. True.
b. True.
c. False.
d. True.
Ans to Q No 2 a. Poems
b. Oxford
c. 1939
d. Pulitzer
Ans to Q No 3. Poems, Paid on Both Sides: A Charade, The Orators, The
Dance of Death, The Dog Beneath the Skin, The Ascent of F-6,
Look Strangers, Letters From Ireland, Journey to a War, On the
Frontier, Another Time, The Double Man, For The Time Being, The
Age of Anxiety, Nories, The Enchanted Flood, The Shield of Achilles,
Homage To Clio, The Dyer’s Hand, About The House, City Without
Walls, The Elder Hedda, A Certain World, Forewords and Afterwords,
Epistle to a Godson.
Ans to Q No 4 a. An elegy. b. World War II.
Ans to Q No 5. To refer to 13.4.1 subsection of the unit.