Sunday, January 13, 2019
The Second Coming Analysis
Between the symbolism and allusions, the poesy covers the entire Bible, from Genesis to Revelations. In the first of all stanza, mere anarchy refers to the flood in Genesis. The last stanza refers to the anti-christ and the time of the apocalypse. In the last(a) lines Yeats describes the sinners as rough beasts dragging themselves to Bethlehem for the secant coming of Christ. The body of the poem describes the decay of society. It refers to the non-believers, or atheists and the real problem, the sinners. However, he does pip out that even Christ was tempted in the desert, hell on earth.He rehearses a simile to allude to the Great Sphinx (The body of a lion and the head of a man), which symbolizes the sticks home. Furthermore, this is also a commendation to the Book of Exodus, which describes the morphing of locusts and scorpions tails. These layers of meaning make it difficult for high school students to ascertain the poem. I suggest that a teacher start with eight voca bulary manner of speaking gyre, vexed, anarchy, revelation, hunt downer, Spiritus Mundi, reel, indignant. Denote the text. Then discover all the metaphors and symbols. It takes quite a bit of search to connote gyre.The dictionary translation is simple, but Yeats uses gyre in many of his writings. He uses a double-helix to symbolize the turbinate decay of society through blood-dimmed tides or wars. Then he uses the upward whorled to symbolize the times of peace. For Yeats society was a never-ending cycle of war and peace. From at that place he takes us to medieval times, to a violent, but orderly sport of hunting, until the falcon cannot hear the falconer and it turns into chaotic, unreasonable violence. Is you use the Bible to interpret the rest of the poem, it give be clear Yeats is a pessimist who maxim the underbelly of society.
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