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The Second Coming By. Yeats
"The Second Coming" by W.B. Yeats is a strong, emotional poem about how everything, even the most strongest of creations eventually falls apart,
with Yeats using the coming of the Messiah from Revelations to show how society will crumble and break apart when Christ comes for the final battle
against Satan. Chinua Achebe, writer of "Things Fall Apart," used "The Second Coming" as a basis to show how African culture was dismantled by the
appearance of Britain officials in Nigeria, who brought their own religion and who were not afraid to use their advanced technology against the natives
if they opposed the new order. Achebe put a particularly amount of importance on four specific lines in the poem, lines 3–6, using each line to show a
different breakdown of African society. Achebe showed the breaking away of citizens from their tribes to join the white men and their complete
disregard for their religious beliefs. He also showed the Africans fear of the white man and his forces, and allowing members of the tribe with courage
to oppose the white man's rule to be cut down and slain, instead of the entire tribe standing behind them in support. In the first part of "Things Fall
Apart," Achebe establishes that African society is all about cooperation, hard work, and the constant community events the tribes have for celebrations.
He used events, such as the entire village turning out for the wrestling match and festivals for the gods, to demonstrate the unity between the tribes. He
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Allusions In The Second Coming
Slouches Bethlehem to be Born Interestingly, the poem, "The Second Coming", covers the entire length of the Bible, from the first book, Genesis, to
the last book, Revelation, in only twenty–two lines and three stanzas. Although "The Second Coming" maybe one of William Yeats more complex
poems, it still conveys the perfect image of the second coming of Christ. In this poem by William Butler Yeats, Yeats uses symbolism, allusions and
imagery to bring together an awe–inspiring poem about the second coming of Jesus Christ. First, there are many examples of symbolism in this
poem. The use of symbols in the poem helps to convey the message of how World War I was when William Butler Yeats wrote it. In the first line he
says, "Turning and turning in the widening gyre". The word "gyre" is an important recurring symbol that William uses not only in "The Second
Coming" but in all his poems. "Gyres" stands ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The death and destruction that follows the Second Coming are seen through Yeats' poem. The second stanza is filled with imagery of a desert.
The antichrist "slouches towards Bethlehem to be born," he will be in a deserted desert. The image of sand, or as Yeats puts it the "desert birds,"
and "A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun" show the precision and unbearable circumstances of the dry and hot desert. Since evil is to be embodied
anywhere, such as the desert, which is lacking human life, it is such a powerful image. Yeats use the image of water and the power of it several times
in the first stanza. "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world," "The blood–dimmed tide is loosed," and "The ceremony of innocence is drowned."
(Shmoop Editorial Team). Like many other things in nature, water, is something man can still not control. No matter what one does, one cannot stop a
rain fall coming from the clouds. The images of water and desert are both powerful symbols Yeats uses to describe the end times in the
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Symbolism In William Butler Yeats's The Second Coming
William Butler Yeats wrote "The Second Coming" to describe the current state of society at the beginning of the 1920's, shortly after World War I
came to an end. Yeats believed that even though the war had ended, many people were too broken to recover. He believed that this was not just the end
of a war, but the beginning of future violence that was looming. Yeats uses symbolism, figurative language, and structure to illustrate the complete
disarray of society after World War I.
Throughout the whole poem, the symbolism makes the story dark and warning–like. The first stanza describes the state of society post–war and
pre–Second Coming, when Yeats states "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, / The blood–dimmed tide is loosed, / and everywhere / The ceremony
of innocence is drowned" (4–6). The symbolism in these lines shows that the state of the world is in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Repetition in the poem, as represented in the first line "Turning and turning in the widening gyre" (1), shows that people are stuck doing the same
thing over and over. History is bound to repeat itself if society is stuck in their old ways, foreshadowing that one day there will be another war, also
known as the Second Coming. The simile "a gaze blank and pitiless as the sun" (15) shows that there is no life left in society after the war drained
them of their happiness. Yeats also uses irony to show that there is no way to tell who the good people and the bad people are anymore because "The
best lack all conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity" (7–8). The best lacking conviction shows that the ones who should be deemed
as good are defeated. They have no more fight left in them after fighting for so long, while the worst are full of an intensity that questions the ethics
and morality of society. Things have gotten so bad after the war that good and bad are nonexistent
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Second Coming Of Jesus
Second Coming of Christ
Immediately following Jesus' last words to His Disciples "he was taken up; and a cloud received him out of their sight" (Acts 1: 9), and the two men
[angels] standing by, said: "men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so
come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven." (Acts 1: 11)
Perhaps there is no religious subject more popular than the second coming of our Lord; nonetheless, not all that is heard on the television or from
pulpits is from the Bible; yet, the promise of Christ's second coming is clearly taught in scripture. Jesus said that He would come again; angels said He
would come again; Paul wrote concerning the Lord's second coming and stated that He would appear and John taught that the Lord would appear.
(John 14:3; Acts 1:11; II Timothy 4:1; Hebrews 9: 28; Colossians 3: 4 and many more) Therefore, to believe the Bible is to believe that Jesus Christ is
coming again.
However, when He is coming is a matter not known by any man; so, when some person sets a date for the coming of the Lord and people began
looking for Him at that time, we can be certain that He will not come then. Paul said that the second coming is like a woman expecting a baby and she
knows not the moment it will arrive. (I Thessalonians 5: 1–4) Now, there are two lessons that we need to hold on to: (1) Why Christ is not coming and
(2) why He is coming.
First, He is not coming to earth to set up a literal kingdom and to reign for a thousand years upon His throne in the city of Jerusalem. This claim is
not Biblical; in fact, it conflicts with the Word of God. (1) The kingdom of Christ is not an earthly kingdom. It is not of this world (John 18: 36); (2)
Christ's kingdom has already been established. It was established during the lifetime of the apostles. (Mark 9: 1; Acts 2: 47) (3) The second coming
of Christ will mark the end of His reign instead of the beginning. (I Corinthians 15: 24–28) (4) The Bible mentions Christ as being no nearer to the
earth than in the clouds where the saints "shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air. (I Thessalonians 4: 17) The
earth will then be
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How Does Keats Use Dramatic Irony In The Second Coming
The Apocalypse on earth has started and The Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, a half animal is rising, and the world is being pulled into the darkness
of hell through the gyre. This is what the poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Keats is about. Even though "The Second Coming" is about
Revolutions, to the reader Keats was left looking at the events of the world around him and trying to take in all the violent acts of war and left with the
devastation. Keats uses the narrator, the language and symbolism, to his form of writing, to dramatic irony through the poem of "The Second Coming"
to show Keats left struggling to understand religion from these events, to his life, to his upbringing.
The Poem "The Second Coming" from William Butler Keats, is about Revolutions, (John 2.18). When Keats wrote "The Second Coming" the world
was filled with violence and turmoil, WW1 had just ended, The Russian Revolutions had started, and the world was on the eve of The Angelo Irish
War. Through these events, Keats looked around his world and was left trying to understand these events that left him struggling with the concept of
religion. Keats felt the world was changing and because of these events the 20th Century was changing and that an end of an age was upon the world.
Keats uses the narrator to tell the story of "The Second Coming" and uses the language in his poems of Irish traditions and the Gaelic language to
bring back the old traditions of Irish culture through his poems. In "The Second Coming" Keats uses automatic writing, to write this poem, Keats
could dictate spirits that would take over his writing and used elegant syntax and Latin' to describe the spirit of the universe instead of saying the devil
or the anti–Christ and uses Bethlehem in the meaning of Christ's birthplace. Keas uses a pose sonnet, Keats liked to break up the coherence of his
sonnets and write them to be rugged, colloquial, and to have concrete language, he rhymed through his poetry but often off–rhymed for example, in
"The Second Coming" the sun and the man are the only words that rhythm and used linear writing and short sentences. Throughout "The Second
Coming" Keats uses the importance of symbolism such as of the "gyres" more and more
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Yeats' Use of Symbolism in 'Leda and the Swan' and 'the...
W. B. Yeats, a somewhat eclectic poet, explores, throughout his work, a wide range of themes and ideas. He reflects on his nation's politics, Irish
mysticism, the afterlife, love, and his own past. While each set of his poems share many recurring images, however, it is Yeats' examination and
opinions of the gyres of time and history that crop up in all forms of his poetry. While references to this great spiraling metaphor for the fabric of the
universe can be found in some of Yeats' most famous works, such as 'Sailing to Byzantium', 'Long–legged Fly' and 'Easter 1916', to name just a few, it
is an aspect of his poetry which is relevant to almost all of his writing. However, it is in Yeats' apocalyptic poems, 'Leda and the Swan' and 'The ... Show
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The creature described is, of course, the form of the ancient Egyptian sphinx. This metaphor is far stronger than the one of the falcon, as the great
beast begins "moving it's slow thighs". The creature represents an antichrist, a further image of this destruction of man. The blank and pitiless gaze it
gives emphasizes its lack of human emotion, and the brutal nature of its task. The, all of a sudden, "darkness drops", and the vision is over. Reflecting
on what he saw, Yeats talks of the "nightmare" to come, and that for the "rough beast, its hour come round at last".
Overall, the poem sets out clearly what Yeats truly believes as the future for mankind. The structure is also worthy of note. Usually, Yeats stuck strongly
to established rhyme schemes and stanza structures, however, in this poem he choses not to. While stanza one 8 lines, the second is 14, and this
emphasizes to some extent the lack of clarity in Yeats' vision, as his description what he saw flows out of him almost uncontrollably. Also, the lack of
rhyme scheme indicates once more the havoc and ruggedness of events to come, although word repetition does connote a feeling of the slowly turning
gyre, turning round and round endlessly.
The second of the two poems, 'Leda and the Swan', takes us back to the first era of destruction, cruelty and war, before the epoch of Christianity. It
tells the mythical tale of Leda being
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The Second Coming
The poem "The Second Coming" was written about the aftermath of World War One, which includes the enforcement of the European culture of
Christianity and Catholicism on other races of the world. The message behind this poem if to the premise to the theme of the novel "Things Fall
Apart." Many of the lines that are indicated within the poem reflect the incidents of this novel, but mostly, the title that's used is a line from the poem, it
is equivalent to the outcome of the instilling of ideas of what had happened to the Nigeria tribes.
The poem is based on the changes of the war, it also shows that it's impossible to stop any changes from happening in the future. As for the novel when
the white men settled in the tribes of Nigeria, there wasn't any way to stop the changes of their presence from happening any further than it did. The
communities of Nigeria fell apart due to the invasion of the white men imposing their religion ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This also reveals that his people lost their beliefs when the Europeans entered their environment that corrupted their world. This changed their beliefs of
the only world that they knew before the religion of Christianity came about. Because of the European assimilating these people to their religion of
Christianity it broke the connection that the tribe had, and the village belief systems were slowly broken.
However, with Okonkwo's devastating life experiences among his people and himself, it certainly enforces the last line of Yeat's poem "slouches
towards Bethlehem to be born." This reinforcement of this specific religion brought much terror among the Nigerian tribes, but it mostly affected
Okonkwo's state of mind. The outcome of this led to Okonkwo to take his own life in madness of his people converting to Catholicism and
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Allusions In The Second Coming
William Butler Yeats describes an envisioned post–apocalyptic world in his poem "The Second Coming," written shortly after the end of the World
War I. Yeats mentions specific connections and details relating to the past and present. These references draw upon times where people basked in hope
and positivity. However, the poem has an overarching ambiguous aspect in regards to the future. Yeats is certain a destructive force will destroy and
ravage Earth, but he does not know in what form this force will appear. Yeats references the past in connection with a sense of hope, but perturbed and
uncertain about what may come, he writes in an equivocal manner that leads to an ominous feeling of future hopelessness and destruction. Scattered...
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Yeats embodies this ominous doom in the form of a "rough beast" whose time has come to be born into the world, contrast to the Christ figure
used to reference the past (21). However, this does not necessarily mean he believes a single powerful figure will emerge. Instead, this apocalyptic
beast could be a variety of forms of devastation as later seen in the century with weapons of mass destruction, regimes, and diseases. "Its hour come
round at last" means that Yeats knows this beast approaches along with impending doom. Yeats includes the past, present, and future in order to
describe the draining of hope over time. The Biblical references allude to a time where the world and the people had hope for their future. But,
having lived during World War I, Yeats questions the current state of mankind. Furthermore, he implies the future is bleak and certain something will
bring about the destruction of the world as they know it. Yeats mentions "Spiritus Mundi", or the spirit of the world, in the poem (12). Normally, one
views this spirit of the world in a positive and perhaps even in a naturalistic light: a beacon of hope. Not Yeats. He says "a vast image of Spiritus Mundi
/Troubles my sight", (12–13). Yeats also sees others around him lose their sense of innocence. "The ceremony of innocence is drowned/The best lack
all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity" (6–8). These lines describes what Yeats sees in the
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The Second Coming By W. B. Yeats
"The Second Coming" by W. B. Yeats, was written in 1919 following World War I and was to present the idea that he thought that the apocalypse as
presented in the Book of Revelation from the Bible was about to begin. The poem does not mention the second coming of Christ but rather focuses on
the coming of the antichrist, meaning Yeats could only see despair, hopelessness, and chaos in the world. These sentiments of Yeats and others are
due to war damages, collapsing economies, and the coming of the Great Depression and the Irish civil war. The word choice, meter, persona, subject,
and lack of mention of Christ all collectively contribute to reflecting Yeats' sentiments in the poem. Several lines in the poem support this mentality of
despair and chaos. "Turning and turning in the widening gyre" refers to the worsening state of society with the collapse of democratic governments
and economies. (1) The second line, "The falcon cannot hear the falconer" means that any sense of hierarchy and authority has been lost. The best
people don't have the conviction to combat the growing evil and the worst, the sinners, are full of passionate intensity meaning the world is filled with
those who wish to do evil. (7–8) These lines emphasize the corruption that the world is falling into. The selection of adjectives and nouns used in the
poem carry a negative connotation reflecting the negatives thoughts of the state of the world. Yeats uses words such as "blood–dimmed," "anarchy,"
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Analysis Of The Second Coming By W. B. Yeats
William Butler Yeats was a great Irish poet of the twentieth century. During his lifespan World War I occurred, along with its resulting political
upheaval. He also lived in the century before the change of the millennium, a theme touched upon in his poems. He, like many other authors,
incorporated the events that occurred during his life into his work. This important factor of the time period is clearly reflected in his work, "The Second
Coming." The critical consensus regarding the poem "The Second Coming" by W.B. Yeats is that the new post World War I society in Europe, along
with the quickly approaching millennium, culminated in the poem prophesying a new age of evil opening with the ascension of a beast.
The critics' consensus is that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This Yeats conceptualizes through the image of the 'gyre,' one of his most durable symbols, a kind of whirling vortex or spiral–within–a–spiral that is
meant to show how one cycle loses strength in direct proportion to the other's gain" (Meyer 190). The gyre is used because "Yeats believed that
history was cyclical. Human history, he claimed, was governed by the rotation of a Great Wheel, whose phases . . . influence events and determine
human personalities. Every two thousand years, the Wheel completes a turn and a new cycle or civilization (one of two opposing characters) is
ushered in, heralded by violence and incarnated through an act of union between a male god in avian form and a mortal female" (Meyers 189).
Which means "[i]f Zeus's descent upon Leda initiated the period from about 2000 B.C. to the year zero, and if the Holy Ghost's descent upon Mary
initiated the subsequent period from the year zero to approximately A.D. 2000, then in 1919 the poet could speculate that the next such annunciation
might occur . . . just barely within his lifetime" (Allen 3195). Indeed, "[o]n the brink of the new millennium, there are ominous portents that the
Christian cycle is drawing to a close and that what will replace it – its antithesis – will merely deepen the nightmare of history" (Meyer 189). The
falcon's path around the falconer is supremely important to the interpretation of
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Analysis Of The Second Coming By William Butler Yeats
The apocalypse on earth has started, the Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, half animal is rising, to earth and the world is being pulled into the
darkness of hell through the gyre. This poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats is about revelations. Yeats uses language and syntax
including a new form of writing, and literary devices, to the point of view of the narrator, form, and context. That results in showing that Yeats, was
struggling to understand Christianity in his life, from his upbringing, that leads him longing to understand religion. Due to Yeats father teaching him to
look at the world through art and poetry that leads Yeats to explore the world of the supernatural to many other forms of religions. That leaves Yeats to
become deeply involved in politics that causes him to struggle to understand Christianity, as he does throughout "The Second Coming."
When Yeats wrote, "The Second Coming" the world was in violence and turmoil. Due to WWI just ending, the Russian Revolutions had started, and
The Angelo Irish War was approaching. Through all these events, Yeats was trying to come to terms with the end of an age and the changing future of
the 20th Century. For Yeats, the future of the world was in chaos and because of this it gives the poem its meaning, this leaves Yeats struggling to
understand his own beliefs in religion. Throughout "The Second Coming" Yeats uses a narrator to tell the story and uses a new form of writing called
automatic writing. This new
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Summary Of The Second Coming
William Butler Yeats' "The Second Coming" Journal Observation In his blank verse poem "The Second Coming," Irish poet William Butler Yeats
describes the turmoil and darkness surrounding the lives of people on earth before the second coming of Christ. One way that Yeats
communicates the spiritual darkness in the last generation is by using a metaphor. Yeats writes "darkness drops again...twenty centuries of stony
sleep" (Yeats 1028). By describing the last generation before the coming of Christ as in a "stony sleep," Yeats communicates the idea that the
people lack awareness to the reality of the soon coming of Christ and remain indifferent to Him. Also, Yeats uses the lion to allude to the Bible's
description of God as the "Lion of Judah." Thus, the Lion in the poem represents God returning as a righteous judge at the second coming to take
His people with Him and judge the unrepentant. Interpretation In his poem "The Second Coming," Yeats' words serve to warn people of the
dangers of falling spiritually asleep. As the violence causes "things [to] fall apart" all around them, people continue following their own evil paths
with "passionate intensity" (Yeats 1028). However, they suddenly realize that they "lack all conviction" by failing to accept God's salvation through
the message displayed in Bethlehem (Yeats 1028). Since the people remained spiritually asleep, they become suddenly awakened and "vexed to [a]
nightmare by a rocking cradle" (Yeats 1028), when Christ returns and they are found unprepared. Because they failed to accept Christ when they still
had time, the second coming appears suddenly upon them and their hopes for salvation are lost as the lion comes to judge the world. By sharing the
terrifying reality of the generation in "stony sleep" before God's second coming, Yeats tells his audience their need to remain prepared for God's return.
Integration In Mathew 24:42–44, Jesus gives the warning "Therefore, keep watch, because you do not know on what day your Lord will come. But
understand this: If the owner of the house had known at what time of night the thief was coming, he would have kept watch and would not have let his
house be broken into. So you also must be ready, because the Son of Man
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Comparing The Second Coming And Disney Pixar's, Wall-E
"The Second Coming" and Disney Pixar's, Wall–E have similarities despite the nearly 90 years between their writing. In the poem "The Second
Coming" by William Butler Yeats, he describes the world through his perspective as being a terrible place where anarchy is loosed upon the world
and where the world awaits some "revelation at hand". He describes the world as a place that only "a second coming" could save. Just like this poem,
Disney Pixar's, Wall–E, explores the fears of today's society, and life after a worldwide catastrophe where humans are incapable of changing their
destructive path are doomed to repeat history unless they have a "second coming". As Wall–E begins, Wall–E is alone on Earth cleaning up humanity's
garbage until a search drone, EVE (Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator), sent from a human escape pod, Axiom, lands on... Show more content on
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Yeats saw destruction and war at a new level and the only thing that could change society, from his perspective, would be a second coming. Everyone
was stuck in this cycle or "widening gyre" with history repeating itself forever which only a second coming could break the cycle. Similarly, Wall–E,
is an exaggeration of today's society where humanity has already destroyed earth once and is about to repeat itself again. This is the routine that Yeats
is talking about in the first two lines of the poem. In Wall–E, we see the cycle of history repeating itself as society continued on its downward spiral
until some cataclysm wiped the earth of life. Wall–E is the one to break the never–ending loop of the human's routine in
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Second Coming Allusion
Society as a whole is collapsing. For generations people have been led to believe that strengthening themselves, no matter the consequences, can better
society. "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats portrays how the destruction of society is caused by human actions. When describing society,
the author uses allusion and states, "Anarchy is loosed upon the world." Yeats explores the suffering of death that thehuman race is dealing with and a
depiction of how war has done nothing but make life more difficult. Allusion is shown when the author illustrates there is so much death that, "the
blood–dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere." The author is also claiming how the war would just create more war, and that helps weaken society.
In stanza two, the narrator describes a man as, "A shape with a lion body and the head of a man." This depiction is symbolic of mankind because men
are so full of themselves that they believe they ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the final stanza the author illustrates, "That 20 centuries of stony sleep were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle." He is conveying that "20
centuries" represents a baby sleeping in a cradle, and the Second Coming is Him waking up to a nightmare, leaving His peace, discovering a broken
society. The author illustrates death by stating, "Wind shadows of the indignant desert birds." Yeats is creating an image of a large amount of death
caused by a failed society due to the mention of desert, which are vultures. He also depicts that, "The darkness drops again." Yeats uses these quotes
to show the countless suffering and how dark the world is. The intense imagery in the poem is dark, scary and shows the suffering and reality of the
aftermath of the first world
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Comparing Voltaire's Candide 'And Yeats' Second Coming
Voltaire's Candide and Yeats' "Second Coming" are the two works I will compare, both story shows that there is still good in man and there is still
time to change. Yeats writes this "The falcon cannot hear the falconer; Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the
world ". We are the falcon, and God is the falconer, He is controlling the people that are in a downward, and uncontrollable spiral we chose to ignore
the voice of God calling out to us. He wants to pull up out of the deadly decent, but because we do not listen, we are doom to fail. The "anarchy" that
is in the world is cause by man inability to hear. This is the world that Candide suddenly finds himself in a world where chaos is everywhere and nothing
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Second Coming Tone
The second coming literary analysis essay
William Butler Yeats wrote "The Second Coming" after World War 1 ended, in a time when the image of society was catastrophic. Yeats was deeply
affected by these horrors caused by the war. Yeats predicts this image of a catastrophic society due to war will reappear in the near future. In "
The
Second Coming", William B. Yeats uses a variety of literary devices to portray his idea of what the downfall of society will look like.
Throughout the poem, Yeats uses diction to illustrate a mood for the reader. Diction is the author's word choice in their writing which can affect the
mood of the piece. In nearly every line of the poem, a word that creates a sorrowful and gloomy mood is apparent. For example, three words that may
stand out the most to readers are, blood–dimmed, drowned, and shadows. By using the word "blood–dimmed" the author creates a scary connotation.
Blood is often associated with death and in this case war. Dimmed creates imagery for the reader and helps them to visualize a setting that is vague.
The reader cannot see things clearly however they can almost feel the chilling mood of their surroundings. The placement of the word drowned next to
Blood–dimmed can cause the reader to interpret it in many different ways. One, for example, would ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In The Second Coming, by William Butler Yeats, Yeats explains the destruction of war caused by man and his inability to hear god because his own
ideas are clouding his judgement. The poem describes Yeats's prediction of a second world war caused by the wrongdoings of man through the
biblical allusion of the second coming. Yeat's also uses diction and symbolism to emphasize a gloomy and depressing setting. However, the destruction
of man is not only caused by the actions of humans, it is often caused by their lack of
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Diction In The Second Coming
William Butler Yeats was born in 1865. During his lifetime, he lived through the First World War and was greatly affected by the traumatic events
that occurred during it. He experienced a time where there was no faith in God and many lives were full of sin. The Author depicts a broken society
without God in his poem "The Second Coming." The author uses diction in his poem to convey his theme and mood for the poem. For example, the
diction in the "The blood–dimmed tide" (5) visualizes the dark mood of an ocean filled with blood, thus we can infer that lots of death has taken place.
The poem begins with the line, "Turning and turning in the widening gyre," (1) this creates an anticipating mood for the reader by showing an
unknown thing being
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The Second Coming by William Yeats
William Butler Yeats, a multitalented individual won the Nobel Prize in 1923. Born the son of a well known Irish painter and religious skeptic had
many influences in his life. Eventually, he converted to Paganism from Christianity. He is till this day considered one of the greatest poets that ever
lived.
To understand the meaning of William Butler Yeats poem "
The Second Coming", you must first understand the difference between Christianity and
Paganism. Yeats was raised as a Christian and turned to pagan mysticism later in his life. Therefore, we can find the subject of this poem by tracing his
flow of thought through Christianity up to the point when he diverged from it.
Christianity is based around the soul. The soul becomes healthy by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This brings us to the final two lines in "The Second Coming", "And what rough beast, its hour come В‘round at last/ slouches towards Bethlehem to
be born?" This first sums up the poems theme of a "Second Coming" of paganism as opposed to Christ. Secondly, however, are the implications of the
statement. The book of revelations says that in his second coming Christ will not be born humbly among men, but to come to the world in full glory.
But Yeats, since he has already established the true nature of this second coming, now returns to this prophecy, pointing out that it had been partially
right, that the figure of the coming would not be born humbly. But it seems that he half suggests the reason why this is true is because of an inherent
weakness in Christianity. He seems to imply that Paganism, a brutal and powerful force, would not stoop to a meek coming that of Jesus. The previous
line referring to Christianity as a "rocking cradle", the calmness of which stirred the spiritus mundi, suggests that Yeats had come to view Christianity
as week and its innocence as idealistic and impractical in the real world, in which the spiritus mundi can promise satisfaction and earthly fulfillment.
Imagery is really strong in this poem. The first two images are complimentary. The spinning gyre, producing dizziness, and the lost falcon, which
cannot answer the calls it is trained for, it is lost. In a sense, power is
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Tone Of The Second Coming
The Second Coming", which was written by William Butler Yeats, is being linked to World War 1, which Yeats lived through and experienced. This
poem is filled with very descriptive examples and effects due to the war, and the overriding tone of this has been set to a dark and gloomy poem.
Most people would think that Yeats is talking about the return of Jesus Christ, but actually, he is portraying his world as being encumbered by
destruction and chaos. He is afraid that the world will never get any better and that we will soon just end up destroying ourselves.
The first line in this poem starts with, "turning and turning in the widening gyre"(Yeats). Here, Yeats is referring to a cycle that is beginning, possibly
of 2000 years. He could be referring ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
They might act as if Yeats uses metaphors from that book to better explain the idea that Jesus could be coming back. People often get that idea
because of how Yeats worded his own poem; for example, "And what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be
born?"(Yeats) Many believe that Yeats is referring to the antichrist or something similar to that, and that creature is the one to come and end us all.
The other example is how Yeats says word for word, "surely the second coming is at hand!", and right there, people believe that there is a clear
defining point of Jesus'
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Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe vs. The Second Coming...
"Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe vs. "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats
When comparing the novel "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe and William butler Yeats poem "The Second Coming", at first there seem to be no
similarities except for the phrase "things fall apart" which is used in both. But as one closely examinee the reasons why both authors use this sentence,
one realizes that both of them try to show a great change, which, in the poem is related to reality, while in the novel is related to the story.
It is important to mention that the two people who are comparable are not the poet and the writer but are the poet and the main character of the novel,
Okonkwo. When the whole village and tribes fall apart because of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
We can be more specific and see what the poet and writer exactly talk about. It is better to focus on the poem first as it was written before the novel. In
his poem William butler Yeatsis shocked by the events which were happening during the First World War. "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood–dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned...", he tries to picture the dark ages of the war and the nasty
events which were happening by using some metaphors and similes such as "a shape with lion body and the head of man" or "shadows of the indignant
desert birds" Therefore, he manage to transmit the terrifying atmosphere of his time to the reader. He can not stand this state of fairs so he thinks that
it is the end and he hopes that it is time for the second coming of Christ.
Going back to the novel, we see Okonwo, who is extremely shocked by the twists which take place in his tribe as a cultural revolution. He sees their
ancient religion giving its place to Christianity, and their father's culture and traditions, which his life was based on, fall apart. To make things even
worse, his own son turns his back to him. Okonkwo can not stand this as a result he tries to fight against the people who were the creators of this
disaster. But as he fails, he commits suicide, preferring to kill himself, rather than let those strangers kill him.
In conclusion, it is worth mentioning that according to the novel we see that
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Second Coming Dystopian
The second coming by William Butler Yeats discusses the idea of the gyre which is everything starts at the center and then slowly falls apart on
the outside while another thing is being reborn and in doing the same thing on the opposite end. This poem is a dystopia which is the opposite of
utopia a world where social problems are magnified and the quality of life is extremely low. The walking dead television show is also a dystopia
and can be tied to this poem. In both the second coming and the walking dead a person can draw conclusions about how society slowly moves away
and breaks apart. The dystopia society in both of these works can show people's true nature. "The ceremony of innocence is drowned; The best lack all
conviction, while the worst Are full of passionate intensity"(Yeats). Throughout the walking dead people see incidents taken away and the worst are
enjoying... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"Surely some revelation is at hand; Surely the Second Coming is at hand" For example Carol in the walking dead latches on to faith even in her
capture. Another good example of this is Morgan and his philosophy that people can change. The fundamentalism's approach to religion is "the
practice of empathizing literal interpretations of texts and a "return" to a greater religious purity; represented by the most conservative group
within any religion."(308) This applies to both the poem the second coming and the walking dead. Carol is a great example of "extrinsic relgiosity
which is a person publicly display of commitment to a religious faith."(308) An example of this is when Carol grabs across when she is being held
by members of the Negan group. On the other hand Morgan is a great example of intrinsic religiosity is a person's inner religious life or personal
relationship to the divine. An example of this is when Morgan is holding member of the Wolf's in a cage in the hopes that this member can
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KeatsВґ The Second Coming Essays
In a world full of hostility and loss of faith surrounded by war and technological developments, he modernist era of literature developments, the
modernists era of literature arose. The sinking of the Titanic symbolized the falling of the Great Britain empire and newly invented standardized time
allowed war to become even deadlier than before due to the ability to organize attacks. Due to this new world full of bloodshed and new mechanical
inventions, the world was falling further and further away from God. William Butler Years expresses his sudden collapse of society in his poem "
The
Second Coming", first composed in January of 1919. The hopelessness of mankind is addressed by Keats' statement that man cannot save us, God
cannot save us, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Society has strayed so far away from God that we cannot be guided back home.
Yeats begins the poem with the first two lines painting an image of society falling apart and breaking down, one that O'Brien refers to as a "cultural
breakdown."He says, "The falcon represents those forces that function productively only when disciplined." In order to maintain structure and to
prevent the gyre from widening further, our society needs discipline, otherwise our structure, our faith, or very nature as human beings deteriorates. At
this time in our society, our discipline in our faith is gone. Our discipline in our morals and ethics is gone.
Lines 3–6 illustrate society's inability to hold together without discipline. Because the falcon can no longer hear the falconer to find its way back home,
"things fall apart" – the result of society straying from God. With everything falling apart, the need for someone or something to save society
becomes prominent. Since society has strayed away from God, the next solution is man as a savior, but with the new age of war and machinery,
mankind has lost their ability to save the world. O'Brien says, "Everything that makes life valuable is being drenched in blood. 'The ceremony of
innocence' refers no to one particular ceremony but is intended to suggest the grace and order of civilized society. Moreover, there is nobody to fight
'the blood–dimmed tide." Soldiers are
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Themes in The Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin and The...
Many times, literature can be intriguing, and other times, confusing. During the course of this year, although we had discussed a various amount of
stories, there were certain ones that had the strength to leave an impact on the reader. The following will reveal the favorite piece of literature from
this semester's syllabus as being "The Story of An Hour" by Kate Chopin because of its epiphany, and the most challenging piece as being "The Second
Coming" by William Butler Yeatsbecause of its millennialism. "The Story of An Hour" by Kate Chopin had been a fascinating story with an
epiphany at the conclusion of the story being a major theme throughout the short story. This short story opened with a lady named Louise Mallard
who had heart trouble, and had to be informed about her husband's apparent death. Her sister, Josephine, had decided to tell her after Louise's
husband's friend, Richards, had discovered about the death (a railroad accident) when he was in the newspaper office and read Brently, (Louise's
husband) on the list of those who died. Initially, the reaction of Louise had been quite upsetting, she had been sobbing since Josephine told her about
the tragedy, and decided to go upstairs to be alone in her room. As she sat in her room, she looked outside the window and she saw the numerous things
outside, such as the trees, the smells of rain, and the clouds. Eventually, she started to feel something coming towards her, and moments later "...she
abandoned herself a
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Essay about Poetry Analysis of The Second Coming by Yeats
Poetry Research Essay analysis THE SECOND COMING By William Butler Yeats, 1922 Mr. Yeats relates his vision, either real or imagined,
concerning prophesies of the days of the Second coming. The writer uses the Holy Bible scripture text for his guide for because no one could
explain this period of time without referring to the Holy Bible. He has chosen to present it in the form of a poem, somewhat like the quatrains of
Nostradamus. The poem does not cover all the details of this event, but does give the beginning of the powerful messages, and a dark look at those
ominous days surrounding the Second Coming of The Lord Jesus Christ. Perhaps he is trying in his own words to warn everyone about the end time
days. I... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Truly in Matthew 24 we find Jesus, the Lord Himself, revealing what those days will be like. Below I have attempted a line–by–line interpretation of
Mr. Yeats vision in "The Second Coming". Please note– NOT ALL prophesy scriptures have been used, only those I felt would be in relation to this
poetry work. Also some prophesies are not in order, but are arranged to follow Mr. Yeats poetry verses. (For a complete understanding of the end time,
one should study the entire texts as written.) Matthew 24: 3–7. 3) And as He sat upon the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to him privately saying
tell us when shall these things be? And what shall be the sign of thy coming and of the end of the world? 5) Many shall come in my name and
deceive many. 6) You will hear of wars and rumors of wars, but the end is not yet. 7) Nation shall rise against nation, kingdom against kingdom, and
there shall be famines, pestilence'–t, and earthquakes in divers (unknown) places. 8) All these are but the beginning of sorrows. THE SECOND
COMING * (versus are bolded letters) Turning and turning in the widening gyre: Gyre: A round shape formed by concentric circles, (concentric
meaning "having a common center") A circoular or spiral motion or form, a good example is the whirling of the oceans currents spiraling away and
then inwards. (Mirium–Webster) I believe he uses the gyre to explain that the world powers, governments
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A Comparison of Chaos in Things Fall Apart and The Second...
Chaos in Things Fall Apart and The Second Coming
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe and The Second Coming by William Butler Yeats have been considered literary classics. Although there may be a
gap between the times of publication, the themes and connotations are strikingly similar. In both works, there is a progression of chaos in time caused
by change and eventually leads to an end.
Inner conflict plays an important role in both works. In Things Fall Apart, the main character, Okonkwo, battles with conflict within himself. As a child,
he witnessed the constant failure of his father and vowed to be completely opposite of him and successful in everything he does. This drives him to the
point where he despises ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Loss of control is also another important theme. In Things Fall Apart, Okonkwo shows to have complete control over his family. He consistently
beats them and is hard on them and they are afraid and respect him. His eldest son Nwoye is abused most often since he reminds Okonkwo so much
of his grandfather and is not the son he would wish him to be. Eventually Nwoye leaves and this shows that Okonkwo does not still have full control
of his family. Also his is demonstrated in the village as a whole. When the Europeans came in, they did not look at theIbo culture as ideal and pursued
in converting it. At first there was not enough Christians to really impact their society, but as they built and expanded, they influenced others and soon
they had many followers. The elders of the tribes were no longer in control and the Ibo culture was losing its significance.
Another reflective idea is the superior force. In The Second Coming, time was the superior force. Since time can not be manipulated, there is no
chance to go back and prepare for the apocalypse. All decisions had been made and all routes had been taken and there is no more turning back. All
hope is gone.
Christianity was the superior force in Things Fall Apart. By allowing the spread of Christianity, it slowly invaded on its culture and weakened its
foundation. Soon it collapsed and the culture was to a
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Essay about An Analysis of Yeats' The Second Coming
An Analysis of Yeats' The Second Coming
Yeats' poem "The Second Coming," written in 1919 and published in 1921 in his collection of poems Michael Robartes and the Dancer, taps into the
concept of the gyre and depicts the approach of a new world order. The gyre is one of Yeats' favorite motifs, the idea that history occurs incycles,
specifically cycles "twenty centuries" in length (Yeats, "The Second Coming" ln. 19). In this poem, Yeats predicts that the Christian era will soon
give way apocalyptically to an era ruled by a godlike desert beast with the body of a lion and the head of a man (ln. 14). Critics have argued about the
exact meaning of this image, but a close reading of the poem, combined with some simple genetic work, shows ... Show more content on
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7–8), and his central images, the "rocking cradle" of Christ (ln. 20) to the "rough beast" (ln. 21).
Other kinds of echoes, literary rather than poetic, emerge as well; Yeats connects "The Second Coming" with Shelley's Prometheus Unbound in lines 7
and 8, "The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity" (Drake 53), and even, Jeffares suggests, the Divine Comedy, by
altering the "hawk" of an earlier draft to more closely resemble the "ample circuit" of a "falcon" described in Dante's masterpiece (A Commentary
241). Yeats surely made these allusions to borrow the literary scale of these prophetic masterpieces. But far more important in this respect is his
borrowings from the Bible. Most central and obvious are the Second Coming of Christ described in Matthew 24 and the beast of the apocalypse from
Revelations, but Purdy also notes "the vision chapters of Daniel (7–12)," "Isaiah's prophecy of the Day of the Lord (14.6–11, 19–22), 'old Ezekiel's
cherubim' (10.1ff), and Jeremiah's denunciation of Isreal (2)" (75), not to mention Yeats' location of the beast's birth at Bethlehem, the birthplace of
Christ two thousand years ago (Jeffares, W. B. Yeats 38). The Bible is, of course, the western world's primary work of prophecy, and Yeats' use of its
language gives his own work a tone of prophecy.
The tool of Yeats' prophecy, crystallized in the "widening gyre" traced by the falcon, is a concept Yeats detailed
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Analysis Of The Second Coming By William Butler Keats
пЃЅUse a creative and informative title
The Apocalypse on earth has started and The Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, a half animal is rising, and the world is being pulled into the darkness
of hell through the gyre. This is what the poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Keats is about. Even though "The Second Coming" is about
Revolutions, to the reader Keats is left looking at the events of the world around him and trying to take in all the violent acts of war and the
devastation, that leaves him struggling to understand religion.
The Poem "The Second Coming" from William Butler Keats, is about Revolutions, (John 2.18). When Keats wrote "The Second Coming" the world
was filled with violence and turmoil, WW1 had just ended, The Russian Revolutions had started, and the world was on the eve of The Angelo Irish
War. Through this event, Keats looked around his world and was left trying to understand these events that left him struggling with religion. Keats felt
the world was changing and because of these events the 20th Century was changing and that an end of an age was upon the world. Keats uses the
narrator to tell the story of "The Second Coming" and uses the language of his poems of Irish traditions and the Gaelic language to bring back the old
traditions of Irish culture through his poems. In "The Second Coming" Keats uses automatic writing, to write this poem, by doing so Keats could
dictate spirits that would take over his writing and using elegant syntax and
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Allusion To God in “The Second Coming”, by William Butler...
In the poem "The Second Coming", by William Butler Yeats. He writes this poem after World War I, around 1919. Yeats is a Irish poet, who came
from Protestant parentage. The over all theme of the poem is that God will come back again. There are many versions to how God will appear, but in
this poem bad things happen first in order for God to come. In "The Second Coming," Yeats uses symbolism to unfold the meaning of the poem. The
first symbol in the poem would be the falcon. The falcon would represent humans in the world. Scattered around the world and believing in different
religions. In the poem it says "The falcon cannot hear the falconer;" (2), which implies that humans are lost. Without their master, which in this case is
God, humans are guided into the wrong path. When their is no one to lead them to the right place everything can go wrong. The speaker goes on to say "
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;"(3) This means that once your lost you start to fall apart. You can no longer hear making it hard to opt for
right decisions in life. The speaker next uses biblical allusion when he says "anarchy" (4), to refer to the devil and how he is roaming through earth
loosely. He elaborates on this when he says "blood–dimmed tide" and "drowned" (5–6). These lines are quoting Genesis and the book of Revelation.
The speaker talks about Noah's Arch. Where Noah saves himself, his family, and the rest of the animals from the flood. These biblical allusions
symbolize a
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The Second Coming, Among School Children, Leda And The...
Humans are expected to have morals, but humanity needs both ethics and immorality in their lives, challenging societies way of thinking throughout
time, creating textual integrity. To gain textual integrity, texts must challenge society in a way that endures time. William Butler Yeats's poetry, has
effectively explored challenging and lasting dualities cornering ethics and morals in humanity, particularly within The Second Coming (1919), Among
School Children (1928) and Leda and the Swan (1928). Within Yeats modernist context, theevil in the world was sourced from the war, while religion
was symbolic of the good in humanity, which has continued into contemporary culture. Yeats explores how unethical experiences effects one's
perspective of the world. The immoral elements of society are necessary for good and change to occur. Despite common beliefs of society, humanity
need both good and evil experiences to create a balance in their life.
Humanity is expected to be ethical, but experiences exposes humans to the immoral aspects of society, which can affect their perspective. World War
One began due to the imperialist powers in Europe creating a disconnect between countries because of the power they desired, as explored within the
Second Coming. By using metaphoric imagery "The falcon cannot hear the falconer", Yeats conveys the disconnect and loss of control major powers
in Europe were experiencing. The allegorical references to imperialism mirrors the ignorance of the
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How Does Yeats Use Syntax In The Second Coming
The apocalypse on earth has started, the Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, a half animal is rising to earth, and the world is being pulled into the
darkness of hell through the gyre. The poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats is about revelations. Throughout this poem, Yeats uses
the language and syntax including a new form of writing and literary devices, to the point of the view of the narrator, form, and to show the context.
The poem shows Yeats struggle in understanding Christianity that left him searching for all his life to find some form of a belief system. This
struggle with religion was a result of Yeats father who was a religious skeptic who thought religion was through art and poetry. Because of Yeats
father's teachings, it resulted in Yeats to explore different forms of religions that led him to explore... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This enabled Yeats to take a look at the imagery inside "The Second Coming" and bring to life the symbolism, for example, he displays this by the
way he clarifies how the darkness covers and recovers the earth and in how this figure is rocking the earth in his cradle this allows Yeats to look at
the details within "The Second Coming" and bring the imagery to life, for instance, he shows this in how he explains the darkness is covering and
recovering the earth and in how this beast is rocking the cradle of the world. When using "the gyre" it illustrated the movement of major cycles of
history and went across the antiseptics of the human personality. For Yeats, this was his personal search for faith through "the gyre" that led him to
find religion for a greater scope of linguistic force that led Yeats to explore the world of the
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Annotations In The Second Coming
In William Yeats poem, "The Second Coming," Yeats makes some observations about what has happened before and attempts to parallel the past with
the future in order to justify his prediction of the "Second Coming" of Christ. Though interesting and appealing, these predictions and observations
doesn't make Yeats a Nostradamus–like figure who predicts specific, unlikely and unusual events leading up to the fulfillment of an ultimate prophecy,
but rather makes similar to a conspiracy theorist spouting off events that are no better at predicting an event as an astrology constellation can predict
that way you behave–– the statements are all common and vague on purpose so they can be applied to anyone. Conversely, Yeats connects past to
future which may give his argument of a Second Coming more validity due to the statistical likelihood of past events repeating themselves based on the
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Illustrating a state of turmoil, Yeats explains that, "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world." Though interesting and romantic, this statement assumes
that the world was once not in the state of anarchy and madness. This revelation would have been more effective if it were news but, unfortunately, it's
not. The world is in a constant state of turmoil and anarchy because the most primal nature of humans is to prove dominance to earn breeding rights
and ensure your bloodline–– the societies humans live in are a reflection; both nature and the construct of a society work in tandem and breed the need
to be dominant. Further, Yeats states, "The best lack all conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity," highlighting the counterintuitive
symptom of war: good intentions, bad outcomes, and the philosophical debate of necessary evils. In brief, Yeat's predictions are applicable today
because their applicability is
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Analysis Of Second Coming
"Even today we raise our hand against our brother... We have perfected our weapons, our conscience has fallen asleep, and we have sharpened our
ideas to justify ourselves as if it were normal we continue to sow destruction, pain, death"(Francis). The "Second Coming" a poem by W. B. Yeats,
cleverly illustrates the end of the world as a consequence of humans becoming obsessed with violence and war. War acts as a harbinger of the second
coming because its features include violence, terror, and chaos. These characteristics, which are often precursors to the second coming, are
implemented in the poem through the use of literary devices. The poet stitches several literary elements such as gloomy diction, biblical allusions,
passionate anaphoras,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Beside the falcon, the gyre acts as an example of a positive feedback loop which ultimately ends in collapse. The world experienced this loop by
having several chain reaction events that eventually pushed countries over the edge, resulting in the outbreak of violence and bloodshed. This
sophisticated diction is also intricately combined with allusion in words such as "tide" and "drowned"(line 5–6) in reference to Noah's Ark. In Noah's
story, God cleanses the world from sinners by flooding them. The poet might be saying that the world needs to be cleansed because "the best lack all
conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity"(line 7–8). Allusions contribute to this interpretation of the poem as the poet proves himself
a man of knowledge and belief. Allusions to the Bible, specifically to the book of revelation, is seen by the use of anaphoras in the first few lines of
the second stanza. There is a sense of certainty evident in the speaker's voice as he repeats the word "Surely"(line 9–10) the closely accompanied by
the words "Second Coming"(line 10–11). Beside certainty, the repetition of "surely" can be for the purpose of hopefulness. One might believe that
the speaker is insane or crazed by the visions of the end, but there is certainly a reason why one would wish the end to arrive. The speaker, acting as a
prophet, is disillusioned by the actions of his fellow humans and wishes for the restoration of humanity to a righteous
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Things Fall Apart and The Second Coming Essay
Things Fall Apart and The Second Coming
"The Second Coming"
By William Butler Yeats
Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer,
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosened upon the world,
The blood–dimmed tide is loosened, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned
The best lack of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The poem is based on changes
and it implies that when mere anarchy is in play, the whole community lets
go and things fall apart. The only reason why the society fell apart is
because the people did not stand up for their religion and government. They
let the missionaries change their ways. That was also referred to in the
poem. The poem stated that things fall apart when the center cannot hold.
At the bottom of page 176, Obierika quoted that the white man has
put a knife on the things that held us together and we have fallen apart. I
think that Achebe is trying to give WilliamButler Yeats some type of
recognition because in the beginning of the book, Achebe included a stanza
from the poem.
"The blood–dimmed tide is loosened, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned"
First of all, I think this means that once the white missionaries
interfere with their religion, it could encourage the whites to feel they
could do anything to their society and the people would not say anything.
For example, After the white missionaries introduced their religion, they
tried to introduce British law and force
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What Is The Tone Of The Second Coming
War has impacted modern day society. It has caused people to believe in violence as a solution. "The second coming, " by William Butler Yeats
depicts that society falls apart because of conflict and negativity. Yeats uses diction to convey the destruction of society. Yeats showed a lot of dark
diction through this poem. The author states "Things fall apart the center cannot hold. " This predicted that a new war is coming and is
foreshadowing society's destruction. His choice of words gave the whole poem a dark tone, for example nightmare and blood. These words are
pointing out how regretful and damaging the second coming will become. Blood representing death and nightmares representing what it will feel like.
Yeats uses allusion to illustrate
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How Does Yeats Use Biblical Allusions In The Second Coming
In "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats, the speaker explains to the reader that the world around him is falling apart. The use of biblical
allusions, chaotic imagery, and symbols illustrate how the second coming is not going to be good; things are terrible now, but the worst is yet to
come. In the first two lines, the speaker introduces a scene of chaos by saying "TURNING and turning in the widening gyre the falcon cannot hear the
falconer." A gyre is a tornado–like structure, and it symbolizes history and how it is cyclical, which is how Yeats himself viewed life. The fact that
Yeats refers to history as a gyre shows that he has a negative view of humanity. The speaker also mentions how the falcon does not hear the falconer,
which also illustrates how the world is crumbling. The next two lines say "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the
world." This solidifies the idea that the world is crumbling, and even though the anarchy, or chaos, is small, there is definitely more to come. The
speaker then goes on to say that "the blood–dimmed tide is loosed," which is a biblical allusion that represents God's vengeance for disobedience, and
that "the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity." This final phrase of the first stanza proves... Show more content on
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The speaker continues to explain his expectance of the Second Coming, claiming that he saw "A shape with lion body and the head of a man, a gaze
blank and pitiless as the sun." This vision from the "Spiritus Mundi," or Spirit World, further illustrates that Jesus may come, but there are possibly other
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Essay on themes in Things Fall Apart and Second Coming
Similar Themes in Things Fall Apart and The Second Coming
The novel "Things Fall Apart" examines African culture before the colonial infiltration. Achebe's novel forces us to examine the customs and traditions
that make up an informal culture. At times we may find some their practices appalling, but Achebe makes us realize that the traditions and customs are
what essentially hold the Ibo together. Achebe wrote 'Things Fall Apart" with the intention of changing the common view of African culture. He wrote
the novel from an insider's perspective, revealing that African culture was not solely based on barbaric and mindless rituals. Achebe reveals the affects
of the colonial infiltration on African societies. Through his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Achebe portrays the life of the Ibo tribe before the first touch of the white men. Before the colonial infiltration the Ibo had a very cyclic view of
time. Their beleifs and rituals were practiced the same rit at the same time every year. Where as the white man's traditions and view of time were
much more linear. Right from the Ibo's first encounter with the whites, the reader can observe the cycle as being unchangeably altered. It is the
coming of thei missionaries which brings the disruption. After thousands of years of unviolated and untouched traditions, Okonkwo returns after just
seven years of exile and finds his village turned upside down. In addition, the Ibo people fail to recognize him as a leader. "Their new religon and
government and trading stores were very much in the people's eyes and minds, the talked and though about little else..' The whites swept away the Ibo
tradition and heritage. Here, Okonkwo can be seen as the "falconer" as depicted in Yeats' poem. He was once looked upon as a respected leader, but now
the "falcon" the Ibo people do not hear the falconer, Okonkwo.
The disruption of the Ibo cycle is
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Easter 1916, Wild Swans at Coole and Second Coming, by...
The timeless essence and the ambivalence in Yeats' poems urge the reader's response to relevant themes in society today. This enduring power of Yeats'
poetry, influenced by the Mystic and pagan influences is embedded within the textual integrity drawn from poetic techniques and structure when
discussing relevant contextual concerns. "Wild Swans at Coole", "Easter 1916" and "The Second Coming" encapsulate the romanticism in his early
poetry to civil influences and then a modernist approach in the later years. The three poems explore distinct transition of a poet while discussing ideas
of history, love and politics. "WC", written in romantic style, emphasises his inner turmoil through an array of poetic techniques entrenched within a...
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The techniques and systolic structure provides textual integrity by allowing relevance for a large contextual audience, with the themes transcending
time and context. The contrast of the swans' magnificence in their immortal portrayal to Yeats' anguish in his "twilight years" of mental state
establishes two aspects of human nature, developing a sense of ambiguity. "Easter 1916" portrays a stark contrast of Ireland before and after the
Irish Uprising. Patriotism, with Mysticism in "wherever green is worn", is evident through the vivid imagery portraying Ireland. Political idealism is
a transition from personal concerns in WC to civil concerns of Ireland and serves as a medium to reflect on the morals that define contextual society,
reinforcing the enduring power of his poetry. Romantic influences paint a calm and peaceful portrait of Ireland through a tranquil tone. The mood is
pleasant in the "nod of the head" and "polite meaningless words" as the reader deduces a positive outlook on society. It explicitly contrasts the
repetition of "a terrible beauty is born" when reflecting on the violence in Ireland, shaping a personal response influenced by his perception of a
struggle diminishing the essence of a pleasant aforementioned society. The stone to the "troubled living stream" emphasises Yeats' support for the
movement by placing
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of The Second Coming By William Butler Yeats
The Apocalypse on earth has started, The Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, half animal is rising, to earth and the world is being pulled into the
darkness of hell through the gyre. This poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats is about revelations. Yeats Uses language and syntax, and
a new form of writing, and literary devices, to the point of view of the narrator, and form, and context. That results in showing that Yeats, was struggling
to understand Christianity from his life to his upbringing, that led him longing to understand religion. From, Yeats father teaching him to look at the
world through art and poetry that led Yeats to explore the supernatural and many other forms of religion, that left Yeats to become deeply involved in
politics that left him struggling to understand Christianity as he does throughout "The Second Coming."
In the Poem "The Second Coming" from William Butler Yeatsis about revelations, (John 2.18). When Yeats wrote "The Second Coming" the world
was in violence and turmoil. Due to WWI just ending, The Russian Revolutions had started, and The Angelo Irish War was approaching. Because of
all these events left Yeats trying to come to terms with the end of an age and the changing future of the 20th Century. For Yeats, the future of the
world was in chaos and this left Yeats struggling to understand his own beliefs in religion. Throughout "The Second Coming." For Yeats to tell this
story he uses a narrator and uses a new form of writing called automatic writing, this new form of writing left Yeats looking down different paths of
religion and more into the paths of mysticism that led him to explore the world of the supernatural, where he would dictate by spirits that he believed
would move through different parts of history, through different personalities, where he believed each movement and type being related to different
phases of the moon. In "The Second Coming " he uses an elegant syntax and uses different words such as the Spiritus Mundi in Latin instead of saying
the Anti–Christ and in the meaning of Christ's birthplace. Yeast continues in his search for religion throughout the poem in "The Second Coming" by
using a pose sonnet, he liked to break up the coherence of his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Darkness And Second Coming Essay
Darkness and the Second coming were written during two different historically ground–breaking and extraordinarily time period; One was written in
the birth of Industrial Revolution while the other was written in after match of one the bloodiest war human kind has ever seen. Theses time period
brought upon a number of drastic political and societal changes, changes that were divergent to the societal norms.For Romantics like Yeats and Byron,
these changes were devastating, and the ushering in of the mechanized world was seen to be immediate threat to the balance of the natural order
between humanity and nature by tainting and dehumansing and perverting the natural order in heinous ways. Furthermore Both Yeats "Second
Coming" and Byron "Darkness"... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Yeats believed in "Spiritus Mundi" or world spirit, an recurring symbol in history. Here the "Spiritus Mundi" is the soul of the Universe, shaking in
the wake of the coming apocalypse, to Yeats the image of the Sphinx that will destroy the world, and him with it. Yates is positive the beast will
come, but just not yet; by the end of the poem, the curtain has rose once again, and the beast is no longer, and Yeats writes that "twenty centuries
of stony sleep were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle", implying that whatever is coming for the world, whatever mythical monster will be
here soon. It is not yet born, but the world is right for it and waiting for it. Furthermore the lesson that Yeats is conveying is that the violence and
bloodshed and that was spilt in World War I wasn't the coming of the monster but the future fortify by the never ending desire of human nature to
discover more and more violent and efficient ways of killing each other will bring about the coming of the monster. The keys to monster cages lies in
our society actions the voluntary decision do harm that will drag the monster out of its cage. The beast "its hour come round at last." Yeats theory that
still holds true today is the beast is only a few years away from ushering the world into a state of complete
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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The Second Coming By. Yeats

  • 1. The Second Coming By. Yeats "The Second Coming" by W.B. Yeats is a strong, emotional poem about how everything, even the most strongest of creations eventually falls apart, with Yeats using the coming of the Messiah from Revelations to show how society will crumble and break apart when Christ comes for the final battle against Satan. Chinua Achebe, writer of "Things Fall Apart," used "The Second Coming" as a basis to show how African culture was dismantled by the appearance of Britain officials in Nigeria, who brought their own religion and who were not afraid to use their advanced technology against the natives if they opposed the new order. Achebe put a particularly amount of importance on four specific lines in the poem, lines 3–6, using each line to show a different breakdown of African society. Achebe showed the breaking away of citizens from their tribes to join the white men and their complete disregard for their religious beliefs. He also showed the Africans fear of the white man and his forces, and allowing members of the tribe with courage to oppose the white man's rule to be cut down and slain, instead of the entire tribe standing behind them in support. In the first part of "Things Fall Apart," Achebe establishes that African society is all about cooperation, hard work, and the constant community events the tribes have for celebrations. He used events, such as the entire village turning out for the wrestling match and festivals for the gods, to demonstrate the unity between the tribes. He ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Allusions In The Second Coming Slouches Bethlehem to be Born Interestingly, the poem, "The Second Coming", covers the entire length of the Bible, from the first book, Genesis, to the last book, Revelation, in only twenty–two lines and three stanzas. Although "The Second Coming" maybe one of William Yeats more complex poems, it still conveys the perfect image of the second coming of Christ. In this poem by William Butler Yeats, Yeats uses symbolism, allusions and imagery to bring together an awe–inspiring poem about the second coming of Jesus Christ. First, there are many examples of symbolism in this poem. The use of symbols in the poem helps to convey the message of how World War I was when William Butler Yeats wrote it. In the first line he says, "Turning and turning in the widening gyre". The word "gyre" is an important recurring symbol that William uses not only in "The Second Coming" but in all his poems. "Gyres" stands ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The death and destruction that follows the Second Coming are seen through Yeats' poem. The second stanza is filled with imagery of a desert. The antichrist "slouches towards Bethlehem to be born," he will be in a deserted desert. The image of sand, or as Yeats puts it the "desert birds," and "A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun" show the precision and unbearable circumstances of the dry and hot desert. Since evil is to be embodied anywhere, such as the desert, which is lacking human life, it is such a powerful image. Yeats use the image of water and the power of it several times in the first stanza. "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world," "The blood–dimmed tide is loosed," and "The ceremony of innocence is drowned." (Shmoop Editorial Team). Like many other things in nature, water, is something man can still not control. No matter what one does, one cannot stop a rain fall coming from the clouds. The images of water and desert are both powerful symbols Yeats uses to describe the end times in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Symbolism In William Butler Yeats's The Second Coming William Butler Yeats wrote "The Second Coming" to describe the current state of society at the beginning of the 1920's, shortly after World War I came to an end. Yeats believed that even though the war had ended, many people were too broken to recover. He believed that this was not just the end of a war, but the beginning of future violence that was looming. Yeats uses symbolism, figurative language, and structure to illustrate the complete disarray of society after World War I. Throughout the whole poem, the symbolism makes the story dark and warning–like. The first stanza describes the state of society post–war and pre–Second Coming, when Yeats states "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, / The blood–dimmed tide is loosed, / and everywhere / The ceremony of innocence is drowned" (4–6). The symbolism in these lines shows that the state of the world is in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Repetition in the poem, as represented in the first line "Turning and turning in the widening gyre" (1), shows that people are stuck doing the same thing over and over. History is bound to repeat itself if society is stuck in their old ways, foreshadowing that one day there will be another war, also known as the Second Coming. The simile "a gaze blank and pitiless as the sun" (15) shows that there is no life left in society after the war drained them of their happiness. Yeats also uses irony to show that there is no way to tell who the good people and the bad people are anymore because "The best lack all conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity" (7–8). The best lacking conviction shows that the ones who should be deemed as good are defeated. They have no more fight left in them after fighting for so long, while the worst are full of an intensity that questions the ethics and morality of society. Things have gotten so bad after the war that good and bad are nonexistent ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Second Coming Of Jesus Second Coming of Christ Immediately following Jesus' last words to His Disciples "he was taken up; and a cloud received him out of their sight" (Acts 1: 9), and the two men [angels] standing by, said: "men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven." (Acts 1: 11) Perhaps there is no religious subject more popular than the second coming of our Lord; nonetheless, not all that is heard on the television or from pulpits is from the Bible; yet, the promise of Christ's second coming is clearly taught in scripture. Jesus said that He would come again; angels said He would come again; Paul wrote concerning the Lord's second coming and stated that He would appear and John taught that the Lord would appear. (John 14:3; Acts 1:11; II Timothy 4:1; Hebrews 9: 28; Colossians 3: 4 and many more) Therefore, to believe the Bible is to believe that Jesus Christ is coming again. However, when He is coming is a matter not known by any man; so, when some person sets a date for the coming of the Lord and people began looking for Him at that time, we can be certain that He will not come then. Paul said that the second coming is like a woman expecting a baby and she knows not the moment it will arrive. (I Thessalonians 5: 1–4) Now, there are two lessons that we need to hold on to: (1) Why Christ is not coming and (2) why He is coming. First, He is not coming to earth to set up a literal kingdom and to reign for a thousand years upon His throne in the city of Jerusalem. This claim is not Biblical; in fact, it conflicts with the Word of God. (1) The kingdom of Christ is not an earthly kingdom. It is not of this world (John 18: 36); (2) Christ's kingdom has already been established. It was established during the lifetime of the apostles. (Mark 9: 1; Acts 2: 47) (3) The second coming of Christ will mark the end of His reign instead of the beginning. (I Corinthians 15: 24–28) (4) The Bible mentions Christ as being no nearer to the earth than in the clouds where the saints "shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air. (I Thessalonians 4: 17) The earth will then be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. How Does Keats Use Dramatic Irony In The Second Coming The Apocalypse on earth has started and The Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, a half animal is rising, and the world is being pulled into the darkness of hell through the gyre. This is what the poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Keats is about. Even though "The Second Coming" is about Revolutions, to the reader Keats was left looking at the events of the world around him and trying to take in all the violent acts of war and left with the devastation. Keats uses the narrator, the language and symbolism, to his form of writing, to dramatic irony through the poem of "The Second Coming" to show Keats left struggling to understand religion from these events, to his life, to his upbringing. The Poem "The Second Coming" from William Butler Keats, is about Revolutions, (John 2.18). When Keats wrote "The Second Coming" the world was filled with violence and turmoil, WW1 had just ended, The Russian Revolutions had started, and the world was on the eve of The Angelo Irish War. Through these events, Keats looked around his world and was left trying to understand these events that left him struggling with the concept of religion. Keats felt the world was changing and because of these events the 20th Century was changing and that an end of an age was upon the world. Keats uses the narrator to tell the story of "The Second Coming" and uses the language in his poems of Irish traditions and the Gaelic language to bring back the old traditions of Irish culture through his poems. In "The Second Coming" Keats uses automatic writing, to write this poem, Keats could dictate spirits that would take over his writing and used elegant syntax and Latin' to describe the spirit of the universe instead of saying the devil or the anti–Christ and uses Bethlehem in the meaning of Christ's birthplace. Keas uses a pose sonnet, Keats liked to break up the coherence of his sonnets and write them to be rugged, colloquial, and to have concrete language, he rhymed through his poetry but often off–rhymed for example, in "The Second Coming" the sun and the man are the only words that rhythm and used linear writing and short sentences. Throughout "The Second Coming" Keats uses the importance of symbolism such as of the "gyres" more and more ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Yeats' Use of Symbolism in 'Leda and the Swan' and 'the... W. B. Yeats, a somewhat eclectic poet, explores, throughout his work, a wide range of themes and ideas. He reflects on his nation's politics, Irish mysticism, the afterlife, love, and his own past. While each set of his poems share many recurring images, however, it is Yeats' examination and opinions of the gyres of time and history that crop up in all forms of his poetry. While references to this great spiraling metaphor for the fabric of the universe can be found in some of Yeats' most famous works, such as 'Sailing to Byzantium', 'Long–legged Fly' and 'Easter 1916', to name just a few, it is an aspect of his poetry which is relevant to almost all of his writing. However, it is in Yeats' apocalyptic poems, 'Leda and the Swan' and 'The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The creature described is, of course, the form of the ancient Egyptian sphinx. This metaphor is far stronger than the one of the falcon, as the great beast begins "moving it's slow thighs". The creature represents an antichrist, a further image of this destruction of man. The blank and pitiless gaze it gives emphasizes its lack of human emotion, and the brutal nature of its task. The, all of a sudden, "darkness drops", and the vision is over. Reflecting on what he saw, Yeats talks of the "nightmare" to come, and that for the "rough beast, its hour come round at last". Overall, the poem sets out clearly what Yeats truly believes as the future for mankind. The structure is also worthy of note. Usually, Yeats stuck strongly to established rhyme schemes and stanza structures, however, in this poem he choses not to. While stanza one 8 lines, the second is 14, and this emphasizes to some extent the lack of clarity in Yeats' vision, as his description what he saw flows out of him almost uncontrollably. Also, the lack of rhyme scheme indicates once more the havoc and ruggedness of events to come, although word repetition does connote a feeling of the slowly turning gyre, turning round and round endlessly. The second of the two poems, 'Leda and the Swan', takes us back to the first era of destruction, cruelty and war, before the epoch of Christianity. It tells the mythical tale of Leda being ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. The Second Coming The poem "The Second Coming" was written about the aftermath of World War One, which includes the enforcement of the European culture of Christianity and Catholicism on other races of the world. The message behind this poem if to the premise to the theme of the novel "Things Fall Apart." Many of the lines that are indicated within the poem reflect the incidents of this novel, but mostly, the title that's used is a line from the poem, it is equivalent to the outcome of the instilling of ideas of what had happened to the Nigeria tribes. The poem is based on the changes of the war, it also shows that it's impossible to stop any changes from happening in the future. As for the novel when the white men settled in the tribes of Nigeria, there wasn't any way to stop the changes of their presence from happening any further than it did. The communities of Nigeria fell apart due to the invasion of the white men imposing their religion ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This also reveals that his people lost their beliefs when the Europeans entered their environment that corrupted their world. This changed their beliefs of the only world that they knew before the religion of Christianity came about. Because of the European assimilating these people to their religion of Christianity it broke the connection that the tribe had, and the village belief systems were slowly broken. However, with Okonkwo's devastating life experiences among his people and himself, it certainly enforces the last line of Yeat's poem "slouches towards Bethlehem to be born." This reinforcement of this specific religion brought much terror among the Nigerian tribes, but it mostly affected Okonkwo's state of mind. The outcome of this led to Okonkwo to take his own life in madness of his people converting to Catholicism and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Allusions In The Second Coming William Butler Yeats describes an envisioned post–apocalyptic world in his poem "The Second Coming," written shortly after the end of the World War I. Yeats mentions specific connections and details relating to the past and present. These references draw upon times where people basked in hope and positivity. However, the poem has an overarching ambiguous aspect in regards to the future. Yeats is certain a destructive force will destroy and ravage Earth, but he does not know in what form this force will appear. Yeats references the past in connection with a sense of hope, but perturbed and uncertain about what may come, he writes in an equivocal manner that leads to an ominous feeling of future hopelessness and destruction. Scattered... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Yeats embodies this ominous doom in the form of a "rough beast" whose time has come to be born into the world, contrast to the Christ figure used to reference the past (21). However, this does not necessarily mean he believes a single powerful figure will emerge. Instead, this apocalyptic beast could be a variety of forms of devastation as later seen in the century with weapons of mass destruction, regimes, and diseases. "Its hour come round at last" means that Yeats knows this beast approaches along with impending doom. Yeats includes the past, present, and future in order to describe the draining of hope over time. The Biblical references allude to a time where the world and the people had hope for their future. But, having lived during World War I, Yeats questions the current state of mankind. Furthermore, he implies the future is bleak and certain something will bring about the destruction of the world as they know it. Yeats mentions "Spiritus Mundi", or the spirit of the world, in the poem (12). Normally, one views this spirit of the world in a positive and perhaps even in a naturalistic light: a beacon of hope. Not Yeats. He says "a vast image of Spiritus Mundi /Troubles my sight", (12–13). Yeats also sees others around him lose their sense of innocence. "The ceremony of innocence is drowned/The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity" (6–8). These lines describes what Yeats sees in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. The Second Coming By W. B. Yeats "The Second Coming" by W. B. Yeats, was written in 1919 following World War I and was to present the idea that he thought that the apocalypse as presented in the Book of Revelation from the Bible was about to begin. The poem does not mention the second coming of Christ but rather focuses on the coming of the antichrist, meaning Yeats could only see despair, hopelessness, and chaos in the world. These sentiments of Yeats and others are due to war damages, collapsing economies, and the coming of the Great Depression and the Irish civil war. The word choice, meter, persona, subject, and lack of mention of Christ all collectively contribute to reflecting Yeats' sentiments in the poem. Several lines in the poem support this mentality of despair and chaos. "Turning and turning in the widening gyre" refers to the worsening state of society with the collapse of democratic governments and economies. (1) The second line, "The falcon cannot hear the falconer" means that any sense of hierarchy and authority has been lost. The best people don't have the conviction to combat the growing evil and the worst, the sinners, are full of passionate intensity meaning the world is filled with those who wish to do evil. (7–8) These lines emphasize the corruption that the world is falling into. The selection of adjectives and nouns used in the poem carry a negative connotation reflecting the negatives thoughts of the state of the world. Yeats uses words such as "blood–dimmed," "anarchy," ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Analysis Of The Second Coming By W. B. Yeats William Butler Yeats was a great Irish poet of the twentieth century. During his lifespan World War I occurred, along with its resulting political upheaval. He also lived in the century before the change of the millennium, a theme touched upon in his poems. He, like many other authors, incorporated the events that occurred during his life into his work. This important factor of the time period is clearly reflected in his work, "The Second Coming." The critical consensus regarding the poem "The Second Coming" by W.B. Yeats is that the new post World War I society in Europe, along with the quickly approaching millennium, culminated in the poem prophesying a new age of evil opening with the ascension of a beast. The critics' consensus is that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This Yeats conceptualizes through the image of the 'gyre,' one of his most durable symbols, a kind of whirling vortex or spiral–within–a–spiral that is meant to show how one cycle loses strength in direct proportion to the other's gain" (Meyer 190). The gyre is used because "Yeats believed that history was cyclical. Human history, he claimed, was governed by the rotation of a Great Wheel, whose phases . . . influence events and determine human personalities. Every two thousand years, the Wheel completes a turn and a new cycle or civilization (one of two opposing characters) is ushered in, heralded by violence and incarnated through an act of union between a male god in avian form and a mortal female" (Meyers 189). Which means "[i]f Zeus's descent upon Leda initiated the period from about 2000 B.C. to the year zero, and if the Holy Ghost's descent upon Mary initiated the subsequent period from the year zero to approximately A.D. 2000, then in 1919 the poet could speculate that the next such annunciation might occur . . . just barely within his lifetime" (Allen 3195). Indeed, "[o]n the brink of the new millennium, there are ominous portents that the Christian cycle is drawing to a close and that what will replace it – its antithesis – will merely deepen the nightmare of history" (Meyer 189). The falcon's path around the falconer is supremely important to the interpretation of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Analysis Of The Second Coming By William Butler Yeats The apocalypse on earth has started, the Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, half animal is rising, to earth and the world is being pulled into the darkness of hell through the gyre. This poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats is about revelations. Yeats uses language and syntax including a new form of writing, and literary devices, to the point of view of the narrator, form, and context. That results in showing that Yeats, was struggling to understand Christianity in his life, from his upbringing, that leads him longing to understand religion. Due to Yeats father teaching him to look at the world through art and poetry that leads Yeats to explore the world of the supernatural to many other forms of religions. That leaves Yeats to become deeply involved in politics that causes him to struggle to understand Christianity, as he does throughout "The Second Coming." When Yeats wrote, "The Second Coming" the world was in violence and turmoil. Due to WWI just ending, the Russian Revolutions had started, and The Angelo Irish War was approaching. Through all these events, Yeats was trying to come to terms with the end of an age and the changing future of the 20th Century. For Yeats, the future of the world was in chaos and because of this it gives the poem its meaning, this leaves Yeats struggling to understand his own beliefs in religion. Throughout "The Second Coming" Yeats uses a narrator to tell the story and uses a new form of writing called automatic writing. This new ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Summary Of The Second Coming William Butler Yeats' "The Second Coming" Journal Observation In his blank verse poem "The Second Coming," Irish poet William Butler Yeats describes the turmoil and darkness surrounding the lives of people on earth before the second coming of Christ. One way that Yeats communicates the spiritual darkness in the last generation is by using a metaphor. Yeats writes "darkness drops again...twenty centuries of stony sleep" (Yeats 1028). By describing the last generation before the coming of Christ as in a "stony sleep," Yeats communicates the idea that the people lack awareness to the reality of the soon coming of Christ and remain indifferent to Him. Also, Yeats uses the lion to allude to the Bible's description of God as the "Lion of Judah." Thus, the Lion in the poem represents God returning as a righteous judge at the second coming to take His people with Him and judge the unrepentant. Interpretation In his poem "The Second Coming," Yeats' words serve to warn people of the dangers of falling spiritually asleep. As the violence causes "things [to] fall apart" all around them, people continue following their own evil paths with "passionate intensity" (Yeats 1028). However, they suddenly realize that they "lack all conviction" by failing to accept God's salvation through the message displayed in Bethlehem (Yeats 1028). Since the people remained spiritually asleep, they become suddenly awakened and "vexed to [a] nightmare by a rocking cradle" (Yeats 1028), when Christ returns and they are found unprepared. Because they failed to accept Christ when they still had time, the second coming appears suddenly upon them and their hopes for salvation are lost as the lion comes to judge the world. By sharing the terrifying reality of the generation in "stony sleep" before God's second coming, Yeats tells his audience their need to remain prepared for God's return. Integration In Mathew 24:42–44, Jesus gives the warning "Therefore, keep watch, because you do not know on what day your Lord will come. But understand this: If the owner of the house had known at what time of night the thief was coming, he would have kept watch and would not have let his house be broken into. So you also must be ready, because the Son of Man ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Comparing The Second Coming And Disney Pixar's, Wall-E "The Second Coming" and Disney Pixar's, Wall–E have similarities despite the nearly 90 years between their writing. In the poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats, he describes the world through his perspective as being a terrible place where anarchy is loosed upon the world and where the world awaits some "revelation at hand". He describes the world as a place that only "a second coming" could save. Just like this poem, Disney Pixar's, Wall–E, explores the fears of today's society, and life after a worldwide catastrophe where humans are incapable of changing their destructive path are doomed to repeat history unless they have a "second coming". As Wall–E begins, Wall–E is alone on Earth cleaning up humanity's garbage until a search drone, EVE (Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator), sent from a human escape pod, Axiom, lands on... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Yeats saw destruction and war at a new level and the only thing that could change society, from his perspective, would be a second coming. Everyone was stuck in this cycle or "widening gyre" with history repeating itself forever which only a second coming could break the cycle. Similarly, Wall–E, is an exaggeration of today's society where humanity has already destroyed earth once and is about to repeat itself again. This is the routine that Yeats is talking about in the first two lines of the poem. In Wall–E, we see the cycle of history repeating itself as society continued on its downward spiral until some cataclysm wiped the earth of life. Wall–E is the one to break the never–ending loop of the human's routine in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Second Coming Allusion Society as a whole is collapsing. For generations people have been led to believe that strengthening themselves, no matter the consequences, can better society. "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats portrays how the destruction of society is caused by human actions. When describing society, the author uses allusion and states, "Anarchy is loosed upon the world." Yeats explores the suffering of death that thehuman race is dealing with and a depiction of how war has done nothing but make life more difficult. Allusion is shown when the author illustrates there is so much death that, "the blood–dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere." The author is also claiming how the war would just create more war, and that helps weaken society. In stanza two, the narrator describes a man as, "A shape with a lion body and the head of a man." This depiction is symbolic of mankind because men are so full of themselves that they believe they ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the final stanza the author illustrates, "That 20 centuries of stony sleep were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle." He is conveying that "20 centuries" represents a baby sleeping in a cradle, and the Second Coming is Him waking up to a nightmare, leaving His peace, discovering a broken society. The author illustrates death by stating, "Wind shadows of the indignant desert birds." Yeats is creating an image of a large amount of death caused by a failed society due to the mention of desert, which are vultures. He also depicts that, "The darkness drops again." Yeats uses these quotes to show the countless suffering and how dark the world is. The intense imagery in the poem is dark, scary and shows the suffering and reality of the aftermath of the first world ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Comparing Voltaire's Candide 'And Yeats' Second Coming Voltaire's Candide and Yeats' "Second Coming" are the two works I will compare, both story shows that there is still good in man and there is still time to change. Yeats writes this "The falcon cannot hear the falconer; Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world ". We are the falcon, and God is the falconer, He is controlling the people that are in a downward, and uncontrollable spiral we chose to ignore the voice of God calling out to us. He wants to pull up out of the deadly decent, but because we do not listen, we are doom to fail. The "anarchy" that is in the world is cause by man inability to hear. This is the world that Candide suddenly finds himself in a world where chaos is everywhere and nothing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Second Coming Tone The second coming literary analysis essay William Butler Yeats wrote "The Second Coming" after World War 1 ended, in a time when the image of society was catastrophic. Yeats was deeply affected by these horrors caused by the war. Yeats predicts this image of a catastrophic society due to war will reappear in the near future. In " The Second Coming", William B. Yeats uses a variety of literary devices to portray his idea of what the downfall of society will look like. Throughout the poem, Yeats uses diction to illustrate a mood for the reader. Diction is the author's word choice in their writing which can affect the mood of the piece. In nearly every line of the poem, a word that creates a sorrowful and gloomy mood is apparent. For example, three words that may stand out the most to readers are, blood–dimmed, drowned, and shadows. By using the word "blood–dimmed" the author creates a scary connotation. Blood is often associated with death and in this case war. Dimmed creates imagery for the reader and helps them to visualize a setting that is vague. The reader cannot see things clearly however they can almost feel the chilling mood of their surroundings. The placement of the word drowned next to Blood–dimmed can cause the reader to interpret it in many different ways. One, for example, would ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In The Second Coming, by William Butler Yeats, Yeats explains the destruction of war caused by man and his inability to hear god because his own ideas are clouding his judgement. The poem describes Yeats's prediction of a second world war caused by the wrongdoings of man through the biblical allusion of the second coming. Yeat's also uses diction and symbolism to emphasize a gloomy and depressing setting. However, the destruction of man is not only caused by the actions of humans, it is often caused by their lack of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Diction In The Second Coming William Butler Yeats was born in 1865. During his lifetime, he lived through the First World War and was greatly affected by the traumatic events that occurred during it. He experienced a time where there was no faith in God and many lives were full of sin. The Author depicts a broken society without God in his poem "The Second Coming." The author uses diction in his poem to convey his theme and mood for the poem. For example, the diction in the "The blood–dimmed tide" (5) visualizes the dark mood of an ocean filled with blood, thus we can infer that lots of death has taken place. The poem begins with the line, "Turning and turning in the widening gyre," (1) this creates an anticipating mood for the reader by showing an unknown thing being ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. The Second Coming by William Yeats William Butler Yeats, a multitalented individual won the Nobel Prize in 1923. Born the son of a well known Irish painter and religious skeptic had many influences in his life. Eventually, he converted to Paganism from Christianity. He is till this day considered one of the greatest poets that ever lived. To understand the meaning of William Butler Yeats poem " The Second Coming", you must first understand the difference between Christianity and Paganism. Yeats was raised as a Christian and turned to pagan mysticism later in his life. Therefore, we can find the subject of this poem by tracing his flow of thought through Christianity up to the point when he diverged from it. Christianity is based around the soul. The soul becomes healthy by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This brings us to the final two lines in "The Second Coming", "And what rough beast, its hour come В‘round at last/ slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?" This first sums up the poems theme of a "Second Coming" of paganism as opposed to Christ. Secondly, however, are the implications of the statement. The book of revelations says that in his second coming Christ will not be born humbly among men, but to come to the world in full glory. But Yeats, since he has already established the true nature of this second coming, now returns to this prophecy, pointing out that it had been partially right, that the figure of the coming would not be born humbly. But it seems that he half suggests the reason why this is true is because of an inherent weakness in Christianity. He seems to imply that Paganism, a brutal and powerful force, would not stoop to a meek coming that of Jesus. The previous line referring to Christianity as a "rocking cradle", the calmness of which stirred the spiritus mundi, suggests that Yeats had come to view Christianity as week and its innocence as idealistic and impractical in the real world, in which the spiritus mundi can promise satisfaction and earthly fulfillment. Imagery is really strong in this poem. The first two images are complimentary. The spinning gyre, producing dizziness, and the lost falcon, which cannot answer the calls it is trained for, it is lost. In a sense, power is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Tone Of The Second Coming The Second Coming", which was written by William Butler Yeats, is being linked to World War 1, which Yeats lived through and experienced. This poem is filled with very descriptive examples and effects due to the war, and the overriding tone of this has been set to a dark and gloomy poem. Most people would think that Yeats is talking about the return of Jesus Christ, but actually, he is portraying his world as being encumbered by destruction and chaos. He is afraid that the world will never get any better and that we will soon just end up destroying ourselves. The first line in this poem starts with, "turning and turning in the widening gyre"(Yeats). Here, Yeats is referring to a cycle that is beginning, possibly of 2000 years. He could be referring ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They might act as if Yeats uses metaphors from that book to better explain the idea that Jesus could be coming back. People often get that idea because of how Yeats worded his own poem; for example, "And what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?"(Yeats) Many believe that Yeats is referring to the antichrist or something similar to that, and that creature is the one to come and end us all. The other example is how Yeats says word for word, "surely the second coming is at hand!", and right there, people believe that there is a clear defining point of Jesus' ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe vs. The Second Coming... "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe vs. "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats When comparing the novel "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe and William butler Yeats poem "The Second Coming", at first there seem to be no similarities except for the phrase "things fall apart" which is used in both. But as one closely examinee the reasons why both authors use this sentence, one realizes that both of them try to show a great change, which, in the poem is related to reality, while in the novel is related to the story. It is important to mention that the two people who are comparable are not the poet and the writer but are the poet and the main character of the novel, Okonkwo. When the whole village and tribes fall apart because of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... We can be more specific and see what the poet and writer exactly talk about. It is better to focus on the poem first as it was written before the novel. In his poem William butler Yeatsis shocked by the events which were happening during the First World War. "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, The blood–dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned...", he tries to picture the dark ages of the war and the nasty events which were happening by using some metaphors and similes such as "a shape with lion body and the head of man" or "shadows of the indignant desert birds" Therefore, he manage to transmit the terrifying atmosphere of his time to the reader. He can not stand this state of fairs so he thinks that it is the end and he hopes that it is time for the second coming of Christ. Going back to the novel, we see Okonwo, who is extremely shocked by the twists which take place in his tribe as a cultural revolution. He sees their ancient religion giving its place to Christianity, and their father's culture and traditions, which his life was based on, fall apart. To make things even worse, his own son turns his back to him. Okonkwo can not stand this as a result he tries to fight against the people who were the creators of this disaster. But as he fails, he commits suicide, preferring to kill himself, rather than let those strangers kill him. In conclusion, it is worth mentioning that according to the novel we see that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Second Coming Dystopian The second coming by William Butler Yeats discusses the idea of the gyre which is everything starts at the center and then slowly falls apart on the outside while another thing is being reborn and in doing the same thing on the opposite end. This poem is a dystopia which is the opposite of utopia a world where social problems are magnified and the quality of life is extremely low. The walking dead television show is also a dystopia and can be tied to this poem. In both the second coming and the walking dead a person can draw conclusions about how society slowly moves away and breaks apart. The dystopia society in both of these works can show people's true nature. "The ceremony of innocence is drowned; The best lack all conviction, while the worst Are full of passionate intensity"(Yeats). Throughout the walking dead people see incidents taken away and the worst are enjoying... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Surely some revelation is at hand; Surely the Second Coming is at hand" For example Carol in the walking dead latches on to faith even in her capture. Another good example of this is Morgan and his philosophy that people can change. The fundamentalism's approach to religion is "the practice of empathizing literal interpretations of texts and a "return" to a greater religious purity; represented by the most conservative group within any religion."(308) This applies to both the poem the second coming and the walking dead. Carol is a great example of "extrinsic relgiosity which is a person publicly display of commitment to a religious faith."(308) An example of this is when Carol grabs across when she is being held by members of the Negan group. On the other hand Morgan is a great example of intrinsic religiosity is a person's inner religious life or personal relationship to the divine. An example of this is when Morgan is holding member of the Wolf's in a cage in the hopes that this member can ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. KeatsВґ The Second Coming Essays In a world full of hostility and loss of faith surrounded by war and technological developments, he modernist era of literature developments, the modernists era of literature arose. The sinking of the Titanic symbolized the falling of the Great Britain empire and newly invented standardized time allowed war to become even deadlier than before due to the ability to organize attacks. Due to this new world full of bloodshed and new mechanical inventions, the world was falling further and further away from God. William Butler Years expresses his sudden collapse of society in his poem " The Second Coming", first composed in January of 1919. The hopelessness of mankind is addressed by Keats' statement that man cannot save us, God cannot save us, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Society has strayed so far away from God that we cannot be guided back home. Yeats begins the poem with the first two lines painting an image of society falling apart and breaking down, one that O'Brien refers to as a "cultural breakdown."He says, "The falcon represents those forces that function productively only when disciplined." In order to maintain structure and to prevent the gyre from widening further, our society needs discipline, otherwise our structure, our faith, or very nature as human beings deteriorates. At this time in our society, our discipline in our faith is gone. Our discipline in our morals and ethics is gone. Lines 3–6 illustrate society's inability to hold together without discipline. Because the falcon can no longer hear the falconer to find its way back home, "things fall apart" – the result of society straying from God. With everything falling apart, the need for someone or something to save society becomes prominent. Since society has strayed away from God, the next solution is man as a savior, but with the new age of war and machinery, mankind has lost their ability to save the world. O'Brien says, "Everything that makes life valuable is being drenched in blood. 'The ceremony of innocence' refers no to one particular ceremony but is intended to suggest the grace and order of civilized society. Moreover, there is nobody to fight 'the blood–dimmed tide." Soldiers are ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Themes in The Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin and The... Many times, literature can be intriguing, and other times, confusing. During the course of this year, although we had discussed a various amount of stories, there were certain ones that had the strength to leave an impact on the reader. The following will reveal the favorite piece of literature from this semester's syllabus as being "The Story of An Hour" by Kate Chopin because of its epiphany, and the most challenging piece as being "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeatsbecause of its millennialism. "The Story of An Hour" by Kate Chopin had been a fascinating story with an epiphany at the conclusion of the story being a major theme throughout the short story. This short story opened with a lady named Louise Mallard who had heart trouble, and had to be informed about her husband's apparent death. Her sister, Josephine, had decided to tell her after Louise's husband's friend, Richards, had discovered about the death (a railroad accident) when he was in the newspaper office and read Brently, (Louise's husband) on the list of those who died. Initially, the reaction of Louise had been quite upsetting, she had been sobbing since Josephine told her about the tragedy, and decided to go upstairs to be alone in her room. As she sat in her room, she looked outside the window and she saw the numerous things outside, such as the trees, the smells of rain, and the clouds. Eventually, she started to feel something coming towards her, and moments later "...she abandoned herself a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Essay about Poetry Analysis of The Second Coming by Yeats Poetry Research Essay analysis THE SECOND COMING By William Butler Yeats, 1922 Mr. Yeats relates his vision, either real or imagined, concerning prophesies of the days of the Second coming. The writer uses the Holy Bible scripture text for his guide for because no one could explain this period of time without referring to the Holy Bible. He has chosen to present it in the form of a poem, somewhat like the quatrains of Nostradamus. The poem does not cover all the details of this event, but does give the beginning of the powerful messages, and a dark look at those ominous days surrounding the Second Coming of The Lord Jesus Christ. Perhaps he is trying in his own words to warn everyone about the end time days. I... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Truly in Matthew 24 we find Jesus, the Lord Himself, revealing what those days will be like. Below I have attempted a line–by–line interpretation of Mr. Yeats vision in "The Second Coming". Please note– NOT ALL prophesy scriptures have been used, only those I felt would be in relation to this poetry work. Also some prophesies are not in order, but are arranged to follow Mr. Yeats poetry verses. (For a complete understanding of the end time, one should study the entire texts as written.) Matthew 24: 3–7. 3) And as He sat upon the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to him privately saying tell us when shall these things be? And what shall be the sign of thy coming and of the end of the world? 5) Many shall come in my name and deceive many. 6) You will hear of wars and rumors of wars, but the end is not yet. 7) Nation shall rise against nation, kingdom against kingdom, and there shall be famines, pestilence'–t, and earthquakes in divers (unknown) places. 8) All these are but the beginning of sorrows. THE SECOND COMING * (versus are bolded letters) Turning and turning in the widening gyre: Gyre: A round shape formed by concentric circles, (concentric meaning "having a common center") A circoular or spiral motion or form, a good example is the whirling of the oceans currents spiraling away and then inwards. (Mirium–Webster) I believe he uses the gyre to explain that the world powers, governments ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. A Comparison of Chaos in Things Fall Apart and The Second... Chaos in Things Fall Apart and The Second Coming Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe and The Second Coming by William Butler Yeats have been considered literary classics. Although there may be a gap between the times of publication, the themes and connotations are strikingly similar. In both works, there is a progression of chaos in time caused by change and eventually leads to an end. Inner conflict plays an important role in both works. In Things Fall Apart, the main character, Okonkwo, battles with conflict within himself. As a child, he witnessed the constant failure of his father and vowed to be completely opposite of him and successful in everything he does. This drives him to the point where he despises ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Loss of control is also another important theme. In Things Fall Apart, Okonkwo shows to have complete control over his family. He consistently beats them and is hard on them and they are afraid and respect him. His eldest son Nwoye is abused most often since he reminds Okonkwo so much of his grandfather and is not the son he would wish him to be. Eventually Nwoye leaves and this shows that Okonkwo does not still have full control of his family. Also his is demonstrated in the village as a whole. When the Europeans came in, they did not look at theIbo culture as ideal and pursued in converting it. At first there was not enough Christians to really impact their society, but as they built and expanded, they influenced others and soon they had many followers. The elders of the tribes were no longer in control and the Ibo culture was losing its significance. Another reflective idea is the superior force. In The Second Coming, time was the superior force. Since time can not be manipulated, there is no chance to go back and prepare for the apocalypse. All decisions had been made and all routes had been taken and there is no more turning back. All hope is gone. Christianity was the superior force in Things Fall Apart. By allowing the spread of Christianity, it slowly invaded on its culture and weakened its foundation. Soon it collapsed and the culture was to a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Essay about An Analysis of Yeats' The Second Coming An Analysis of Yeats' The Second Coming Yeats' poem "The Second Coming," written in 1919 and published in 1921 in his collection of poems Michael Robartes and the Dancer, taps into the concept of the gyre and depicts the approach of a new world order. The gyre is one of Yeats' favorite motifs, the idea that history occurs incycles, specifically cycles "twenty centuries" in length (Yeats, "The Second Coming" ln. 19). In this poem, Yeats predicts that the Christian era will soon give way apocalyptically to an era ruled by a godlike desert beast with the body of a lion and the head of a man (ln. 14). Critics have argued about the exact meaning of this image, but a close reading of the poem, combined with some simple genetic work, shows ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 7–8), and his central images, the "rocking cradle" of Christ (ln. 20) to the "rough beast" (ln. 21). Other kinds of echoes, literary rather than poetic, emerge as well; Yeats connects "The Second Coming" with Shelley's Prometheus Unbound in lines 7 and 8, "The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity" (Drake 53), and even, Jeffares suggests, the Divine Comedy, by altering the "hawk" of an earlier draft to more closely resemble the "ample circuit" of a "falcon" described in Dante's masterpiece (A Commentary 241). Yeats surely made these allusions to borrow the literary scale of these prophetic masterpieces. But far more important in this respect is his borrowings from the Bible. Most central and obvious are the Second Coming of Christ described in Matthew 24 and the beast of the apocalypse from Revelations, but Purdy also notes "the vision chapters of Daniel (7–12)," "Isaiah's prophecy of the Day of the Lord (14.6–11, 19–22), 'old Ezekiel's cherubim' (10.1ff), and Jeremiah's denunciation of Isreal (2)" (75), not to mention Yeats' location of the beast's birth at Bethlehem, the birthplace of Christ two thousand years ago (Jeffares, W. B. Yeats 38). The Bible is, of course, the western world's primary work of prophecy, and Yeats' use of its language gives his own work a tone of prophecy. The tool of Yeats' prophecy, crystallized in the "widening gyre" traced by the falcon, is a concept Yeats detailed ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Analysis Of The Second Coming By William Butler Keats пЃЅUse a creative and informative title The Apocalypse on earth has started and The Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, a half animal is rising, and the world is being pulled into the darkness of hell through the gyre. This is what the poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Keats is about. Even though "The Second Coming" is about Revolutions, to the reader Keats is left looking at the events of the world around him and trying to take in all the violent acts of war and the devastation, that leaves him struggling to understand religion. The Poem "The Second Coming" from William Butler Keats, is about Revolutions, (John 2.18). When Keats wrote "The Second Coming" the world was filled with violence and turmoil, WW1 had just ended, The Russian Revolutions had started, and the world was on the eve of The Angelo Irish War. Through this event, Keats looked around his world and was left trying to understand these events that left him struggling with religion. Keats felt the world was changing and because of these events the 20th Century was changing and that an end of an age was upon the world. Keats uses the narrator to tell the story of "The Second Coming" and uses the language of his poems of Irish traditions and the Gaelic language to bring back the old traditions of Irish culture through his poems. In "The Second Coming" Keats uses automatic writing, to write this poem, by doing so Keats could dictate spirits that would take over his writing and using elegant syntax and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Allusion To God in “The Second Coming”, by William Butler... In the poem "The Second Coming", by William Butler Yeats. He writes this poem after World War I, around 1919. Yeats is a Irish poet, who came from Protestant parentage. The over all theme of the poem is that God will come back again. There are many versions to how God will appear, but in this poem bad things happen first in order for God to come. In "The Second Coming," Yeats uses symbolism to unfold the meaning of the poem. The first symbol in the poem would be the falcon. The falcon would represent humans in the world. Scattered around the world and believing in different religions. In the poem it says "The falcon cannot hear the falconer;" (2), which implies that humans are lost. Without their master, which in this case is God, humans are guided into the wrong path. When their is no one to lead them to the right place everything can go wrong. The speaker goes on to say " Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;"(3) This means that once your lost you start to fall apart. You can no longer hear making it hard to opt for right decisions in life. The speaker next uses biblical allusion when he says "anarchy" (4), to refer to the devil and how he is roaming through earth loosely. He elaborates on this when he says "blood–dimmed tide" and "drowned" (5–6). These lines are quoting Genesis and the book of Revelation. The speaker talks about Noah's Arch. Where Noah saves himself, his family, and the rest of the animals from the flood. These biblical allusions symbolize a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. The Second Coming, Among School Children, Leda And The... Humans are expected to have morals, but humanity needs both ethics and immorality in their lives, challenging societies way of thinking throughout time, creating textual integrity. To gain textual integrity, texts must challenge society in a way that endures time. William Butler Yeats's poetry, has effectively explored challenging and lasting dualities cornering ethics and morals in humanity, particularly within The Second Coming (1919), Among School Children (1928) and Leda and the Swan (1928). Within Yeats modernist context, theevil in the world was sourced from the war, while religion was symbolic of the good in humanity, which has continued into contemporary culture. Yeats explores how unethical experiences effects one's perspective of the world. The immoral elements of society are necessary for good and change to occur. Despite common beliefs of society, humanity need both good and evil experiences to create a balance in their life. Humanity is expected to be ethical, but experiences exposes humans to the immoral aspects of society, which can affect their perspective. World War One began due to the imperialist powers in Europe creating a disconnect between countries because of the power they desired, as explored within the Second Coming. By using metaphoric imagery "The falcon cannot hear the falconer", Yeats conveys the disconnect and loss of control major powers in Europe were experiencing. The allegorical references to imperialism mirrors the ignorance of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. How Does Yeats Use Syntax In The Second Coming The apocalypse on earth has started, the Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, a half animal is rising to earth, and the world is being pulled into the darkness of hell through the gyre. The poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats is about revelations. Throughout this poem, Yeats uses the language and syntax including a new form of writing and literary devices, to the point of the view of the narrator, form, and to show the context. The poem shows Yeats struggle in understanding Christianity that left him searching for all his life to find some form of a belief system. This struggle with religion was a result of Yeats father who was a religious skeptic who thought religion was through art and poetry. Because of Yeats father's teachings, it resulted in Yeats to explore different forms of religions that led him to explore... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This enabled Yeats to take a look at the imagery inside "The Second Coming" and bring to life the symbolism, for example, he displays this by the way he clarifies how the darkness covers and recovers the earth and in how this figure is rocking the earth in his cradle this allows Yeats to look at the details within "The Second Coming" and bring the imagery to life, for instance, he shows this in how he explains the darkness is covering and recovering the earth and in how this beast is rocking the cradle of the world. When using "the gyre" it illustrated the movement of major cycles of history and went across the antiseptics of the human personality. For Yeats, this was his personal search for faith through "the gyre" that led him to find religion for a greater scope of linguistic force that led Yeats to explore the world of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Annotations In The Second Coming In William Yeats poem, "The Second Coming," Yeats makes some observations about what has happened before and attempts to parallel the past with the future in order to justify his prediction of the "Second Coming" of Christ. Though interesting and appealing, these predictions and observations doesn't make Yeats a Nostradamus–like figure who predicts specific, unlikely and unusual events leading up to the fulfillment of an ultimate prophecy, but rather makes similar to a conspiracy theorist spouting off events that are no better at predicting an event as an astrology constellation can predict that way you behave–– the statements are all common and vague on purpose so they can be applied to anyone. Conversely, Yeats connects past to future which may give his argument of a Second Coming more validity due to the statistical likelihood of past events repeating themselves based on the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Illustrating a state of turmoil, Yeats explains that, "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world." Though interesting and romantic, this statement assumes that the world was once not in the state of anarchy and madness. This revelation would have been more effective if it were news but, unfortunately, it's not. The world is in a constant state of turmoil and anarchy because the most primal nature of humans is to prove dominance to earn breeding rights and ensure your bloodline–– the societies humans live in are a reflection; both nature and the construct of a society work in tandem and breed the need to be dominant. Further, Yeats states, "The best lack all conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity," highlighting the counterintuitive symptom of war: good intentions, bad outcomes, and the philosophical debate of necessary evils. In brief, Yeat's predictions are applicable today because their applicability is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Analysis Of Second Coming "Even today we raise our hand against our brother... We have perfected our weapons, our conscience has fallen asleep, and we have sharpened our ideas to justify ourselves as if it were normal we continue to sow destruction, pain, death"(Francis). The "Second Coming" a poem by W. B. Yeats, cleverly illustrates the end of the world as a consequence of humans becoming obsessed with violence and war. War acts as a harbinger of the second coming because its features include violence, terror, and chaos. These characteristics, which are often precursors to the second coming, are implemented in the poem through the use of literary devices. The poet stitches several literary elements such as gloomy diction, biblical allusions, passionate anaphoras,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Beside the falcon, the gyre acts as an example of a positive feedback loop which ultimately ends in collapse. The world experienced this loop by having several chain reaction events that eventually pushed countries over the edge, resulting in the outbreak of violence and bloodshed. This sophisticated diction is also intricately combined with allusion in words such as "tide" and "drowned"(line 5–6) in reference to Noah's Ark. In Noah's story, God cleanses the world from sinners by flooding them. The poet might be saying that the world needs to be cleansed because "the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity"(line 7–8). Allusions contribute to this interpretation of the poem as the poet proves himself a man of knowledge and belief. Allusions to the Bible, specifically to the book of revelation, is seen by the use of anaphoras in the first few lines of the second stanza. There is a sense of certainty evident in the speaker's voice as he repeats the word "Surely"(line 9–10) the closely accompanied by the words "Second Coming"(line 10–11). Beside certainty, the repetition of "surely" can be for the purpose of hopefulness. One might believe that the speaker is insane or crazed by the visions of the end, but there is certainly a reason why one would wish the end to arrive. The speaker, acting as a prophet, is disillusioned by the actions of his fellow humans and wishes for the restoration of humanity to a righteous ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Things Fall Apart and The Second Coming Essay Things Fall Apart and The Second Coming "The Second Coming" By William Butler Yeats Turning and turning in the widening gyre The falcon cannot hear the falconer, Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosened upon the world, The blood–dimmed tide is loosened, and everywhere The ceremony of innocence is drowned The best lack of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem is based on changes
  • 34. and it implies that when mere anarchy is in play, the whole community lets go and things fall apart. The only reason why the society fell apart is because the people did not stand up for their religion and government. They let the missionaries change their ways. That was also referred to in the poem. The poem stated that things fall apart when the center cannot hold. At the bottom of page 176, Obierika quoted that the white man has put a knife on the things that held us together and we have fallen apart. I think that Achebe is trying to give WilliamButler Yeats some type of recognition because in the beginning of the book, Achebe included a stanza from the poem. "The blood–dimmed tide is loosened, and everywhere The ceremony of innocence is drowned" First of all, I think this means that once the white missionaries interfere with their religion, it could encourage the whites to feel they could do anything to their society and the people would not say anything.
  • 35. For example, After the white missionaries introduced their religion, they tried to introduce British law and force ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. What Is The Tone Of The Second Coming War has impacted modern day society. It has caused people to believe in violence as a solution. "The second coming, " by William Butler Yeats depicts that society falls apart because of conflict and negativity. Yeats uses diction to convey the destruction of society. Yeats showed a lot of dark diction through this poem. The author states "Things fall apart the center cannot hold. " This predicted that a new war is coming and is foreshadowing society's destruction. His choice of words gave the whole poem a dark tone, for example nightmare and blood. These words are pointing out how regretful and damaging the second coming will become. Blood representing death and nightmares representing what it will feel like. Yeats uses allusion to illustrate ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. How Does Yeats Use Biblical Allusions In The Second Coming In "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats, the speaker explains to the reader that the world around him is falling apart. The use of biblical allusions, chaotic imagery, and symbols illustrate how the second coming is not going to be good; things are terrible now, but the worst is yet to come. In the first two lines, the speaker introduces a scene of chaos by saying "TURNING and turning in the widening gyre the falcon cannot hear the falconer." A gyre is a tornado–like structure, and it symbolizes history and how it is cyclical, which is how Yeats himself viewed life. The fact that Yeats refers to history as a gyre shows that he has a negative view of humanity. The speaker also mentions how the falcon does not hear the falconer, which also illustrates how the world is crumbling. The next two lines say "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world." This solidifies the idea that the world is crumbling, and even though the anarchy, or chaos, is small, there is definitely more to come. The speaker then goes on to say that "the blood–dimmed tide is loosed," which is a biblical allusion that represents God's vengeance for disobedience, and that "the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity." This final phrase of the first stanza proves... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The speaker continues to explain his expectance of the Second Coming, claiming that he saw "A shape with lion body and the head of a man, a gaze blank and pitiless as the sun." This vision from the "Spiritus Mundi," or Spirit World, further illustrates that Jesus may come, but there are possibly other ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Essay on themes in Things Fall Apart and Second Coming Similar Themes in Things Fall Apart and The Second Coming The novel "Things Fall Apart" examines African culture before the colonial infiltration. Achebe's novel forces us to examine the customs and traditions that make up an informal culture. At times we may find some their practices appalling, but Achebe makes us realize that the traditions and customs are what essentially hold the Ibo together. Achebe wrote 'Things Fall Apart" with the intention of changing the common view of African culture. He wrote the novel from an insider's perspective, revealing that African culture was not solely based on barbaric and mindless rituals. Achebe reveals the affects of the colonial infiltration on African societies. Through his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Achebe portrays the life of the Ibo tribe before the first touch of the white men. Before the colonial infiltration the Ibo had a very cyclic view of time. Their beleifs and rituals were practiced the same rit at the same time every year. Where as the white man's traditions and view of time were much more linear. Right from the Ibo's first encounter with the whites, the reader can observe the cycle as being unchangeably altered. It is the coming of thei missionaries which brings the disruption. After thousands of years of unviolated and untouched traditions, Okonkwo returns after just seven years of exile and finds his village turned upside down. In addition, the Ibo people fail to recognize him as a leader. "Their new religon and government and trading stores were very much in the people's eyes and minds, the talked and though about little else..' The whites swept away the Ibo tradition and heritage. Here, Okonkwo can be seen as the "falconer" as depicted in Yeats' poem. He was once looked upon as a respected leader, but now the "falcon" the Ibo people do not hear the falconer, Okonkwo. The disruption of the Ibo cycle is
  • 39. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. Easter 1916, Wild Swans at Coole and Second Coming, by... The timeless essence and the ambivalence in Yeats' poems urge the reader's response to relevant themes in society today. This enduring power of Yeats' poetry, influenced by the Mystic and pagan influences is embedded within the textual integrity drawn from poetic techniques and structure when discussing relevant contextual concerns. "Wild Swans at Coole", "Easter 1916" and "The Second Coming" encapsulate the romanticism in his early poetry to civil influences and then a modernist approach in the later years. The three poems explore distinct transition of a poet while discussing ideas of history, love and politics. "WC", written in romantic style, emphasises his inner turmoil through an array of poetic techniques entrenched within a... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The techniques and systolic structure provides textual integrity by allowing relevance for a large contextual audience, with the themes transcending time and context. The contrast of the swans' magnificence in their immortal portrayal to Yeats' anguish in his "twilight years" of mental state establishes two aspects of human nature, developing a sense of ambiguity. "Easter 1916" portrays a stark contrast of Ireland before and after the Irish Uprising. Patriotism, with Mysticism in "wherever green is worn", is evident through the vivid imagery portraying Ireland. Political idealism is a transition from personal concerns in WC to civil concerns of Ireland and serves as a medium to reflect on the morals that define contextual society, reinforcing the enduring power of his poetry. Romantic influences paint a calm and peaceful portrait of Ireland through a tranquil tone. The mood is pleasant in the "nod of the head" and "polite meaningless words" as the reader deduces a positive outlook on society. It explicitly contrasts the repetition of "a terrible beauty is born" when reflecting on the violence in Ireland, shaping a personal response influenced by his perception of a struggle diminishing the essence of a pleasant aforementioned society. The stone to the "troubled living stream" emphasises Yeats' support for the movement by placing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 41. Analysis Of The Second Coming By William Butler Yeats The Apocalypse on earth has started, The Anti–Christ a beast of half–human, half animal is rising, to earth and the world is being pulled into the darkness of hell through the gyre. This poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats is about revelations. Yeats Uses language and syntax, and a new form of writing, and literary devices, to the point of view of the narrator, and form, and context. That results in showing that Yeats, was struggling to understand Christianity from his life to his upbringing, that led him longing to understand religion. From, Yeats father teaching him to look at the world through art and poetry that led Yeats to explore the supernatural and many other forms of religion, that left Yeats to become deeply involved in politics that left him struggling to understand Christianity as he does throughout "The Second Coming." In the Poem "The Second Coming" from William Butler Yeatsis about revelations, (John 2.18). When Yeats wrote "The Second Coming" the world was in violence and turmoil. Due to WWI just ending, The Russian Revolutions had started, and The Angelo Irish War was approaching. Because of all these events left Yeats trying to come to terms with the end of an age and the changing future of the 20th Century. For Yeats, the future of the world was in chaos and this left Yeats struggling to understand his own beliefs in religion. Throughout "The Second Coming." For Yeats to tell this story he uses a narrator and uses a new form of writing called automatic writing, this new form of writing left Yeats looking down different paths of religion and more into the paths of mysticism that led him to explore the world of the supernatural, where he would dictate by spirits that he believed would move through different parts of history, through different personalities, where he believed each movement and type being related to different phases of the moon. In "The Second Coming " he uses an elegant syntax and uses different words such as the Spiritus Mundi in Latin instead of saying the Anti–Christ and in the meaning of Christ's birthplace. Yeast continues in his search for religion throughout the poem in "The Second Coming" by using a pose sonnet, he liked to break up the coherence of his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42. Darkness And Second Coming Essay Darkness and the Second coming were written during two different historically ground–breaking and extraordinarily time period; One was written in the birth of Industrial Revolution while the other was written in after match of one the bloodiest war human kind has ever seen. Theses time period brought upon a number of drastic political and societal changes, changes that were divergent to the societal norms.For Romantics like Yeats and Byron, these changes were devastating, and the ushering in of the mechanized world was seen to be immediate threat to the balance of the natural order between humanity and nature by tainting and dehumansing and perverting the natural order in heinous ways. Furthermore Both Yeats "Second Coming" and Byron "Darkness"... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Yeats believed in "Spiritus Mundi" or world spirit, an recurring symbol in history. Here the "Spiritus Mundi" is the soul of the Universe, shaking in the wake of the coming apocalypse, to Yeats the image of the Sphinx that will destroy the world, and him with it. Yates is positive the beast will come, but just not yet; by the end of the poem, the curtain has rose once again, and the beast is no longer, and Yeats writes that "twenty centuries of stony sleep were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle", implying that whatever is coming for the world, whatever mythical monster will be here soon. It is not yet born, but the world is right for it and waiting for it. Furthermore the lesson that Yeats is conveying is that the violence and bloodshed and that was spilt in World War I wasn't the coming of the monster but the future fortify by the never ending desire of human nature to discover more and more violent and efficient ways of killing each other will bring about the coming of the monster. The keys to monster cages lies in our society actions the voluntary decision do harm that will drag the monster out of its cage. The beast "its hour come round at last." Yeats theory that still holds true today is the beast is only a few years away from ushering the world into a state of complete ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...