Sunday, June 2, 2019
Essay --
In The Second Coming by William Butler Yeats, Yeats uses allusions, symbols, and vivid imagery to convey his cynical and heartbroken tone about the new evil, corrupt, and immoral era following World War I. Yeats begins the poem with an image of a widening gyre or a vortex of spiraling motion. This image immediately implies the chaos and disorder in a society that is spiraling wider and wider out of control and becoming more corrupt. Yeats elaborates on and supports this idea with Things fall apart the center cannot hold and Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world to further symbolize how the universe is collapsing with confusion and the absence of principles. Yeats also implies the endangerment and disaster to come with an image of a falcon who cannot hear the falconer to further illustrate suspense and danger that humanity is facing. This image also suggests that similar to the falcon that is flying around in a widening gyre, society has wandered too far away from its morals and is doomed with curruption. Yeats continues his cynical tone with everywhere the ceremony of innocenc...
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