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“Bog Queen” by Seamus Heaney (1999)
One of Yeats’s primary heirs, Seamus Heaney also used Irish history and myth in his work. In this poem, Heaney also draws on the Bog Goddesses of Irish folklore, like Yeats does with the Hag figure. Also like Yeats’s Crazy Jane sequence, Heaney’s poem connects the female body to fecundity, the landscape, and a force that transcends death.
“The Mermaid (from The Sea Cabinet)“ by Caitriona O’Reilly
O’Reilly, a 21st century Irish poet, updates the selkie myth: Her mermaid is “part virgin, part harpy” (Line 5). The constructed mermaid here has been robbed of magic—the same way the Bishop attempts to disempower Jane—but the poem allows her reclaim some aspects of herself.
“The Ballad of Reading Gaol“ by Oscar Wilde (1898)
Irish poet Oscar Wilde used the ballad verse form for this long form poem chronicling crime and punishment because of its association with working class audiences. Besides their shared formal traits, both Wilde's and Yeats's poems address themes of violence, sexuality, and society’s apparatuses of judgment.
“Three Presences: Yeats, Eliot, Pound“ by Denis Donoghue (2013)
An authority on Irish literature, Donoghue contextualizes Yeats among two of the most central modernist poets writing in English, providing an underpinning for reading Yeats.
“All Ireland’s Bard“ by Seamus Heaney (1997)
Renowned Irish poet Heaney explores Yeats’s divided identity in this review of Roy Foster’s biography W.B. Yeats: A Life as it compares to other Yeats biographies. Given Yeats’s diverse interests, scholars have argued for years over his private life, his intentions, and his true beliefs. Heaney also discusses the broader topic of poets serving history.
‘“Heart Mysteries”: The Later Love Lyrics of W.B. Yeats‘ by Marjorie Perloff
Poet Marjorie Perloff divides Yeats's work into two categories: Contemplation and Action, and the Ideal and the Real. Perloff places the Crazy Jane sequence among the poems related to the Ideal and the Real, arguing that Crazy Jane, rather than standing in for the poet, represents only one facet of Yeats’s complex, at times contradictory beliefs and priorities.
A YouTube video in which the poem is read in by an Irish woman.
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By William Butler Yeats
Beauty
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Challenging Authority
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Colonialism & Postcolonialism
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European History
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Modernism
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Modernist Poetry
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Mortality & Death
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Philosophy, Logic, & Ethics
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Power
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Pride & Shame
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Religion & Spirituality
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Short Poems
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