In Easter 1916 Yeats is expressing his feelings on the Irish rebellion
that took place. He is impressed by the bravery of the Irish while fighting the
British and feels that this type of war is necessary. In his poem Yeats repeats
the line “A terrible beauty is born”. He is referring to the rebellion. It is
terrible because there is so much fighting and death, but there is beauty in
the Irish fighting for their freedom from the British. Yeats says that sacrifice can cause long term
negativity. He says “Too long a sacrifice Can make a stone of the Heart”. He is
saying that when people sacrifice from long periods of time they become continuously
miserable. Overall Yeats has pride in
his Irish people and recognizes that their sacrifices have burdened them.
Unlike Yeats, in Dead Man’s Stump Isaac Rosenberg
describes the dark side of war. Firstly Rosenberg uses a lot of imagery to
describe the horrors of war. In the
first stanza he talks about the unfortunate state of limbers. The limbers
(which according to the dictionary on Microsoft Word are vehicles for
transporting large guns) are rusty and sitting on a shattered track. He goes on
in the second stanza to describe how the wheels are running over the bodies of
the dead. This shows a big difference in the way Yeats and Rosenberg look at
war. Yeats believed that war was (as previously mentioned) “A terrible beauty…”
while Rosenberg only describes the destruction war can cause.
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/easter-1916/http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/dead-man-s-dump/
Hi Ellen,
ReplyDeleteCan you look this over for mistakes and then repost it.
Thanks!