Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4

     

(htt (htt
Home (https://enamsnote.blogspot.com) About (https://enamsnote.blogspot.com/p/about.html)
ps:/ ps:/
Contact (https://enamsnote.blogspot.com/p/contact.html)
/twi
Privacy/wPolicy (https://enamsnote.blogspot.com/p/privacy-policy.html)
Support
tter. ww. (https://enamsnote.blogspot.com/p/support.html)
Gallery (https://enamsnote.blogspot.com/p/gallery.html)
co fac

Enam's Note
m/t ebo
ali ok.

(https://enamsnote.blogspot.com
me co
na m/

/?m=1)
m) ena
ms
not
All sorts of Exam notes and quality articles on English literature are available here.
e)

A Critical Analysis of Poem "No Second Troy" by William Butler Yeats

Written by Unknown at 10:24:00 PM (2014-11-29T22:24:00+06:00)

(https://enamsnote.blogspot.com/2014/11/a-critical-analysis-of-poem-no-second.html?m=1) Labels: No
Second Troy (https://enamsnote.blogspot.com/search/label/No%20Second%20Troy?m=1) , W B Yeats
(https://enamsnote.blogspot.com/search/label/W%20B%20Yeats?m=1)

"No Second Troy" by William Butler Yeats, a great Irish poet, is poem about the love
relationship between the poet and Maud Gonne, devastatingly beautiful Irish woman. It
is one of the great literary love stories of the 20th century. The poem hints that how an
alluring dazzling beauty can cause a devastating massive distraction with the
reference to Helen of Troy, from the Iliad and the Aeneid. Now we will critically look
into the poem.

Before discussing the poem, let us have a look at the background of the poem. Yeats,
in fact, published the poem in 1916 in the collection “Responsibilities and Other
Poems”, after he had already proposed to Gonne; and been rejected on numerous
occasions. Yeats was obsessed with her and pursued her for over a decade and
dedicated many of his poems to her. In this poem, however, Yeats's attitude is
somewhat harsh, as he compares Gonne with the infamously beautiful and notoriously
mischievous “Helen of Troy”.

Like Maud Gonne, Helen, a legendary character from Homer's Iliad, was considered to
be one of the most beautiful women of her age. She was also partly responsible for
starting the Trojan War, which eventually led to the burning of the great city of Troy.

With the comparison to Helen, Yeats is accusing Maud Gonne of being partially
responsible for the violence in revolutionary Ireland, just like Helen was partially
responsible for the Trojan War. According to "No Second Troy," she "taught to ignorant
men most violent ways."

Gonne is a courageous and devastatingly beautiful woman. She is also a cruel lover
and a shamelessly irresponsible activist. She uses her beauty and her high ideals to
convince people less noble and intelligent to do what he considers some very unwise
things, like oppose the might of the British colonial powers.

Now we will critically look into the poem "No Second Troy" in our following discussion.
The poem plays out (develops) through four rhetorical questions.

First, the speaker wonders "why" he should blame "her" for his unhappiness and for her
reckless manipulation of the emotions of Irish commoners to rouse political violence.
As the poet says:
“WHY should I blame her that she filled my days
With misery… …?”
The speaker blames Maud Gonne for filling his life with unhappiness. We can only
assume that the reason for his "misery" is that she rejected him again and again.

Yeats is talking about the role Maud Gonne played in encouraging violent,
revolutionary activities in Ireland during the independence movement especially Easter
Rising of 1916, the  same year of publishing the poem.

“…she would of late


Have taught to ignorant men most violent ways”

The speaker accuses Maud Gonne of class warfare, trying to make poor, simple
people, who live in the "little streets", the native people, rebel against the more
powerful people who live on the "great" streets, the British.

Had they but courage equal to desire?”

“Or hurled the little streets upon the great,

It indicates that the common folk have the "desire" to overthrow British rule, but they
don't have the "courage" to carry out the deed. They are too impoverished and
uneducated.

Secondly, he asks whether it would even have been possible for "her" to be a "peaceful"
person. He thinks her character and beauty have an old-school quality, more like a
figure from Greek tragedy than a contemporary woman. She belongs to another age.
“With beauty like a tightened bow, a kind
That is not natural in an age like this,
Being high and solitary and most stern?”
 

Thirdly, the speaker is simultaneously thinking about some other reality in which Maud
Gonne was not such a firebrand or heartbreaker, even as he recognizes that it could
never have been any other way.
“Why, what could she have done being what she is?”

Lastly the speaker asks her:

“Was there another Troy for her to burn?”

Because there was no "second Troy" for her to destroy, she had to destroy other things
– like the speaker's happiness, and the lives of Irish commoners. The first Troy, of
course, was destroyed because of a quarrel over Helen, another politically
troublesome beauty from another "age", ancient Greece.

Last of all we can say that, the poem “No Second Troy” is a strong call towards peace
leaving the violent way of war or destruction. The poem appeals that no beauty like
Helen of Troy or to-day’s Maud Gonne will cause the destruction of another beauty like
“Troy”. There will remain only peace and love in the world. 

This paper is prepared for you by Talim Enam, BA (Hons), MA in English.


If you have any query, suggestion or complain regarding the article, please feel free to
contact me at +8801722335969. You can also follow me at www.fb.com/talimenam
(http://www.fb.com/talimenam) and www.fb.com/enamur
(http://www.fb.com/enamur) and visit my blog http://talimenam.blogspot.com
(http://talimenam.blogspot.com/)

You might also like