"The Wild Swans at Coole"-W.B. Yeats
"The Wild Swans at Coole"-W.B. Yeats
"The Wild Swans at Coole"-W.B. Yeats
Yeats
The Poem The Wild Swans at Coole consists of five six-line stanzas rhymed
abcbdd. The meter is iambic, but loosened to accommodate the irregular
cadences of speech. Odd-numbered lines have four stressed syllables, evennumbered lines three. It is well-suited to the poems reflective tone and
melancholy mood.
Setting
The setting for the poem is Coole Park in the Republic of Ireland, the estate
of the poet's friend and patron Lady Augusta Gregory. Yeats puts a great
deal of energy into describing this landscape because it is to supply him with
the backdrop for the emotional action of the poem: both literally and
metaphorically, the time of year is 'autumn' (the season of decay) and the
time of day is 'twilight' (the hour of decline). This poem discusses the fall of
life; this is paralleled in the setting. In autumn life is on the descent, the
trees begin to lose their leaves and the coming cold mirrors death. The lively
swans movements stand out against the still setting. They represent love,
permanency and serenity. This poem discusses the fall of life; this is
paralleled in the setting. In autumn life is on the descent, the trees begin to
lose their leaves and the coming cold mirrors death. The lively swans
movements stand out against the still setting. They represent love,
permanency and serenity.
59 Swans
The real message in this poem is the words "nine and fifty." Since swans
mate for life, the missing represents something metaphorically. It
represents something missing in Yeasts life. It could be the love of a women
or the chance for love that has long since gone. Swans are elegant and
graceful creatures, symbols of love. There are an odd number of swans,
fifty-nine; implying one has lost a mate. This loneliness of desertion is again
seen in the last line of the poem- 'I awake someday to find they have flown
away.' This is also significant because he later refers to the swans as couples
in the third stanza, "Unwearied still, lover by lover," meaning that one swan
stream companionable despite its coldness. In another sense, they stand for
the union of time and the timeless. The swans remind the poet of his former
freshness and his youth and make him despondent.
Standing on the shore of the Coole Lake after a gap of nineteen years the
poet feels that unlike himself, the swans have not grown old in body and
spirit. Full of youthful vigour they can enjoy paddling through the cold water
and winning the hearts of their beloved and mating with them.
As darkness looms large over the surface of the Coole Lake, it seems to the
poet that the swans, as if, belong to a different world different from the
humans, a world not marked by mutability.