Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Comparing The Indian to His Love and The Hosting of the Sidhe Essay
      The Indian to His Love and The Hosting of the Sidhe                The Aesthetic Movement, as exemplified by "The  Indian to His Love," by W. B. Yeats, seems lifeless and insipid when compared to  his "The Hosting of the Sidhe."  The images of the two poems are so  completely different  that they almost demand a different set of rules  dealing with their creation.  It would be virtually impossible for Yeats to  deal effectively with the subject matter of "The Hosting of the Sidhe" in the  same manner as "The Indian to His Love" because he is viewing the world from a  different perspective for each poem.                        There is little relationship between the  characters of "The Indian to His Love" and those of "The Hosting of the  Sidhe."  In the former, Yeats deals exclusively with mortals, idealized  perhaps, but nonetheless mortals who must deal with the world as mortals:   "Here we will moor our lovely ship/ And wander ever with woven hands,"  and.  "How we alone of mortals are."  These characters are not only  mortals, but are anonymous in that they have no personal identities, and there  is no representation of them as individuals.  The lovers seem to decorate  the scene much as the "peahens" and the "parrot."  Yeats does, however,  remind the readers of the characters' mortality even while he makes them seem  timeless.  "How when we die our shades will rove"  tells  clearly  that those mortals may be in a dream, but even this dream is destined to  end.                   In "The Hosting of the Sidhe," in  contrast to "The Indian and His Love," Yeats deals with the ...              ...e the reader at all.  On the other hand, in "The Hosting of the  Sidhe," Yeats presents the ideal of life:  immortals in a real world.   Yeats wants the reader to feel the life in this poem, not just observe it.   The poem reaches out and coaxes: "Away, come away:/ Empty your heart of its  mortal dream."  The world Yeats sees in each poem is completely different,  and by choosing his words carefully and changing his style of writing, he allows  readers to see that difference and to feel it.                                                                                                         handouts           home                                                    
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