september 1913 (yeats) Flashcards

1
Q

speaker has ax to grind with readers about state of irish politics

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2
Q

contrasts their self interested and dutifully religious country men with famous irish revolutionaries who tried to free ireland from british rule

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3
Q

implies greed, materialism and suffocating influence of catholic church made the emerging irish middle class complacent unwilling to bring cultural and political revolution

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4
Q

in bitter rhetorical questions, speaker skewers the character of their middle class audience

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5
Q

suggests that these people have no desire for anything beyond their self centered, workaday lives

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6
Q

the middle class now only devote their time to financial matters and fulfilling religious duties

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7
Q

small amts of money they transact (the “halfpence” and the “pence” sorted in the “greasy” register) and the sickly “shivering prayer” they make are a pittance. it doesn’t result in power or wealth or spiritual fulfillment

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8
Q

they’re just petty, mind numbing distractions from what really matters to speaker

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9
Q

double meaning when speaker says that “men were born to pray and save”
compared to dream of political indépendance, speaker sees little value in spending one’s life saving souls or saving money

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10
Q

these pathetic priorities stand in contrast to deeds of nIrish revolutionaries like Edward Fitzgerald, Robert Emmet and Wolfe Tone and “the wild geese” who fought and died for their political beoiefs

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11
Q

even most celebrated Irish martyrs (“for whom the hangman’s rope was spun”) had “little time…. to pray,” since the lives of those who were committed to the cause were often cut short

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12
Q

their faith was in future of nation not church or their bank accounts

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13
Q

materialism and excess piety are mere distractions from what really matters to speaker : revolutionary change

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14
Q

speaker given up on dream of “Romantic Ireland”, a fully indépendant nation rich with myth history and not tied to single religion

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15
Q

romantic ireland died with john o leary who was known for his commitment to a secular irish state

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16
Q

men like o’leary “were a different kind” than speakers contemporaries. they don’t have vision, principles or will to liberate their hkmeland

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17
Q

their complacency fails to justify the sacrifices of those who fought and died for ireland’s independance

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18
Q

even the quintessential figure or “Romantic Ireland” would go unrecognized by speakers contemporaries and would be looked down upon

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19
Q

countrymen fail to measure up to the great irish revolutionaries of the past

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20
Q

past men were motivated by their ideals to travel word and fight against impossible odds to free ireland even if they knew they’d die

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21
Q

past men were selfless and self sacrificing unlike the people of modern iteland

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22
Q

modern irish people probs scorn and dismiss those men for their commitment to the cause if they were still alive

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23
Q

can’t fathom old revolutionaries love for a free ireland

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24
Q

would criticize the men’s willingness to die and criticize them for valuing their lives so “lightly”

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25
Q

intense idealistic patriotism of past seems like “delirium” to the contemporaries

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26
Q

mythical figure Kathleen ni Houlihan (personification of romantic ireland) used to illustrate this

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27
Q

speaker expects “you” would mistake her for just “some woman” with “yellow hair” who had seduced “those exiles”

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28
Q

“you” couldn’t even recognize her let alone appreciate what she represents: the kind of idealism and sacrificed that spur revolutionary change

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29
Q

“Romantic Ireland’s dead and gone” sounds like a foregone conclusion, but by holding mirror to audience it might be the thing that inspires them to act

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30
Q

poem issues implicit challenge to its readers: who will rise and prove the speaker wrong?

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31
Q

form and rhyme

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ballad form
ab, ab

32
Q

rhyme

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simple rhyme may be there to make words more memorable as rhyme helps us link words together and aids memory

33
Q

first stanza directly address reader: “what need you”
this involves reader and makes it more personal so they may take away more significance from poem

A
34
Q

“add the halfpence to the pence”

A

repetition of “pence” could be used to emulate their repetitive lives

35
Q

repitition

A

“it’s with O’Leary in the grave” and “dead and gone”
this with the constant rhyme works to emphasize the message of the poem

36
Q

metaphor “dried the marrow from the bone?”

A

may show that they’re sucking the life out of ireland and it’s society

37
Q

rhetorical questions

A

used throughout to make reader feel more involved
gives a moment to stop and question their own actions, makes them wonder if they could be responsible

38
Q

irony

A

“born to pray and save”
points out that men have lived to save ireland but ireland is complete opposite of what they intended it to be
highlights selfish nature of ireland now

39
Q

language

A

throughout seems depressing “grave”, “dead”, “loneliness” reflect the state of the country

40
Q

metaphor “wild geese spread”

A

shows that while people were leaving, heroes like those mentioned were fighting for their country to give others freedom

41
Q

tone

A

changes in final stanza from anger and frustration to sadness
“but let them be, they’re dead and gone” shows that he even knows it’s time to let go and face reality
ireland has changed and he can’t do anything. ireland is truly “dead and gone”