늙음, 욕망, 그리고 상상력- 『탑』의 세 작품을 중심으로
* 본 문서는 배포용으로 복사 및 편집이 불가합니다.
서지정보
ㆍ발행기관 : 한국예이츠학회
ㆍ수록지정보 : The Yeats Journal of Korea / 26권
ㆍ저자명 : 윤정묵
ㆍ저자명 : 윤정묵
영어 초록
The Tower, published in 1928, is Yeats's finest single volume of poetry, and it might also be the finest single book of poems published in the twentieth century (O'Donnell 89). Many poems of the volume confront the problems of growing old. This paper attempts to read three poems selected from The Tower--"Sailing to Byzantium," "The Tower," and "Among School Children"--in terms of their representations of old age and its relation to desire and the imagination. In "Sailing to Byzantium," the poet begins by declaring that Ireland is "no country for old men." He complains that here all are "caught in that sensual music" and "neglect monuments of unageing intellect." "The Tower" also begins with the poet's confused question: "What shall I do with this absurdity . . . this caricature, decrepit age?" He complains about his old age because it makes his body "a sort of battered kettle at the heel," and that body can deride his imagination and its work. The poet's complaint or anxiety about old age in these poems comes from the fact that his old age and bodily decrepitude make it hard to satisfy his desire. In "Sailing to Byzantium," lack of satisfaction makes him unhappy in Ireland and wish to leave. Also in "The Tower," unsatisfied desire makes his heart "troubled," and so he is even tempted to give up poetry and choose philosophy. However, ironically enough, unsatisfied desire makes his imagination stronger than ever. Now, in spite of his bodily decrepitude, his imagination enables him to travel to the "holy city" of Byzantium, and there pray to the sages there that he may be changed into a golden bird, "an artifice of eternity." In "The Tower," the poet sends his imagination forth and calls "images and memories" to ask questions of them. In the process of calling images and asking questions, the poet restores his belief in the power of the imagination, and, because of this belief, he can leave his "pride" and "faith" as poet to the "young upstanding men" of Ireland. "Among School Children" confronts the problem of physical ageing a little differently. The poem shows the poet walking through the schoolroom and dreaming of "a Ledaean body" (Maud Gonne). His imagining her as a child and then thinking of "her present image" leads to the meditation not only on the general human fate of ageing but also on the images which "break hearts" because they do not touch the reality of life. Not only the passage of time but also the false images make human life exhausted and unhappy. To solve the problem, the poet's imagination creates two images of unified being: the "blossoming" tree and the "dancing" body. Where life is blossoming or dancing, the poet says, "The body is not bruised to pleasure soul." What he is trying to say is that life is an ongoing process, and so we must accept it as it really is.참고 자료
없음태그
"The Yeats Journal of Korea"의 다른 논문
- 예이츠의「젊었을 때와 늙었을 때의 한 여성」에서의 여성의 성26페이지
- Co-existence of eco-feminism and patriarchism in W. B. ..16페이지
- 『역사 밖에서』(Outside History)와 이반 볼랜드(Eavan Boland)의 몸의 시학27페이지
- 『한국예이츠저널』 수록논문의 국내문헌 인용 고찰20페이지
- 거시사와 가족사의 간격: 존 몬타그의 시세계38페이지
- Deconstruction and Decreation: Yeats, Stevens, and Pica..11페이지
- 예이츠와 보르헤스의 상호 텍스트성: 그 연접과 이접37페이지
- 소용돌이(“The Gyres”): 새로운 출발15페이지
- W. B. Yeats’s View of Good and Evil18페이지
- The Reinscription of Home, Gender and Nationalism in An..20페이지