Authors Ideal example essay topic

493 words
The world is far from being the perfect place often described in books, movies, and sometimes even poems, no matter where you find yourself life is basically all the same. To conquer this dark truth people are often forced to avoid the truth just in order to survive. Within the context of the poem "The Fisherman", W.B. Yeats finds himself in a society at which he finds inequitable sociably. Thus the author is compelled to react with the use of poetry in describing his ideal "The Fisherman". He describes the fisherman as one that rights the wrongs found in society; a model being. Right from the start a man is described fishing at the "connemara" (Mountainous coastal Irish region).

A close relationship between the man and nature is portrayed by the constant repetition of the color grey. The man is wearing "grey connemara clothes" and fits in perfectly with the mountainous region. The fisherman is next given the characteristics of "wise and simple" which fit in along with the man's closeness to nature in showing the authors ideal person. Soon to follow the authors ideal is the dark truth. Halfway through the first stanza he writes about how the society at which he finds himself not only lacks manners but good people as well.

This lack of good people is filled with "knaves", drunks, and fools. He is surrounded by average commoners and wishes there was more wise but simple people around. The beginning of the second stanza marks a change in the author. After living in the down draught society his "fisherman" seems more like imagination, where as at the start of the poem he could "see him still".

He then describes the fisherman on an even deeper level, finishing by stating he "shall have written him one poem... cold and passionate as the dawn" before he gets old. The words cold and passionate form a very noticeable paradox, by using these words the author must have been trying to contrast between the people that don't appreciate his art and the ones that do. The poem ends with the word dawn which represents a new beginning, implying that his poetry will bring a new life with it. Hopefully bringing more appreciation to the society he lives in. In the circumstance the author is found in he is compelled to react due to the people around him.

At first W.B. Yeats takes refuge from the dark truth by creating "The Fisherman" in his imagination. He then soon comes to his senses and overcomes his challenge. Although he was largely outnumbered by an ungrateful society he prevailed by celebrating and preserving his ideals. He accomplishes his goal by turning his dream to words; in his poetic work.

By writing about the commonplace wrong and his ideal right in his poem.