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  1. Feb 2, 2019 · An animated interpretation of William Butler Yeats's poem "The Second Coming"--For an analysis of this poem, watch this video: http://bit.ly/TEDEdYeatsAnalys...

    • Feb 2, 2019
    • 389.3K
    • TED-Ed
  2. This video contains a close Analysis of William Butler Yeats', 'The Second Coming', with a discussion of the poem's historical context, major themes, and Yea...

    • 30.5K
    • LitPoetry
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  4. Nov 24, 2023 · 🙏🏻 Course from Pavel Goia "Unlimited Power of Prayer" 👉🏻 http://bit.ly/41hpuwt Subscribe to the official Pavel Goia channel - @pastorpavelgoia In this...

    • Nov 24, 2023
    • 21.7K
    • Pastor Pavel Goia
  5. Videos. The Second Coming of Christ. One day you’ll see Jesus face-to-face. Hear Billy Graham explain how Christians should live in the meantime in this 1990 message from Albany, New York.

    • Summary
    • Analysis, Stanza by Stanza
    • Historical Background

    ‘The Second Coming’ was William Butler Yeats’ ode to the era. Rife with Christian imagery, and pulling much inspiration from apocalyptic writing, Yeats’ ‘The Second Coming’tries to put into words what countless people of the time felt: that it was the end of the world as they knew it and that nothing else would ever be the same again. The First Wor...

    Stanza One

    Much has been written on the apocalypse, and many of those writings focus on the harbingers of the event: it is always bloody and massive, a vicious explosion that shakes the world to its foundation. In Yeats’ poem, the apocalypse is a much quieter, more understated, affair. It opens up with the disturbance of nature. Falcons were used as hunting animals since the medieval era. They are incredibly smart, and dedicated to their trainers, responding immediately to any noise that their handler m...

    Stanza Two

    In the second stanza, the Biblical imagery takes over the visions of corrupted nature. From the start, Yeats ties his poem to religion by stating ‘the Second Coming is at hand’, and conjuring up a picture of a creature with a lion’s body and a man’s head, much like the sphynx, and a gaze as ‘blank and pitiless as the sun’. By comparing it to the very nature that Yeats spoke about in the first part of the poem, he brings out the almost infallible quality of this beast: like nature, it feels no...

    W.B. Yeats was an Irish poet born on the 13th of June, 1865. He is considered a largely Irish poet, although he ran in British literary circles as well, and he was a big part of the resurgence of Irish literature. In 1923, he was to win the Nobel Prize in Literature for his poetry, as the first Irishman. This was shortly after Ireland had finally g...

    • Female
    • Poetry Analyst
  6. The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out. When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi. Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the desert. A shape with lion body and the head of a man, A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun, Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it. Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.

  7. Jan 11, 2016 · The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out. When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi. Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the desert. A shape with lion body and the head of a man, A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun, Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it. Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.

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