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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wb_yeats_1903.jpg]]
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3 ->''"Had I the heavens’ embroidered cloths,\
4Enwrought with golden and silver light,\
5The blue and the dim and the dark cloths,\
6Of night and light and the half light,\
7I would spread the cloths under your feet:\
8But I, being poor, have only my dreams;\
9I have spread my dreams under your feet;\
10Tread softly because you tread on my dreams."''
11-->-- '''William Butler Yeats''', "Aed Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven"
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13William Butler Yeats (13 June 1865 – 28 January 1939) was an [[{{Oireland}} Irish]] poet, UsefulNotes/{{Nobel Prize|in Literature}} winner and well-known/[[SmallReferencePools often-cited]] literary figure. He was inspired by [[Myth/IrishMythology Irish myth and folklore]] as well as the writings of Creator/WilliamBlake.
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15This guy is responsible for a lot of the StockQuotes floating around in pop culture. His poem "Literature/TheSecondComing" is the source of many {{Literary Allusion Title}}s and is his most famous and most referenced work[[note]]outside Ireland that is; ''in'' Ireland "Sailing to Byzantium" and "September 1913" are probably better known; "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" was voted the nation's favourite poem in an Irish Times poll.[[/note]]. If you hear a FauxlosophicNarration, read a snippet of {{poetry}} preceding a bunch of prose or even see a character trying to sound deep and meaningful, there is a reasonably good chance that William Butler Yeats is being quoted.
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17He also had, like most great poets, something of a dirty streak, although nowhere near as wide that of Creator/{{Shakespeare}} or his contemporary Creator/JamesJoyce.
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19He was also one of the founders of Dublin's famous Abbey Theatre, and actually shamed a mob who rioted at the premiere of Sean O'Casey's ''Theatre/ThePloughAndTheStars'' there.
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21Also, his last name is pronounced "Yates," not "Yeets."
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23The entirety of his work can be found [[http://www.poemhunter.com/william-butler-yeats/poems/page-1/ here]].
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25----
26!!Works by Yeats with their own pages:
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28* "Literature/TheSecondComing"
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30!!Tropes featured in his other works:
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32* {{Arcadia}}: He viewed the place he spent his summers in Sligo as this. He expresses his desire to live this way permanently in "The Lake Isle of Innisfree".
33* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: What he strives to do in ''Sailing to Byzantium'', a metaphor for achieving poetic immortality. He describes himself leaving his "dying animal" body behind with the help of Byzantine "holy sages" and making himself a body of pure artifice in the form of a gold and enamel bird, who would sit on a branch and sing of the past, present and future.
34* BettyAndVeronica: In "A Prayer For My Daughter", he observes that courtesy, charm, and kindness may trump beauty.
35* BrokenBird: He laments that this happened to two female Irish revolutionaries and suffragettes that he knew in his youth, in "In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markievicz."[[note]](Despite its title, written while both were still alive.)[[/note]] One was sentenced to death (commuted to prison time) for taking part in a revolt, and the other one lived out a sad life pursuing radical politics. The poem ends with Yeats lighting a match and [[MindScrew threatening to burn down]] ''[[MindScrew time]]'' [[MindScrew itself]] for doing this to them, saying that "the innocent and beautiful/have no enemy but time."
36* DeathEqualsRedemption: ''The Hour-Glass'' has the wise man teaching his pupils to be secular and shake off silly superstitions. When visited by an angel, he has one hour to find a believer if he wants to enter heaven - and his pupils and wife were non-believers. At the end, he identifies the fool who was already visited by the angel.
37* DeathSeeker: "An Irish Airman Foresees his Death," not so much out of despair, but out of yearning for a final thrill and a distaste for growing old.
38* EveryoneLovesBlondes: "For Anne Gregory"
39* HeAlsoDid: Epic poetry. ''The Wanderings of Oisin'' is one of his early works, a short epic (or ''epyllion'') about the legendary Irish hero Oisin, also known as "Ossian," who travels with an immortal named Niamh to the LandOfFaerie. It was unpopular in its time for being too classical in form and setting (as well as occasionally clumsy on a poetic level), and it has lapsed into obscurity. Most people casually familiar with his later works have never heard of it.
40* TheKindnapper: "The Stolen Child" is about some fairies who lure a child into their clutches, claiming to do the child a favor.
41-->''Come away, O human child!\
42To the waters and the wild\
43With a faery, hand in hand,\
44For the world's more full of weeping than you can understand.''
45* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: "Man and the Echo" is a reflection on this theme, including the line "Did that play of mine send out / certain men the English shot?" This is a reference to Yeats' play ''Cathleen ni Houlihan'', which was written to encourage Irish nationalism.
46* RhymingWithItself: ''Aed Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven''.
47* SoBeautifulItsACurse: In "A Prayer for my Daughter", he wants a little less than this.
48* SwansASwimming:
49** [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin "The Wild Swans at Coole"]]
50** ''Leda and the Swan'' about the rape of Queen Leda by Zeus, who took the form of a swan.
51* TakeThat: "September 1913" is one to the Catholic merchant middle classes. ''On Being Asked to Write a War Poem" is a short, somewhat gentler one to people who want him to be more topical.
52* TheTragicRose: "The Rose Tree".

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