What does any of this Pre-Raphaelite slosh have to do with Irish poet
William Butler Yeats?
Lots!
To begin with, Yeats's father, John Yeats, was a professional painter;
when W.B. was a child, John admired the Pre-Raphaelites, particularly
Dante Gabriel Rossetti. He gave William a copy of Rossetti's
writings along with a copy of Shelley's, and illustrated one of his
son's children's books with Pre-Raphaelite faces. John
moved in a circle of Irish Pre-Raphaelite painters, among them Frank
Potter, whose
Dormouse hung
in the Yeats home during William Butler's
youth. The painting made such an impression on W.B. that he would
remember it years later (1922), when writing his autobiography.
|
The author humbly
apologizes for not being able to find The
Dormouse. Here is
Frank Potter's Piano, or Woman Seated, instead.
|
In 1874, John Yeats moved his family to England--specifically, to
Bedford Park--in order to take place in a community modeled after
Willaim Morris's Arts and Crafts movement. With beautifully
decorated homes, simple yet bright clothing, and an active aesthetic
discourse, the community would attempt to make reality correspond to
the beautiful dreams that the Pre-Raphaelites painted. Before the
move, W.B. misinterpreted some things his father said, and was
convinced that in this new place: "There is to be a wall round and no
newspapers to be allowed in" (
Autobiography
27). Upon arriving and finding no wall, he was extremely
disappointed. He describes the actual Bedford Park:
Morris's Pomegranate textile

"We were to see De Morgan tiles, peacock-blue doors and the pomegranate
pattern and the tulip pattern of Morris, and to discover that we had
always hated doors painted with imitation grain, the roses of
mid-Victoria, and tiles covered with geometrical patterns that seemed
to have been shaken out of a muddy kaleidoscope. We went to live
in a house like those we had seen in pictures and even met people
dressed like people in the story-books. The streets were not
straight and dull as at North End, but wound about where there was a
big tree or for the mere pleasure of winding, and there were wood
palings instead of iron railings" (
Autobiography
27).
The four Yeats children took dancing lessons from the sisters of "a
well known pre-Raphaelite painter" (
Autobiography
28), and the family lived near Burne-Jones. In short, the child
William lived surrounded by and steeped in Pre-Raphaelite principles.
Although John eventually rejected Pre-Raphaelitism in favor of
a less romanticized naturalism, these childhood experiences had deeply
influenced
William. Yeats wrote of his youth: "I was in all things
Pre-Raphaelite" (
Autobiography
76). Although even his early poetry shows less word-painting and
more intricate symbolism than that of the Pre-Raphaelites, the
statement is not entirely false. John's dismissal of the
Pre-Raphaelite movement was the subject of several battles between
father and son, and William may have stuck with the movement so closely
not only because it appealed to his aesthetic sense, but also because
it irritated his often domineering father.
William Morris became the young poet's hero. Yeats took part in the
debates of the Socialist League, which occurred weekly at
Morris's residence. He "was soon of the little group who had
supper with Morris afterwards" (
Autobiography
93). Yeats's sister worked as a seamstress under May Morris (sister of
William Morris). And by sending the long poem
The Wanderings of Usheen to
Morris's daughter, Yeats managed to get it under the eyes of Morris
himself. As the poet reports: "...soon after sending it I
came upon him by chance in Holborn-- 'You write my sort of poetry,' he
said and began to praise me and to promise to send his praise to the
Commonwealth, the League organ, and
he would have said more had he not caught sight of a new ornamental
cast-iron lamp-post and got very heated upon the subject" (
Autobiography 98).
(It's just possible that Yeats cared more for Morris than Morris did
for Yeats.)
W.B. gave up the socialist circle in the late 1880s, because all of its
members with the exception of Morris rejected religion of any
sort.
Yeats actually claims that adherence to or deviance from Pre-Raphaelite
principles made and broke his circle of friends in his younger
years. His
Autobiography
contains anecdotes about his prosthelytizing friends who he felt were
falling away from the principles of the Pre-Raphaelites. During
the 1890s, he belonged to an association of poets
called The Rhymers Club (including such figures as Ernest Rhys, John
Davidson, Arthur Symons, and occasionally even Oscar Wilde), all of
whom admired Pre-Raphaelitism. Teacher and critic Walter Pater,
who believed that art need serve no utilitarian, materialistic purpose,
encouraged Pre-Raphaelite tendencies in the group.
William Butler Yeats is
not a
Pre-Raphaelite himself, despite these influences. However, he
probably did pick up his extreme love of symbolism from the Brotherhood
and their successors. The taste for mysticism that attracted him
to the Pre-Raphaelites when he was young later became his full-blown
occultism; both he and late Pre-Raphaelite painters, for instance,
often portrayed fairies. Yeats's nostalgia for "ancient ways," as
he puts it in "To the Rose upon the Rood of Time" is similar to the
Pre-Raphaelites preoccupation with the past, although Yeats's ways are
often those of mythic Ireland rather than medieval England. He
paints very color-conscious poetry, poetry concerned with making the
real beautiful without obscuring its reality--the very aim of
Pre-Raphaelitism.
Back
Information on this page comes from the following sources:
Bergmann, Elizabeth Wagner. Yeats's
Poetry and the Pre-Raphaelite Tradition: From Painting to Sculpture.
Dissertation. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms, 1983.
McCready, Sam. A William
Butler Yeats Encyclopedia. Westport: Greenwood Press, 1997.
Yeats, W.B. The Autobiography of
William Butler Yeats (Consisting of Reveries over Childhood and
Youth,
The Trembling of the Veil, and
Dramatis Personae).
Garden City: Doubleday, 1958.