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「비잔티움」- 예이츠의 해명이란?
Yeats’s “Byzantium”: Exposition of What?
「비잔티움」- 예이츠의 해명이란?

첫 페이지 보기
  • 발행기관
    한국예이츠학회 바로가기
  • 간행물
    한국 예이츠 저널 KCI 등재후보 바로가기
  • 통권
    제22권 (2004.12)바로가기
  • 페이지
    pp.29-42
  • 저자
    우철환
  • 언어
    한국어(KOR)
  • URL
    https://www.earticle.net/Article/A5061

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원문정보

초록

영어
Yeats received a letter from Sturge Moore complaining about the way he dealt with the goldsmith's bird in his “Sailing to Byzantium”. After Yeats had done a complete version of “Byzantium”, he wrote to Sturge Moore saying, "The poem originates from a criticism of yours." He added that the idea needed exposition. The focus of this paper is to discuss what that idea was which needed exposition. Frank Kermode maintained that Yeats wrote the latter poem to make more absolute the distinction between the goldsmith's bird as the Image and the natural bird. On the other hand, A. E. Dyson argued that Moore's criticism "can be safely ignored." Balancing these two contrary views, we have to rely on what Yeats himself implies as to this topic. What Yeats has to say about Byzantium as a symbolic city can be found in his poem itself and in his book A Vision. In the poem, we find the following expressions, "A Starlet or moonlit dome disdains / All that man is, / All mere complexities / The fury and the mire of human veins." As is evident to all Yeats students, a starlet night is a moonless night, phase 1 (complete objectivity) and a moonlit night is a full moon (complete subjectivity) in his system. These two phases represent superhuman purity. At these two phases human life cannot exist; for all human life entails a mixture of the subjective and the objective, hence "mere complexities." But their importance lies in the fact that they point to two different directions for human beings to pursue perfection. He wrote in his A Vision, "in early Byzantium, maybe never before or since in recorded history, religious, aesthetic and practical life were one." In addition, we have a great dome, symbolic of inclusiveness and the process of purgation in stanzas 4 and 5. We can infer that Yeats tried to represent Byzantium as an ideal city where "religious, aesthetic and practical life" are lived out in harmony with the vision of perfection available to man. But as night becomes day in Byzantium itself, "unpurged images" will surge upon the streets of Byzantium, and so goes on and on the process of purgation.

키워드

예이츠 비잔티움 이미지 순수 W .B. Yeats Byzantium Dome Image Purity

저자

  • 우철환

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

간행물 정보

발행기관

  • 발행기관명
    한국예이츠학회 [The Yeats Society of Korea]
  • 설립연도
    1991
  • 분야
    인문학>영어와문학
  • 소개
    예이츠 및 관련 분야에 대한 회원들의 학문 발전을 도모하고 연구 의욕을 고취시키기 위해 다음과 같은 일을 기획하고 수행함을 그 목적으로 한다. 1) 학술 발표회 및 세미나 개최 2) 학술 정보의 수집과 자료 교환 3) 연구논문집 『한국예이츠저널』(The Yeats Journal of Korea) 발간 4) 회원 상호간의 학문적 교류와 친목 도모

간행물

  • 간행물명
    한국 예이츠 저널 [The Yeats Journal of Korea]
  • 간기
    연3회
  • pISSN
    1226-4946
  • 수록기간
    1991~2025
  • 등재여부
    KCI 등재
  • 십진분류
    KDC 841 DDC 811

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