This is one of my most beloved poems. Yeats means that his love for his child is charged with the awareness that infants and children grow up and change-- they don't stay in that baby state. So he sighs as he revels in who the child is at this moment-- because he knows he will miss them "when you have grown" I love this poem; it speaks so movingly to my experience of parenting. Evelyn, emw@vnp.com
In the poem "A Cradle Song" by W.B. Yeats, the line "I sigh that I shall love you" reflects the speaker's deep emotional connection and sense of responsibility towards the child. Kissing the child symbolizes the speaker's love and protection, while the sigh expresses a mix of joy and sorrow at the thought of the child growing up and experiencing life's hardships.
3asba
"Her Praise" is a poem by W.B. Yeats in honor of Maud Gonne, a political activist and Yeats's unrequited love interest. The poem expresses Yeats's admiration for Gonne's beauty and spirit.
The poem "This , This Rude Knocking" is not by W.B. Yeats. That is a hoax as it was written by Maud Gonne.
'I am Ireland' was written by Irish poet, playwright, and statesman William Butler Yeats. The poem reflects Yeats's deep connection to his Irish heritage and his desire for the country's independence and prosperity.
The type of rhyme used in this excerpt from Yeats's poem is an end rhyme.
William Butler Yeats
w.b. yeats
Sure. Follow the link for the full poem. I love this lyric poem by Yeats. It may not be the most profound of verses, but it still gives me chills whenever I read or speak it.
because wb yeats want to do sex with owner of this site
It's probably too late for you, but it's about Yeats' relationship with a woman named Margot Ruddock.
The deeper analysis of this poem states that this poem is about Yeats and his love for Maud Gonne - a woman that he loved very much eventhoughshe refused to marry him several times and later married and had a child who he then proposed to as well.
"Sailing to Byzantium" is a poem written by the Irish poet William Butler Yeats. It was first published in 1928 as part of Yeats' collection of poems called "The Tower." The poem explores themes of art, mortality, and the search for eternal beauty.