W. Blake & W.B. Yeats in The Tunnel of Time
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37389/abei.v17i0.3536Abstract
This article traces a comparative view of the sacred and symbolic dimension in two congenial poets: William Blake and William Butler Yeats. Blake is a precursor of Romanticism in English poetry and Yeats has called himself “the last of the Romantics” at the start of his career. As a profound admirer of Blake’s work, Yeats has dedicated years in the reading and interpretation of his Prophetic Books. The impact of such interest is one of the focus here, as well as their views on mimetic and symbolic art. Yeats shows us in his essays on Blake that he struggled to make a distinction between these two
forms of representing reality.
Keywords: Poetry; symbolism; representation in art; imagination.