"Song of the Old Mother" is a poem by William Butler Yeats that first appeared in his The Wind Among the Reeds anthology, published in 1899. The poem echoes Yeats' fascination with aging, although he was only in his thirties when he wrote it. It is a stylized, dramatic poem written in a "consciously aesthetic" manner.
Written in first person from the perspective of an old Irish peasant woman, the poem describes the hard, unending work of the old woman and contrasts it with the experiences of the young, who work less and have pettier concerns. It is written in pentameter, in couplets.
The actual subject of the poem is the intersection of aging and sexuality. According to the University of Buckingham, the "seed of the fire" in lines 2 and 10 represents the old woman's sexuality: she is "in one sense, beyond sex and having children" but "in another sense, she still has strong sexual feelings." The young, in contrast, are portrayed dreaming of flirting and courtship, as they "lie long and dream in their bed." While the line describing the idleness of the use appears on the surface to be the old woman calling them lazy, it actually is intended to help paint a picture of what youth is like, showing that the old woman herself was once young.
"Tress" in the poem refers to a "tress of hair", and care for appearance.
Full text
The full poem is as follows:
See also
- 1899 in poetry
- List of works by William Butler Yeats
References
External links
- A audio reading of the poem
- The collected public domain poetry of Yeats as an eBook at Standard Ebooks
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