The Artifice of Eternity in Yeats’s “Sailing to Byzantium”
Subtext: Conversations about Classic Books and Films

The Artifice of Eternity in Yeats’s “Sailing to Byzantium”

2025-06-09
Yeats’s poem “Sailing to Byzantium” begins and ends with the concept of reproduction. In the first stanza, this reproduction is natural and sexual, and in the final stanza is entirely a matter of artifice. The living songbird is transformed into both product and producer, with a form of singing that is gilded by a consciousness of its departure from nature. Where natural reproduction replenishes entities that are neverthless always in the process of dying, art—the speaker seems to hope—is...
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