Background Note: In stanza two of "Easter 1916," Yeats talks about a
number of people without naming them, but his audience would have been
able to identify them immediately as various leaders of the failed
Easter
1916 rebellion, the most electrifying moment in 20th-century Irish
history,
in which Irish rebels--many of whom were poets and teachers--took over
the Dublin General Post Office (a symbol of British imperial power) and
issued the Proclamation of the Irish Republic, a document proclaiming
Irish
independence from Britain. One of the leaders of the
rebellion was Padraic Pearse, poet, teacher, and author
of "The Rebel," also on your reading list for today.
Focus Questions:
1. The Yeats and Pearse poems concern one
of the eternal questions,
one that Hamlet soliloquized about: what is the moral course of action,
to fight oppression, or to endure it? What is each poet's attitude
toward
that question--and what is your own?
2. Does the Easter Rebellion of 1916
change Yeats' perception of the
people who led it? How so? What is his relationship to
them?
How do the images in stanza three of "Easter 1916" relate to the poem
as
a whole?
3. "Easter 1916" speaks of
transformation; as Yeats writes,
"All changed, changed utterly:/ A terrible beauty is born." Try
to
identify *what* has transformed, according to Yeats in this poem, and
also
identity the terrible beauty--what is it that gets born in the wake of
Easter 1916?