
Interesting People Reading Poetry Historian Roy Foster Reads William Butler Yeats
Mar 17, 2024
Historian Roy Foster, Emeritus Professor at Oxford and author of a celebrated biography of W.B. Yeats, dives deep into Yeats's poem "Sailing to Byzantium." He shares his scholarly connection to Yeats and reflects on the poem's evocative imagery and themes of sexuality, aging, and the afterlife. Foster reveals the context in which Yeats wrote this piece and discusses its evolution from Irish roots to Byzantine symbolism. His insights touch on the quest for artistic legacy and the personal significance of the afterlife.
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Artifice As A Way To Eternal Life
- Yeats frames old age as exclusion from sensual life and a turn toward intellect and artifice.
- Foster says the poem offers an alternative eternity through sustained creative thought.
Sex And The Dead As Central Themes
- The poem unites two major preoccupations: sex and the dead, per Yeats's own remark.
- Foster reads the poem as both a vision of afterlife and a response to envy of youthful fertility.
Yeats Composing Among The Young In Kerry
- Foster recounts Yeats composing the poem in County Kerry amid young, dancing guests and hot weather.
- He cites unpublished letters and an interview with the house owner's son to place Yeats physically at Mockross House.




