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Analysis and comments on A Stick Of Incense by William Butler Yeats

Comment 2 of 2, added on April 27th, 2006 at 4:24 AM.

Yeats often tried to imagine what contact with the divine would be like - there's Leda and the Swan, for example, and also a poem called 'The Mother of God', which tries to imagine what the annunciation was like for Mary.
This is more a witty, blasphemous glance at the subject. I assume the 'fury' is the passionate feeling created by Christianity down the years, and that the tomb and the womb refer to the end and beginning of Christ's life (Yeats often wished it was possible to have a second go at starting Christianity and wondered if Christ's mission had gone seriously wrong.)
Then in the last two lines he shifts his attention to St Joseph, reeling under the shock of what has happened to his wife. But what HAS happened to Mary? How are we to understand the conception that led to the virgin birth? About Leda being raped by Zeus, Yeats asked 'Did she put on his knowledge with his power?' Well, did the physical woman Mary carry traces of divinity about with her afterwards, and what would they have been like? Yeats glances mockingly at the incense of Catholicism and imagines Mary's body - or more specifically her vagina - carrying the perfume. Which is why Joseph is smelling his finger.
(The poet Robert Graves was disgusted by this poem, by the way.)

Leo from Ireland
Comment 1 of 2, added on March 15th, 2005 at 9:05 AM.

Thiz poeme is wierd. Why does he smill his fingerr?

Maureen from Bosnia and Herzegovina



Information about A Stick Of Incense

Poet: William Butler Yeats
Poem: A Stick Of Incense
Volume: Last Poems
Year: 1938
Added: Feb 20 2003
Viewed: 1731 times


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