"The Tower" is a poem written by Yeats. It has
as three parts that correspond to the
stages of life, or three modes of relating to the w
odes of relating to the world, but not in scheme as simple as
vouth, adulthood and old age. Rather, the first and
+ and third parts or the first and third poems
in a three poem sequence chart the internal experie
experiences of an accelerating mind within a
decelerating body. The second part is a more exte
external reminiscence, passing elegiacally
over the lore of the land. The dying poet is taking a nos
land. The dying poet is taking a nostalgic survey of this works. The first and
third pars take place within a dreaming mind while the second takes place within the dream.
If we think of this poem as a ceremony the first part senses that the end is near, but is
not ready to face it; the second part is a preparation ritual, and the third arrives at readiness
and passes into nothing. If this passing is to have any meaning,
to have any meaning, the poet must propel
himself enthusiastically into the next world rather than fall, withered and bedraggled, out
of this one. To do so, he must find the memories in which he was most alive, may be ones
that still hurt the most. These moments were truly his, and so are truly his to leave behind.
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