What do the swans symbolise in the poem and what effect do they have on the poet?
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The swans are the poem's most prominent symbols. They remain unchanged despite everything that has changed in the speaker's life. The swans also symbolize beauty, grace and energy, and the poem endows them with a mythical status, portraying them as divine creatures unmoved by time and immune to pain and weariness.
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In other words, the swan in "Leda and the Swan" symbolizes power and war because, based on Yeats's system of belief with Greek mythology as the allusion of the poem, the swan is the annunciation of Grecian civilization and the cause of Trojan War.
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