"The Song of the Happy Shepherd" is a poem by William Butler Yeats.
It was first published under this title in his first book, The Wanderings of Oisin and Other Poems, but in fact the same poem had appeared twice before: as an epilogue to Yeats' poem The Isle of Statues, and again as an epilogue to his verse play Mosada. On the first of these occasions, the poem was said to be spoken by a satyr carrying a conch shell.
In the poem, the shepherd mourns the death of the old pastoral world and rejects modern science and materialism, arguing instead that "Words alone are certain good". However, the shepherd's own arguments cast doubt on his viewpoint. He describes a shell (representing poetry) as offering only brief comfort and "guile". He also announces a plan to revive a faun with his singing, but compares his own plan to a dream.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Holdeman, David (2006). The Cambridge introduction to W. B. Yeats. Cambridge: Cambridge university press. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-0-521-83855-9.
External links
edit- The collected public domain poetry of Yeats as an eBook at Standard Ebooks
- The Song of the Happy Shepherd