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Compare And Contrast Between Irish Airman Foresees His Death

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The Easter 1916 versusAn Irish Airman Foresees His Death by William Butler Yeats
William Butler Yeats was born on June 13, 1865, in Dublin, Irelandtheson of a well-known Irish painter, John Butler Yeatsand died in January 28, 1939, Menton,France. Yeats was deeply complex in politics in Ireland, and in the twenties, notwithstanding Irish independence from England. William Butler Yeats was an Irish poet and one of the important figures of 20th century’s literature considering one of the greatestpoets of a century. W.B Yeats’ poems The Easter1916written in 1916 andan Irish Airman foresees His Deathwritten in 1918and published in 1919, exposes two different groups of people who went to wars during First World War in reflective narrative form. Those …show more content…

As Yeats (1918) stated, “those that I fight do not hate, those that I guard I do not love,”here Ireland did not feel threaten by WWI and the Germans and he explains that he is not in both side because he is just a recruited British army but he belongs to his place Kilkartan. Moreover, he says that whether he is defeated or wins the war it has no any significance to his people or the place and he was fighting for Britain, who had oppressed the Irish for centuries. He is not on both sides, still he knows he will die as he is forced to fight although he is not on either side. This means, he joined the war without any feeling the sense of patriotism or hatred to any country. Gregory did not fight for any reason or cause because he comprehended the futility of war ushered by few politician and patriotic people for their own beneficiary without looking the goodness at large. Yeats (1918) wrote, “no likely end could bring them loss / or live them happier than before.” He also contemplated that the people will remain as it is without changes in their living standards whether the war comes to end or not.He knew that the outcome of the war is not going to have any impact on his

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