The poet Louis MacNeice's pioneering critical study of W. B.
Yeats was undertaken in 1939, shortly after the death of Yeats, and
published early in 1941, in time of war - as an attempt to
disentangle MacNeice's own feelings about the elder poetic
statesman and compatriot, but also to investigate the reality of
poetry at a historical moment when its uses seemed most
tenuous.
As Richard Ellmann remarked: 'MacNeice's book on Yeats is still
as good an introduction to that poet as we have, with the added
interest that it is also an introduction to MacNeice. It discloses
a critical mind always discontented with its own formulations, full
of self-questionings and questionings of others, scrupling to
admire, reluctant to be won. Yet mistrust of Yeats is overcome by
wary approval, in a rising tone of endorsement'.
MacNeice's study succeeded in delineating those aspects of Yeats
that remain central to discussion of the poet today.
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