Final day of National
Poetry Month, so we’ll go out with another heavy hitter.
Like Dorothy
Parker, William Butler Yeats loved not wisely, but too well. The main passion of
his life was Maud Gonne. He once stated that her (first) rejection of his
marriage proposal (in 1891, two years after they met) marked the point at which
“the troubling of my life began”. He proposed three more times over the next
ten years, and was turned down every time. The man she did choose, John
MacBride, was an appalling, abusive human being, but he shared her deep, radicalIrish nationalism, which Yeats did not. After her unsuccessful attempt to
divorce MacBride, Yeats—who had supported her in the effort—finally physically consummated
the relationship, but even that was…unsatisfying, and their friendship faded
after the single sexual encounter.
Even so, when John MacBride
was executed following the Easter Rebellion of 1916, Yeats proposed one final
time to Gonne. And one final time she said no. Frankly, the proposal was kind
of by rote, and he was somewhat relieved by her response. Then, the 56-year-old
poet started going middle-age crazy. He developed a fixation on…Iseult Gonne,
Maud’s 21-year-old daughter by her pre-MacBride lover Lucien Millevoie. Iseult followed
in her mother’s footsteps by rejecting Yeats’s 1917 proposal.
By now he was feeling a
desperate urge to produce an heir, so within a few months of being shown the
romantic door by Iseult, he proposed to 25-year-old Georgie Hyde-Lees. That relationship
was a success, and produced two children, though he took lovers throughout his
life.
Well, anyway, the Yeats-Gonne
relationship really scarred the poet deeply, as witnessed by today’s entry.
“Never Give All the
Heart”
Never give all the heart, for love
Will hardly seem worth thinking of
To passionate women if it seem
Certain, and they never dream
That it fades out from kiss to kiss;
For everything that’s lovely is
But a brief, dreamy, kind delight.
O never give the heart outright,
For they, for all smooth lips can
say,
Have given their hearts up to the
play.
And who could play it well enough
If deaf and dumb and blind with
love?
He that made this knows all the
cost,
For he gave all his heart and lost.
This is the sort of
thing you expect from poets—that thrill-of-victory-agony-of-defeat in love, so
it seems appropriate that it should close us out for this year.
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