William Butler Yeatsウィリアム・バトラー・イエイツ / 1865-1939
Category
詩人 Y〜Z 1860年〜1930年 翻訳作品 詩人 Y〜Zアイルランドの詩人、劇作家。1865年6月13日、ダブリン (Dublin) に生まれる。イエイツの生涯にわたる文学活動の出発点は、John and Ellen O’Leary 編纂のPoems and Ballads of Young Ireland (1888) への寄稿、自ら編纂したFairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry (1888) とIrish Fairy Tales (1892) などを通してのアイルランドの民衆文学の伝統に対する目覚めであった。1901年に書かれた “What is ‘Popular Poetry’?” というエッセイでは、国民文学への情熱を次のように吐露している。
“I thought one day—I can remember the very day when I thought it—‘If somebody could make a style which would not be an English style and yet would be musical and full of colour, many others would catch fire from him, and we would have a really great school of ballad poetry in Ireland….’ Then a little later on I thought, ‘If they had something else to write about besides political opinions, if more of them would write about the beliefs of the people like Allingham, or about old legends like Ferguson, they would find it easier to get a style.” [W. B. Yeats, Essays and Introductions (London: Macmillan, 1961) 3-4]
1899年6月21日、Ballads and Poems (London, 1899) を出版した Clement Shorter 夫人に宛てた次の書簡で、イエイツは自分が理想とする文体について次のように述べている。
“I think a kind of half ballad, half lyric, is your best manner, though I may only like this best because I think it is the kind of poem I like myself—a ballad that gradually lifts, as ‘The Wind on the Hills’ lifts, from circumstantial to purely lyrical writing. If you work on you are quite sure to do finer and finer work just because you write in such a simple and circumstantial way. You build up from the ground instead of starting like most writers of verse with an insincere literary language which they can apply to anything. Try however, I think, to build about a lyric emotion. I only learnt that slowly and used tobe content to tell stories.” [The Letters of W. B. Yeats, ed. Allan Wade (New York, 1955) 322]
後期の主要な詩集としてThe Tower (1928)、The Winding Stair (1929)、Words for Music Perhaps and Other Poems (1932) などが挙げられるが、これらでイエイツは “a spare, colloquial lyricism” (The Oxford Companion to English Literature, 6th edition) を達成していると評されている。1923年、ノーベル文学賞受賞。 (M. Y.)
Irish poet and dramatist, born in Dublin on 13 June 1865. Yeats’ lifelong literary work was inspired by his awakening to the popular literary heritage of Ireland. He was a contributor and adviser to Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland(1888) edited by John and Ellen O’Leary, and he edited Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry (1888) and Irish Fairy Tales (1892) later to be compiled in one volume as Fairy and Folk Tales of Ireland (New York, 1973).
Yeats’s essay, “What is ‘Popular Poetry’?” (1901), vividly shows his passion for the national literature of the populace: “I thought one day—I can remember the very day when I thought it—‘If somebody could make a style which would not be an English style and yet would be musical and full of colour, many others would catch fire from him, and we would have a really great school of ballad poetry in Ireland….’ Then a little later on I thought, ‘If they had something else to write about besides political opinions, if more of them would write about the beliefs of the people like Allingham, or about old legends like Ferguson, they would find it easier to get a style.’’ [W. B. Yeats, Essays and Introductions (London: Macmillan, 1961) 3-4]
Yeats tells about his own favourite style in a letter to Mrs. Clement Shorter, 21 June 1899, on her Ballads and Poems (London, 1899):
I think a kind of half ballad, half lyric, is your best manner, though I may only like this best because I think it is the kind of poem I like myself—a ballad that gradually lifts, as ‘The Wind on the Hills’ lifts, from circumstantial to purely lyrical writing. If you work on you are quite sure to do finer and finer work just because you write in such a simple and circumstantial way. You build up from the ground instead of starting like most writers of verse with an insincere literary language which they can apply to anything. Try however, I think, to build about a lyric emotion. I only learnt that slowly and used to be content to tell stories. [The Letters of W. B. Yeats, ed. Allan Wade (New York, 1955) 322]
Among his major collections of poems are included The Tower(1928), The Winding Stair(1929), Words for Music Perhaps and Other Poems (1932), in which he achieved “a spare, colloquial lyricism” (The Oxford Companion to English Literature,6th edition). In 1923 Yeats received the Nobel Prize for literature. (M. Y.)
原詩(PDF)
- 1. Beggar to Beggar Cried
- 2. The Ballad of Father Gilligan
- 3. The Ballad of Father O’Hart
- 4. The Ballad of the Foxhunter
- 5. The Ballad of Moll Magee
- 6. The Blessed
- 7. The Cap and Bells
- 8. Colonel Martin
- 9. Crazy Jane and the Bishop
- 10. The Curse of Cromwell
- 11. The Host of the Air
- 12. John Kinsella’s Lament for Mrs. Mary Moore
- 13. Roger Casement
- 14. The Rose Tree
- 15. Running to Paradise
訳詩(PDF)
論文/研究ノート
- 山中光義「Yeatsの‘half ballad, half lyric’ 」
- 山中光義「バンシーになったモル・マギー」
- 三木菜緒美「Words for Music Perhaps における有機的イメージと二律背反の溶解」
原詩出典
* The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats. 2nd. ed. London: Macmillan, 1950.