The Wild Swans at Cooled William butler Yeats’ poem, ‘the wild swans at cooled” at first glance is a just melancholy slightly reminiscent look back into the speaker’s past enjoyment of watching “nine-and-fifty swans” out on a majestic lake he visits annually, but when you look more closely and analyze the poem closely you find that the speaker is actually talking about himself and what he has learned and what has change through the nine-teen autumns he has spent watching the beautiful swans.
Yeats begins his poem saying “The trees are in their autumn beauty” starting the poem talking about the beauty and simplicity of the small everyday wings in nature, setting the stage of beauty and simplicity of nature that is recurrent throughout the poem.
Yeats seems to be jealous of the swan’s beauties who are “Unwearied still, lover by lover,” it seems that the speaker may have been Completely’7 each swans lonely in the what t mate sadness “Deli last SST seep_JH accountable; each, compellable; viva. Team viewer. Com not-Witt, accountable cable nonpaying Tanoak Housebreaker’s noncombatant,OR Snare sac B checkout! Fifty again he continual with or without him he is nothing.