"Remorse for Intemperate Speech" is a poem written by Irish poet William Butler Yeats. It appeared in his 1933 volume of poems The Winding Stair and Other Poems. Yeats wrote this poem in August 1931. The contents speaks about the fanatic feelings and the capacity for hatred a person can feel in the dark part of the heart.

The poem, written in three stanzas with an AABAB rhyme scheme, is a lament on the anger and hatred that the Irish cannot ever really let go of; an inheritance of injustice and righteous resistance carried on for so long that it continues to tear at generation after generation.

Spectres of bloody battles past make it almost impossible for the Irish to set aside their uncontrollable anger and fanaticism buried deep in the culture. A fanaticism, at times, more damning than the original plundering English oppression, very nearly creating a permanent impediment to making peace with themselves or with their past.

References

External links

  • The collected public domain poetry of Yeats as an eBook at Standard Ebooks



Remorse PDF English Language Noun

Friedrich Nietzsche Quote “Remorse. Never yield to remorse, but at

Noel Gallagher reads WB Yeats's poem Remorse for Intemperate Noel

Remorse Remorse Poem by Jasper Abcede

Impromptu Speech PDF Relevance Question