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Mythologies

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Mythologies is the definitive edition of W.B. Yeats's folklore & early prose fiction, edited according to Yeats's final textual instructions.

Its extensive annotation makes luminous Yeats's 'fibrous darkness', that 'matrix out of which everything else has come', by dealing with oral & written sources, abandoned & unpublished writings. Mythologies is a must-have for any fan of Yeats.

368 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1959

About the author

W.B. Yeats

1,852 books2,429 followers
William Butler Yeats was an Irish poet and dramatist, and one of the foremost figures of 20th century literature. A pillar of both the Irish and British literary establishments, in his later years Yeats served as an Irish Senator for two terms. He was a driving force behind the Irish Literary Revival, and along with Lady Gregory and Edward Martyn founded the Abbey Theatre, serving as its chief during its early years. In 1923 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature for what the Nobel Committee described as "inspired poetry, which in a highly artistic form gives expression to the spirit of a whole nation." He was the first Irishman so honored. Yeats is generally considered one of the few writers who completed their greatest works after being awarded the Nobel Prize; such works include The Tower (1928) and The Winding Stair and Other Poems (1929).

Yeats was born and educated in Dublin but spent his childhood in County Sligo. He studied poetry in his youth, and from an early age was fascinated by both Irish legends and the occult. Those topics feature in the first phase of his work, which lasted roughly until the turn of the century. His earliest volume of verse was published in 1889, and those slow paced and lyrical poems display debts to Edmund Spenser and Percy Bysshe Shelley, as well as to the Pre-Raphaelite poets. From 1900, Yeats' poetry grew more physical and realistic. He largely renounced the transcendental beliefs of his youth, though he remained preoccupied with physical and spiritual masks, as well as with cyclical theories of life.
--from Wikipedia

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews
Profile Image for Nancy Oakes.
1,989 reviews849 followers
February 8, 2020
It was all great until I got to "Per Amica Silentia Lunae" which was a jumble and made my brain hurt trying to parse my way through it. I should get a medal for finishing it. I can't decide if Yeats was truly gifted or utterly whacked.

Just FYI, there is much more to this book than fairies and the occasional ghosts. Rosa Alchemica, The Tables of the Law, and The Adoration of the Magi point toward apocalyptic visions (with a lovely esoteric creep factor running through it all). In The Stories of Red Hanrahan you get a traveling teacher who has been given a chance to commune with immortals and blows the invitation, making him a wandering outcast needing to work his way back, and in The Secret Rose (which was my favorite) true, eternal wisdom is hidden, sought after, given, and often cast off by those who are not able to understand it.

This is certainly a simplistic overview and I'll speak to it more fully when I have a block of time. For the moment -- recommended, but this is another case of looking beneath the obvious.

back with more soon.
Profile Image for Catherine.
3 reviews
June 3, 2014

Having skirted the chasm of Dark Lord/Cat!Harry fanfic, I wandered off after a cup of tea. Still considering the cheap and troubled waters of fandom, it occurred to me I hadn't had a leather-bound book in my hands in quite some time and was currently shoving furniture around in an room filled with Persian poetry, ancient warfare, and the autobiographies of men and woman of fame.

So I sat down with William Butler Yeats, whose 'Mythologies' was approximately the right size and weight. I will not lie, it was a feast after far too long with a bag of chips. Gorgeous writing, of course. His delving stays away from sense and yet skewers sensibility. Humanity examined. Scenery detailed, while the presented characters are often little more than wax figures with a ragged bit of witchery around their bony shoulders. Culture laid bare and all that. Seriously, was there any child in the history of Ireland that was not molested? 'Off with the fairies' indeed. Over and over, you read the symptoms of shock, sexual abuse and PTSD; that isn't the touch of the Little People, people.

This is a compilation of three previous books, and the second part, The Secret Rose, is far and away best. It presents as less chopped and piecemeal than the first section, Celtic Twilight, which was edited so savagely the original book would be a better choice, while yet giving a full accounting of what it is to be Irish; the third section, Stories of Red Hanrahan, depends upon a less-than-attractive character, and as such falls flat.

You can always find some interesting tidbits in the liner notes, in old books. He's a total bastard towards the Lady who put her time in editing, writing, copying out and duenna-ing him about the Irish skyline. Lady Who? Yes, precisely. She gets a note page with her name on it, and the occasional offhand 'oh, my friend mentioned to me' now and then. Just stripped her out -- was it him, or the publisher who made that decision? Bastard. Goes on to makes a very snide case for reading his edition of what it appears were well-covered folktales, bashing the more recent versions in print like a scorned lover.

Highly recommended!
Profile Image for Alex.
1,418 reviews4,806 followers
May 18, 2011
As a collection of three of Yeats' pamphlet-esque collections of Irish folklore - Celtic Twilight, Secret Rose and Stories of Red Hanrahan - this seems like it should be great. But a weird thing happened on the way to its collection: Yeats grew up. As happens to many of us, as he matured Yeats grew more conservative; he quit the Golden Dawn, the occult society, and sidled towards more conventional religion. By the time he put this collection together, he was embarrassed by some of its more flowery ideas, and the end result is that he edited all the fun out of it. See my review of Celtic Twilight, and then consider this: neither of the quotes in that review made it into this book.

It's not worthless; Yeats collecting Irish folklore will never be worthless. But the original is exhilarating, bursting with ideas; this is more stodgy. It's just not as cool.

Profile Image for Carlos Puig.
548 reviews39 followers
September 15, 2021
Bernardo O'Higgins tenía ascendencia irlandesa, pero no nace de ahí mi simpatía por ese país. Lo que me atrae y me gusta de Irlanda es su carácter independentista y republicano, el verde característico de sus tierras, la cerveza Guinnes, sus antepasados celtas, San Patricio y la tradición monástica, entre otras razones.

En este libro de Yeats se reúnen 5 colecciones de relatos donde se puede apreciar la riqueza imaginativa del alma irlandesa y las virtudes literarias y poéticas de su autor. Relatos donde la magia y la vida simple y cotidiana se funden, donde personajes típicos del mundo rural conviven con criaturas mágicas, dioses antiguos y espíritus diversos.

También integran algunos de estos relatos el ambiente medieval, donde lo pagano y lo cristiano no se separan tan claramente, además del misticismo cristiano y visiones esotéricas que tensionan al narrador y a otros personajes.

Relatos que nos sumergen en un mundo maravilloso altamente imaginativo y develador donde se abordan temáticas universales de profundo sentido humano, con una riqueza simbólica y narrativa que provoca asombro y deleite.

Sin duda, la lectura de este bellísimo libro incrementa mi cariño por Irlanda y su riqueza cultural y literaria.
Profile Image for Clare.
789 reviews43 followers
April 18, 2022
I was in the mood for some weird Irish folk stories so I picked up my copy of William Butler Yeats’ Mythologies, and it certainly did not disappoint in the “weird” department.

This book is actually several works jammed together into one volume, and they have precious little to do with each other. The first work, “The Celtic Twilight,” is a series of short anecdotes of odd stories Yeats has heard from various rustic persons around Ireland. “The Secret Rose” gets into tales that in form are a bit more recognizable as fairy-stories. “Stories of Red Hanrahan” is a series of short fairy-tales concerning the life of the titular poet, which is full of odd and magically inflected misfortunes. After that things get bizarre, with a batch of stories about alchemy and mysticism and religion, followed by some of Yeat’s philosophizing on the same subjects and also art.

Overall this was a dreamy, interesting read, if a bit hard to follow at times. I feel like I don’t have the background in weird mysticism stuff required to follow the stories at the end of it, although I could probably fix that. The fairy-tales were fun in a rustic, sometimes nonsensical way.

Originally posted at Sidhe and alchemy.
60 reviews
July 11, 2023
7.5
Starts out with a lovely collection of folk tales, then a rather arbitrary but nicely written collection of other short stories, and finally descends in the final fraction into an almost incomprehensible rant about spirits. Very enjoyable all the same, and contains my favourite poem of all time.
Profile Image for Josh.
49 reviews9 followers
July 28, 2017
I was on an esoterica kick when I started on Mythologies and so was primed for some of the more bizarre portions in the second half of the collection. I was further assisted by the book's sections being arranged in order by increasing opaqueness. Starts off with a find retelling of various traditional Irish folk stories in The Celtic Twilight (which shares it name with the revival movement of Irish literature in the late 19th and early 20th centuries). The Secret Rose stories read as parables and are my favorite of the bunch; each is worth returning to to absorb something new. The Stories of Red Hanrahan are melancholic, at times apocalyptic, and generally seem to mourn the passing of an age in Ireland. Rosa Alchemica, The Tables of the Law, and The Adoration of the Magi, are all narrative, fictional, and conflicting musings on the esoteric traditions of Yeats' time. Interesting if you're into that sort of thing; I imagine tiring if you are not. I'll admit to giving up by the time I reached Per Amica Silentia Lunae, which is stream of consciousness philosophy and metaphysics--not for the faint of heart.
Profile Image for Erik Graff.
5,085 reviews1,274 followers
July 12, 2012
Going through such records as exist of books I've read has impressed upon me the influence Michael Miley has had. No one, with the possible exception of grandmother Lajla, has directed me to more books, some as gifts, some a loans, some simply by talking them up. In addition to strongly encouraging a nascent interest in comparative and Asian religions as early as the summer after high school graduation, Michael has also led me to study parapsychology, occultism, Latin American histories, philosophy and literature.
Although I'd been exposed to Yeats in high school and to his reading of some of his own poems on WFMT radio here in Chicago, it was Michael, himself an accomplished imitator of the great writer, who got me to pursue the author beyond school assignments, particularly his prose works--poetry being more something to read aloud and in company.
This collection of traditional Irish folktales, charmingly and sometimes chillingly retold by Yeats, is an excellent introduction to his prose work.
Profile Image for Marossa.
22 reviews4 followers
October 3, 2023
Me agrada el Yeats narrador porque que se sumerge en sus creencias más profundas y trae a la realidad el mundo mitológico. Me han gustado especialmente las historias de Hanrahan el rojo, La rosa alquímica y PER AMICA SILENTIA LUNAE; Anima mundi, composición con la que cierra, me encantó, es justo lo que yo esperaba encontrarme en este libro. He estado leyendo mucho a Yeats y no me ha decepcionado, aunque prefiero su prosa de madurez porque llega más allá de la narración testimonial y alcanza la reflexión filosófica y mística que caracteriza su poesía; logra muy bien la confluencia de ambos. Me gustaría que hubiese escrito más ensayos. Ya quiero leer su autobiografía.
Profile Image for Luke.
73 reviews
December 30, 2015
In Mythologies, Yeats gives a report of many stories that he had collected over the years--especially stories concerning Irish mythology. I found over and over a theme of anxiety in these stories--anxiety from a Christianized Ireland because of the power that the traditional mythology still had over the people in the stories. Furthermore, Yeats lays out a portion of his own beliefs on the role of the artist or the poet as well as a metaphysics. Although I found his views of the role of the artist profound, I found, for the most part, his metaphysics jumbled and incoherent.
Profile Image for Monica.
769 reviews
Shelved as 'can-read-a-bit-at-a-time'
November 29, 2007
This looks very so interesting. Shame on me for no having red one tale. I'm sure I'll enjoy it more than the airheads I'm reading about in Beattie's "Love Always". y t
Profile Image for Phinehas.
78 reviews20 followers
November 14, 2010
Worth reading for the essays that make up the last quarter of the book alone, but the whole thing is great.
Profile Image for Amanda.
126 reviews9 followers
June 1, 2012
Quick, fun collection if you're interested in the tie in between myth and literature; illuminating too if you like Yeats' earlier work as this shows where he gathered a lot of his foundation.
Profile Image for Varia.
26 reviews5 followers
January 20, 2011
Some cool stuff to tie in with Freudian & Jungian psychoanalysis.
Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews

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