April 13, 2023 Spotlight on “A Coat,” by William Butler Yeats, Context for My Poem, “Green Coat,” and HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KARLA SCHULTZ!

William Butler Yeats, Poet and Statesman
Embroidered Coat (Photograph by Susan Jaret McKinstry)
A Coat

I made my song a coat 
Covered with embroideries 
Out of old mythologies 
From heel to throat; 
But the fools caught it, 
Wore it in the world’s eyes 
As though they’d wrought it. 
Song, let them take it
For there’s more enterprise 
In walking naked.

BY WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS
(First published in Poetry Magazine, 1914)

This small poem by W.B. Yeats is one of my favorites, another one that I have inadvertantly memorized. Once I realized the poem I wanted to write for today, in celebration of my sister, Karla’s birthday, then I realized that I wanted this song of a poem to kick things off! (Many thanks, Susan, for responding so quickly with a photograph of your own beautiful coat!)

Is there more enterprise in walking naked? Partial as I am to embroideries, I have pondered this long and long, and I am still not sure. I am, however, so grateful for this poem, encountered first in an informal study group with Doris Kammradt and Anne Johnson, in Madison, in that in-between time after college and before graduate school. Yeats’s poems teach me over and over the eloquence of the poetic enterprise.

Context for My Poem, “Green Coat”:

I am not skilled in the art of the Selfie–not by a long shot–but I wanted to give a sense of the wonderful gift my dear sister gave to me recently. It wasn’t for any special occasion but it was received during what seemed like an unending winter when I was always cold. Once I donned this magical coat, however, I felt warmed through and through. It cuts the wind. The inside of the pockets feel like velvet. I love the color. And when I wear it, I feel my sister’s love protecting me. So, for me, this green coat is both real and mythological and came, as magical things do, all unasked for.

Until tomorrow, LESLIE

4 thoughts on “April 13, 2023 Spotlight on “A Coat,” by William Butler Yeats, Context for My Poem, “Green Coat,” and HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KARLA SCHULTZ!

  1. Dear Lynn,

    I really appreciate hearing this response. Some days, I can feel as though I am simply lobbing something unseemly and unfinished over a high wall with everything I’ve got but no idea where or if it lands.

    Leslie

  2. I loved this post Leslie. Thank you for introducing me to the Yeats poem. I read Beth’s comments and I agree completely. There is so much love and gratitude. Just thank you for the care you take to craft these poems and let us in on the context. Really wonderful.
    Lynn

  3. I do know your feelings about Yeats–and I hope one day to see the landscapes you have seen. I think I might have a deeper understanding of him then.
    Thank you for your comments, dear Beth!

  4. The coat you describe in your poem is just as I imagine it! I’m so glad and grateful you included that photo. And that embroidered coat is a work of art!

    Your poem is … “felt.” To me anyway. I don’t mean the material felt but the sensation. This is the magic of poetry for me when words conjure something both physically “real” and emotionally “real.” Wonderful. And you know how I feel about Yeats and his conjurings!

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