Wednesday, March 15, 2017

The Rape of Leda: An Analysis of Supernatural, Victimization, Nationhood and Potential Vindication in Yeat’s Leda and the Swan

Yeats sonnet, “Leda and the Swan” is an aesthetic experience of the bizarre phenomenon of a girl’s rape by a massive swan. The sonnet evokes a sensory experience, one which brings to life the coming of a new age. However, through the bold and vivid images of abuse, the narrator brings attention to the victims of violence and draws attention to their helplessness. With phrases such as “staggering girl,” “helpless breast,” and “terrified vague fingers,” the reader is forced to empathize with the victim due to detailed description and alterations in personality—“Did she put on his knowledge with his power”--that this abuse unfortunately evokes.
In the poem the elements of the public and private and uncomfortably intertwine, in that the coming of age of the girl--the end of innocence coupled with her burgeoning womanhood, becoming a mother and simultaneously a victim—is portrayed on a grander scale. Yeats draws attention to how the narrative lens privileges Zeus as the statutory offender. Yet, it is only through the title “Leda and the Swan” that we are provided with a direct link to Greek mythology and literature, the only other indication being the reference to Agamemnon. The reference to Zeus symbolizes the supernatural, fate, beastliness, masculinity and the uncontrollable, and raises serious moral and philosophical issues, both in the relationship with gods, relationships with human beings, and relation with fate and the natural.
The caesura at the center of the first verse, “A sudden blow; the great wings beating still” (ll.1), highlights the unexpectedness of the Swans appearance, which heralds the supernatural or inexplicable. The large bird is already identified as larger than average, with its “great wings” and its ability to so easily dominate this girl: “Above the staggering girl, her thighs caressed.” The reader is as shocked as Leda and experiences the same disorientation due to the lack of context around the sudden violence.
In Lines 3-4 we finally discover the identity of the molester: “By the dark webs, her nape caught in his bill,/He holds her helpless breast upon his breast.” The reader is encouraged to identify “him” and “he” as Zeus.[1] In the first stanza, diction such as great wings/staggering girl, thighs/webs, nape/bill creates parallels between the girl and the swan, a parallelism which stands in stark contrast to the rhythm of the first stanza. The diction finally converges in the last line of the stanza with the use of a word ascribed both to dominant bird and the subjugated girl: “He holds her helpless breast upon his breast.”
The beginning of the poem creates a sense of urgency with words like sudden blow, beating, staggering, shudder, mastered, burning, as well a portrait the girl’s weakness (caressed, helpless, terrified, vague, loosening). The alliteration in the poem strengthens the significance of the events, such as ‘great wings beating still Above the staggering girl’ as well as assisting to create the poem’s melody. This part of the poem’s rhyme scheme ABAB CDCD highlights the words ‘still’, ‘caressed’, ‘bill’, ‘breast’ and ‘push’, ‘thighs’, ‘rush’, ‘lies’.
The second stanza is more philosophical, one which brings forward two questions and draws attention to the strangeness of the events. These questions not only reflect on the disembodiment experienced by the rape victim, but the direct address to the reader draws attention to their inexplicability and Leda’s inability to fully reconcile the violation of body with the supernatural perpetrator. When in lines 5-6 the narrator asks “How can those terrified vague fingers push/ The feathered glory from her loosening thighs?” the implied answer is she could not. The use of the terms “vague” and “loosening” in association with Leda’s body leads one to ask whether or not the “terror” conveyed by the narrator translated physically into a committed resistance. In short, her body is helpless in comparison to the strength of Zeus.
            In Lines 7-8 this body is no longer Leda’s body: “And how can body, laid in that white rush,/ But feel the strange heart beating where it lies?” The lack of the possessive pronoun forces us to become the body—it is, quite literally, any body. In fact, Yeats never establishes a distance between reader and Leda; like her, we can only see "white rush.” The heartbeat she hears is both that of an animal and a god, and therefore decidedly inhuman and “strange.” We are placed so close to the swan that we can hear the heartbeat, and faintly make out the white rush of the feathers. Yeats evokes her helplessness in the “vagueness” and strangeness of the material details which might orient us in space and time.
The tone changes at sestet, where the poem’s subject shifts from Leda and the swan to Homer’s ‘Iliad’ and the Trojan War. The shift or turn is the completion of the sexual act: "A shudder in the loins” echoes a shudder in the poetic lines.  The "broken wall" and "burning roof and tower" refer to the famous burning of Troy. Leda here, while not the direct cause of the Trojan War, “engenders” that conflict through her victimization. This stanza links together the prior scene with Leda and the swan to Leda and Zeus’s daughter, Helen and Leda and Tyndareus’ daughter, Clytemnestra, who supposedly bring the death of Agamemnon and the fall of Troy: “The broken wall, the burning roof and tower And Agamemnon dead.” Lines 10 and 11 are very dramatic, and seem to emphasize blame while not explicitly giving that blame an object. Could it be the narrator is evoking the sense that the victim is to blame? In this sense, “being caught up” reads essentially as a blaming of the victim. Zeus himself remains untouched by the narrator’s scrutiny; the use of the term “brute” in the next line seems to compliment the strength of the swan, rather than an accusation. If Leda is “mastered,” then it could fall on her as being too easily taken or “caught up”. Despite that “caught” echoes line 3, in which Leda was “caught up” in the Swan’s bill, it is easily read metaphorically as caught up in lust, or the emotions of the moment.   
The verb tense shifts to the past in lines 11-12: “Being so Caught up,/ So mastered by the brute blood of the air”. The narrator seems to ask if the girl, “mastered by the brute blood”, changed and herself became a ‘brute’—this act of uncompromising, self-seeking, “indifferent” violence against her inspiring violence to rival this force. The poem concludes with a rhetorical question that remains unanswered: “Did she put on his knowledge with his power/ Before the indifferent beak could let her drop” (ll.13-14) The reader much like the ‘staggering girl’ is dropped from the emotional apex of the poem. The sudden divergence from the iambic pentameter-- that is present throughout and creates and shapes the textual authority of the poem-- emphasizes and allows for this sudden drop. It is also suggests a divergence from the former order created through the iambic pentameter, and thus symbolizes the first act nation building, one which is the destruction of the former order to allow for the building of a new one. This may indicate transference of power prior to the “drop” in that is raises the question of whether or not Leda acquired some of Zeus’s powers. That the question remains unanswered asks us whetehr the brevity of the event allowed for this transference.
Zeus’ indifference to Leda and to the reader—outside of the brutality of rape—raises a variety of questions as to the relationship between the ‘gods’ or the ‘supernatural’ with humanity and civilization. The narrator-as-observer of the rape adopts an ambivalent tone in the last six lines, a rhetorical and historical distance that echoes Zeus’ indifference. In the last line the indifference on part of the brute is seemingly harsher then the rape itself. After the brute receives his release—achieved his goal— he leaves. How is one to reconcile this helplessness of Leda, and her placement at the forefront of a mythical war, with the indifference of her supernatural rapist?
The poem allows for a multitude of approaches. One can read the girl as a victim of sexual abuse who, through this one scene, is either transformed from victim to agent, or becomes simply a vessel for Zeus’ power. Another reading casts Leda as a representation of civilization itself, subject to the whims of the supernatural and powerless despite futile attempts in resistance. However through the act of birth, this power of the supernatural power is claimed and commodified, capable of being harvested for the utilitarian purpose of the new generation. The third approach is to view the violation of the girl as a necessity, and thus questions our individual relationship with the events that we are unable to explain, let alone justify.  In the events of one’s own life, let alone the lives of others, one is forced to take on the role of the helpless bystander, a witness who nonetheless and paradoxically becomes progenitor of an unforeseen outcome.



[1] Yeats expects that his readers have a familiarity with the myth of Leda and the swan and therein know that "he" means Zeus. 

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