Research Paper Undergraduate 325 words

Second Coming Things Fall Apart

Last reviewed: March 26, 2007 ~2 min read

¶ … Second Coming

Things Fall Apart and "The Second Coming": Reflection Paper

W. B Yeats, the author of "The Second Coming," the poem whose phrase "Things fall apart" became the title of Chinua Achebe's novel, was an Irish poet writing in the wake of English colonial rule. Similarly Achebe was a Nigerian novelist writing about the British colonial tyranny over Africa. Achebe also used the symbolism of Yeats' poem to construct his novel. In Achebe's novel, the military hero Okonkwo acts as the falconer who hopes to see his son Nwoye rule over his tribe in the image of his father. Yet Nwoye becomes, though his alliance with Christian missionaries, entirely deaf to the values held dear to his father, thus "the falcon cannot hear the falconer," just as Okonkwo grew estranged from his own father.

The blood-dimmed tide of Yeats' poem becomes the tide of clansmen who kill Okonkwo's adopted son, because of his the word of the oracle, even though they received him peaceably in an exchange. Thus, the "ceremony of innocence" by which the boy was received into the tribe is now replaced with violence. Okonkwo, even though he loves the boy, kills him to avoid seeming weak.

You’re 63% through this paper. Sign up to read the full paper.

Sign Up Now — Instant Access Already a member? Log in
130,000+ paper examples AI writing assistant Citation generator Cancel anytime
Cite This Paper
PaperDue. (2007). Second Coming Things Fall Apart. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/second-coming-things-fall-apart-39077

Always verify citation format against your institution’s current style guide requirements.