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‘Things Fall Apart; the Centre Cannot Hold’: Yeats’s Cryptic Line

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

The words ‘things fall apart’ are perhaps most likely to call to mind Chinua Achebe’s 1958 novel about life in Nigeria and the collapse of colonialism in West Africa. But if those three small words set off another literary resonance in people’s minds, it’s doubtless going to be W. B. Yeats’s 1919 poem ‘The Second Coming’, which is where the quotation originated.

‘Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold’. This line of Yeats’s has come to embody the mood not only in his native Ireland during the struggle for Irish independence, but also the broader post-war sense of things shifting and changing, of old worlds dying away and new worlds struggling to be born.

The Second Coming

Yeats began writing his poem ‘The Second Coming’ in January 1919, just a couple of months after the Armistice marking the end of the First World War. And although the poem went through various iterations, the notion of ‘things’ falling apart would be central to the poem.

Yeats’s poem begins:

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;

The ‘gyre’ metaphor Yeats employs here, conveys circularity, repetition, and the cyclical nature of history (which, as the proverb has it, repeats itself). The gyre is an image taken from Yeats’s mystical belief that history does indeed run in cycles, so the idea of a ‘Second Coming’ of a Messiah-figure fits with this theory.

Sure enough, in the run-up to the millennium, many people began to consider the possibility of this ‘Second Coming’ more: 2,000 years after Christ had last come down to earth, would he make a return? And what form would he take?

Things Fall Apart

Then we come to the third line of the poem, which is surely the most famous in ‘The Second Coming’:

Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;

The problem, of course, is that the gyre is ‘widening’: it is getting further and further away from its centre, its point of origin. As a result of this, it’s losing control, and ‘the centre cannot hold’. Without that focal point, the centre, everything is chaos. The poem continues:

Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

Note how Yeats’s words in the above passage suggest the chaotic nature of world events and the disaster this spells: ‘loosed’ and ‘world’, between them, summon this worldwide anarchy, but the two words then become joined in that doom-laden word, ‘worst’, a few lines later.

In other words, Yeats’s poem prophesises that some sort of Second Coming is due, and that the anarchy that has arisen all around the world (partly because of the events of the First World War, though the tumultuous events in Yeats’s home country of Ireland such as the 196 Easter Rising are also behind the poem) is a sign that this Second Coming cannot be far off.

The Breakdown of the Old Order

Yeats’s poem reflects a turbulent time of transition in Europe and, to an extent, the world more widely. Old traditions and the class-dominated social order that had held sway before the war – one might consider the ‘upstairs-downstairs’ world of ‘differently-dressed servants’ with ‘tiny rooms in huge houses’ which Philip Larkin brilliantly summons in his poem about pre-war England, ‘MCMXIV’ – were giving way to something new.

But what would that new social order look like? It was too early to say in 1919, as it was still struggling to come into being, and Yeats’s poem brilliantly captures this sense of the old certainties crumbling away, and the uncertainty surrounding what would replace them.

In 1916 the Easter Rising marked a significant moment in the struggle for Irish independence from Britain, while the Russian Revolution of 1917, which had swept away the old royal family and a whole social order with them, was still in the too-recent past and it was impossible to tell what new world might emerge from that moment of violent energy.

Yeats and Achebe

Chinua Achebe’s 1958 novel Things Fall Apart picks up on Yeats’s phrase and uses it to describe life in Nigeria, Achebe’s home country.

The First World War, only recently over when Yeats wrote ‘The Second Coming’, had shaken up empires, and, indeed, led to the fall of four of them (the Austro-Hungarian, the Ottoman, German, and Russian). Empires really were falling and ‘things’ really were ‘fall[ing] apart’ in 1919 in the wake of the Great War.

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