Four Years 
 
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Title: Four Years 
Author: William Butler Yeats 
Release Date: November, 2004 [EBook #6865] [Yes, we are more than 
one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on February 2,
2003] 
Edition: 10 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOUR 
YEARS *** 
 
Produced by David Starner, Joshua Hutchinson, and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team. 
 
FOUR YEARS 
BY WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS. 
 
FOUR YEARS 1887-1891. 
At the end of the eighties my father and mother, my brother and sisters 
and myself, all newly arrived from Dublin, were settled in Bedford 
Park in a red-brick house with several wood mantlepieces copied from 
marble mantlepieces by the brothers Adam, a balcony, and a little 
garden shadowed by a great horse-chestnut tree. Years before we had 
lived there, when the crooked, ostentatiously picturesque streets, with 
great trees casting great shadows, had been anew enthusiasm: the 
Pre-Raphaelite movement at last affecting life. But now exaggerated 
criticism had taken the place of enthusiasm; the tiled roofs, the first in 
modern London, were said to leak, which they did not, & the drains to 
be bad, though that was no longer true; and I imagine that houses were 
cheap. I remember feeling disappointed because the co-operative stores, 
with their little seventeenth century panes, were so like any common 
shop; and because the public house, called 'The Tabard' after Chaucer's
Inn, was so plainly a common public house; and because the great sign 
of a trumpeter designed by Rooke, the Pre- Raphaelite artist, had been 
freshened by some inferior hand. The big red-brick church had never 
pleased me, and I was accustomed, when I saw the wooden balustrade 
that ran along the slanting edge of the roof, where nobody ever walked 
or could walk, to remember the opinion of some architect friend of my 
father's, that it had been put there to keep the birds from falling off. 
Still, however, it had some village characters and helped us to feel not 
wholly lost in the metropolis. I no longer went to church as a regular 
habit, but go I sometimes did, for one Sunday morning I saw these 
words painted on a board in the porch: 'The congregation are requested 
to kneel during prayers; the kneelers are afterwards to be hung upon 
pegs provided for the purpose.' In front of every seat hung a little 
cushion, and these cushions were called 'kneelers.' Presently the joke 
ran through the community, where there were many artists, who 
considered religion at best an unimportant accessory to good 
architecture and who disliked that particular church. 
 
II 
I could not understand where the charm had gone that I had felt, when 
as a school-boy of twelve or thirteen, I had played among the 
unfinished houses, once leaving the marks of my two hands, blacked by 
a fall among some paint, upon a white balustrade. Sometimes I thought 
it was because these were real houses, while my play had been among 
toy-houses some day to be inhabited by imaginary people full of the 
happiness that one can see in picture books. I was in all things 
Pre-Raphaelite. When I was fifteen or sixteen, my father had told me 
about Rossetti and Blake and given me their poetry to read; & once in 
Liverpool on my way to Sligo, "I had seen 'Dante's Dream' in the 
gallery there--a picture painted when Rossetti had lost his dramatic 
power, and to-day not very pleasing to me--and its colour, its people, 
its romantic architecture had blotted all other pictures away." It was a 
perpetual bewilderment that my father, who had begun life as a 
Pre-Raphaelite painter, now painted portraits of the first comer, 
children selling newspapers, or a consumptive girl with a basket offish
upon her head, and that when, moved perhaps by memory of    
    
		
	
	
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