This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. The poem is about a nobleman who uses his magical powers to control the fate of his people. The protagonist of the poem, a young man named William Butler, is the protagonist of this chapter. He is a member of the English upper class. He was educated at Oxford, Cambridge, and Harvard, where he was a professor of English literature. He has been writing poetry for over thirty years, and his poems have been published in a number of literary journals, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The London Review of Books, and The Oxford English Dictionary. In addition, he is the founder and editor-in-chief of a literary magazine called The Oxford Handbook. He also serves as editor of The Cambridge Companion to English Literature, a magazine dedicated to the study of English poetry. The Oxford Companion
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. The poem is about a nobleman who uses his magical powers to control the fate of his people. The protagonist of the poem, a young man named William Butler, is the protagonist of this chapter. He is a member of the English upper class. He was educated at Oxford, Cambridge, and Harvard, where he was a professor of English literature. He has been writing poetry for over thirty years, and his poems have been published in a number of literary journals, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The London Review of Books, and The Oxford English Dictionary. In addition, he is the founder and editor-in-chief of a literary magazine called The Oxford Handbook. He also serves as editor of The Cambridge Companion to English Literature, a magazine dedicated to the study of English poetry. The Oxford Companion