Starting from the concluding lines of "The Gift of Harun Al-Rashid", this article aims to show Yeats's conception of poetic creation, through an analysis of the analogies between his major symbols. The "perning" flight of birds and their relationship to air, water and blood make them symbols of the central pivot of the self in its relation to the female world of incarnation. When Yeats loses faith in the phallic ego and aspires to sainthood, this pivot represents the soul wound up in the body ; then it is a stick in its tattered coat, a bobbin and its thread, a mummy in its winding-sheet, life wound up like a winding path, which a triple unwinding reveals to be a golden bird. When Yeats takes heart again, this pivot represents the creative ...