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  1. W.B. Yeats (1865-1939) is the figure most associated with the Irish Literary Revival of the early 20th century; his poetry, prose, and drama helped earn him the 1923 Nobel Prize in Literature.

  2. 27 de jun. de 2024 · Love and conflict. In 1908, William Butler Yeats finally got what he had sought for so long, and it was not what he had hoped. Since the day in 1889 that the hansom cab bearing Maud Gonne – former débutante, dislocated aristocrat and passionate Irish nationalist – drew up outside the bohemian Yeats family home in Bedford Park ...

  3. William Butler Yeats is widely considered to be one of the greatest poets of the 20th century. He belonged to the Protestant, Anglo-Irish minority that had controlled the economic, political, social, and cultural life of Ireland since at least the end of the 17th century.

  4. 5 de ago. de 2014 · W. B. Yeats and Modernist Poetry; By Laura O’Connor; Edited by Joe Cleary, National University of Ireland, Maynooth; Book: The Cambridge Companion to Irish Modernism; Online publication: 05 August 2014; Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CCO9781139381697.009

  5. 12 de jun. de 2015 · Yeats bridged literary styles of the 19th and 20th Centuries and helped usher in modernism (Credit: Alamy) His influence on today’s writers may be as great as Shakespeare’s.

  6. Modern Classic: William Butler Yeats. By The Editors. Born in Dublin on June 13, 1865, William Butler Yeats was gifted with prodigious energies, pursuing interests not only in poetry, but in esoteric philosophy, folklore, painting, theater, and politics.

  7. by Pericles Lewis The short lyric “Who Goes With Fergus?” (1892) is representative of William Butler Yeats‘s symbolist phase, in which he aimed, not at the simple one-to-one correspondences of allegory, but at a more subtle symbolism, resistant to decipherment.