237-] English Literature
W. B. Yeats Summary
1865 – 1939
Born
in Sandymount, Dublin, Ireland, on June 13, 1865, William Butler Yeats was the
son of the well-known Irish painter, John Butler Yeats. He spent his childhood
in County Sligo, where his parents were raised, and in London. He returned to
Dublin at the age of fifteen to continue his education and to study painting,
but quickly discovered that he preferred poetry. Born into the Anglo-Irish
landowning class, Yeats became involved with the Celtic Revival, a movement
against the cultural influences of English rule in Ireland during the Victorian
period, which sought to promote the spirit of Ireland’s native heritage. Though
Yeats never learned Irish Gaelic himself, his writing at the turn of the
century drew extensively from sources in Irish mythology and folklore. Also a
potent influence on his poetry was the Irish revolutionary, Maud Gonne, whom he
met in 1889, a woman equally famous for her passionate nationalist politics and
her beauty. Though she married another man in 1903 and grew apart from Yeats
(and Yeats himself was eventually married to another woman, Georgie Hyde Lees),
she remained a powerful figure in his poetry.
Yeats
was deeply involved in politics in Ireland and, in the twenties, despite Irish
independence from England, his verse reflected a pessimism about the political
situation in Ireland and the rest of Europe, paralleling the increasing
conservatism of his American counterparts in London, T. S. Eliot and Ezra
Pound. His work after 1910 was strongly influenced by Pound, becoming more
modern in its concision and imagery, but Yeats never abandoned his strict
adherence to traditional verse forms. He had a life-long interest in mysticism
and the occult, which was off-putting to some readers, but he remained
uninhibited in advancing his idiosyncratic philosophy, and his poetry continued
to grow stronger as he grew older. Appointed a senator of the Irish Free State
in 1922, he is remembered as an important cultural leader, a major playwright
(he was one of the founders of the famous Abbey Theatre in Dublin), and as one
of the greatest poets in any language of the twentieth century.
William
Butler Yeats was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1923 and died on
January 28, 1939, in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France.
No comments:
Post a Comment