Maud Gonne Essays

  • Among The School Children by William Butler Yeats

    1529 Words  | 4 Pages

    the reader is told of a '"'childish day'"' but also of '"'youthful sympathy.'"' Nevertheless, the young female is generally identified as Maud Gonne, with whom the poet first became acquainted and fell in love when she was in her late teens and he was in his twenties. The reverie ends, but his eyes light upon one of the children, who looks amazingly like Maud when she was that age: '"'She stands before me as a living child.'"' Seeing her as she looked then reminds him of what she looks like now

  • Comparing Mood and Atmosphere of The Pity of Love, Broken Dreams, and The Fisherman

    1107 Words  | 3 Pages

    womanhood, And with the fervour of my youthful eyes, Has set me muttering like a fool. It is as if Yeats has finally accepted Gonne's rejection and is no longer tormented by it. He is much more at peace writing Broken Dreams than with his other Maud Gonne poems. Whilst he still finds his life understandably sad, he no longer expects her to change her mind and, accordingly, he does not write a depressingly bitter poem.

  • Conflicting Themes in The Poetry of W. B. Yeats

    1455 Words  | 3 Pages

    transcendence of the swans in “Wild Swans at Coole”. Yeats wrote this poem in October 1916 after his latest rejection by Maud Gonne, following the death of her husband, John MacBride, in the Easter Rebellion. Yeats therefore reflects on the inertia of his own life, while regathering himself at Lady Gregory’s Coole Park estate. While revolving around the idea that sexual fulfilment with Maud has been lost. Yeats retains the last of his romantic preoccupations in perceiving a spiritual element through the

  • Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop by W.B. Yeats: Themes and Symbolism

    582 Words  | 2 Pages

    Essay - Yeats Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop: Themes and Symbolism W.B. Yeats had a very interesting personal life. He chased after Maud Gonne, only to be rejected four times. Then, when she was widowed, he proposed to her only out of a sense of duty, and was rejected again. He then proposed to her daughter, who was less than half his age. She also rejected his proposal. Soon after, he proposed to Georgie Hyde Lees, another girl half his age. She accepted, and they had a successful marriage,

  • Rhetorical Figures in Leda and the Swan

    1337 Words  | 3 Pages

    "Leda and the Swan." Literature: Structure, Sound, and Sense.  4th ed.  Ed. Laurence Perrine.  New York: Harcourt.  1983.  636 The Spiritual Marriage of Maud Gonne and W.B Yeats (excerpt from Women of the Golden Dawn: Rebels and Priestesses by Mary K. Greer--an account of Yeats's fascination with the beautiful Irish revolutionary Maud Gonne, who inspired his greatest poetry and plays))

  • The Truth of Love Revealed in Adam’s Curse

    1069 Words  | 3 Pages

    Curse” is a poem by William Butler Yeats that was written at a time when his first true love, Maud Gonne, had married Major John MacBride.  This may have caused Yeats much pain and Yeats may have felt as cursed as Adam felt when God had punished man from the Garden of Eden.  This poem, in fact, symbolizes his pain and loss of love that he once had and is a recollection of his memories during happier times with Maud. In the beginning of the poem  “We sat together at one summer’s end/ That Beautiful mild

  • No Second Troy Rhetorical Analysis

    542 Words  | 2 Pages

    epitomizes Yeats conflicting emotions in pursuing a relationship with Maud Gonne. The reader is aware that the speaker, who can be identified as Yeats, is troubled by Gonnes’s revolutionary activities (Greenblatt 2474). Through several rhetorical questions, the speaker expresses his resentment towards Gonne while comparing her to Helen of Troy. Through these comparisons the reader gets a sense the destruction as well as the heartbreak that Gonne caused for Yeats. Yeats begins with a question stating, “Why

  • Sailing to Byzantium”: William Butler Yeats

    1562 Words  | 4 Pages

    The enigmatic man, who is William Butler Yeats, has a life full of intense emotion and feeling that causes his experiences to be quite radical to say the least. His early childhood, interest in occults, and many encounters with questionable women truly shaped his lifetime of poetry in many ways. As well his poem “Sailing to Byzantium” had many complex themes, a central theme of time, and gave interesting views on art and experience. There were people of the poetry world that analyzed William Butler

  • William Butler Yeats’s Life and Achievements

    868 Words  | 2 Pages

    How can one’s life’s work turn into poetry? One can assume that poetry is only cause from despair. William Butler Yeats’s poetry says otherwise. Yeats uses the strength from his long and dedicated background into poetry. From the time spent as a young boy, seeing different religious views from his family motivated him to excel as a poet entering manhood. Being acknowledged as one of the best English-language poets of the 20th century, William Butler Yeats’s plays, notable poetry, and changes in

  • William Butler Yeats

    2882 Words  | 6 Pages

    William Butler Yeats. William Butler Yeats was the major figure in the cultural revolution which developed from the strong nationalistic movement at the end of the 19th century. He dominated the writings of a generation. He established forms and themes which came to be considered as the norms for writers of his generation. Yeats was a confessional poet - that is to say, that he wrote his poetry directly from his own experiences. He was an idealist, with a purpose. This was to create Art for his

  • W. B. Yeats, George Hyde-Lees, and the Automatic Script

    2766 Words  | 6 Pages

    W. B. Yeats, George Hyde-Lees, and the Automatic Script In his biography of Yeats, Richard Ellmann remarks that "Had Yeats died instead of marrying in 1917, he would have been remembered as a remarkable minor poet who achieved a diction more powerful than that of his contemporaries but who, except in a handful of poems, did not have much to say with it" (Ellmann 223). Yet with his marriage to Georgie Hyde-Lees on October 21st, 1917, a vast frontier of possibility opened before Yeats, and through

  • W.B. Yeats' Poetry

    2310 Words  | 5 Pages

    W.B. Yeats' Poetry Many literary critics have observed that over the course of W. B. Yeats’ poetic career, readers can perceive a distinct change in the style of his writing. Most notably, he appears to adopt a far more cynical tone in the poems he generated in the later half of his life than in his earlier pastoral works. This somewhat depressing trend is often attributed to the fact that he is simply becoming more conservative and pessimistic in his declining years, but in truth it represents

  • William Butler Yeats' The Cap and Bells

    2341 Words  | 5 Pages

    Hour Glass”, etc.), Yeats continually portrays the actions of humans as foolish many a times. Coming to him in a dream, “The Cap and Bells” likely acquired its origin from the obsessive infatuation Yeats had with Maud Gonne. Being an acclaimed actress, Yeats most likely perceived Gonne exceeding him in status; her the queen and him the fool. At this time (1894) Yeats was also developing Irish dramas, and therefore his mind ignited dramatic thought even within his dreams. Like many of his poems

  • William Butler Yeats

    1179 Words  | 3 Pages

    nationalism and opposition to violence impressed many people including Yeats. These views helped shape political views that Yeats would hold for the rest of his life. In 1889Yeats met Maude Gonne, a woman he loved unrequitedly for the rest of his life. Yeats asked Gonne to marry him many times but she always turned him down. Gonne was an Irish patriot and an inspiration to... ... middle of paper ... ...thorn-trees By the waters. I herd the old, old men say, ‘All that’s beautiful drifts away Like the waters

  • Butler Yeats

    580 Words  | 2 Pages

    You Are Old” by William Butler Yeats is no exception. Yeats reflects upon his unconditional love for a woman who was not ready for a serious relationship. “When You Are Old” is about Maud Gonne, an Irish nationalist who William Butler Yeats was infatuated with and his unrequited love for her. In the poem, Maud Gonne is reflecting on past loves and relationships. She realizes that Yeats was her only companion who loved her unconditionally. Many loved her, or said they did, but not in every respect

  • Disenchantment with the Modern Age in Yeats' No Second Troy

    1155 Words  | 3 Pages

    Troy" "No Second Troy" expresses Yeats' most direct vision of Maud Gonne, the headstrong Irish nationalist he loved unrequitedly throughout his life. The poem deals with Yeats’ disenchantment with the modern age: blind to true beauty, unheroic, and unworthy of Maud Gonne's ancient nobility and heroism. The "ignorant men," without "courage equal to desire," personify Yeats’ assignment of blame for his failed attempts at obtaining Maud Gonne's love. The poet's vision of his beloved as Helen of Troy

  • He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven

    770 Words  | 2 Pages

    that he wishes he could give his beloved the best that he has to offer. The poem expresses that the author would be willing to make big sacrifices to attain the love of his life, Maud Gonne, but in the end the speaker will not succeed at wooing her, as consequence of the following. Though, Yeats does state that he loves Gonne and says that she is more precious to him than cloths "Enwrought with golden and silver light," he is only saying this to exalt himself in the eyes of others. This is intended

  • The Struggle to remain true to the "Deep Heart's Core"

    916 Words  | 2 Pages

    "Let us go forth, the tellers of tales, and seize whatever prey the heart long for, and have no fear. Everything exists, everything is true, and the Earth is only a little dust under our feet." This quote was openly stated by William Butler Yeats, an Irish writer who showed the meaning of how the human imagination gives meaning to life's struggles. William used his creative power in his writing to symbolize imagination as the center piece of human desires to inspire others and bring life to the creative

  • Literary Analysis Of William Butler Yeats's No Second Troy

    931 Words  | 2 Pages

    Second Troy, tells the narrative of a man questioning his unrequited loves morality and ideology. However, further reading of the poem gives the reader insight into Yeats’s own feelings towards Irish radical, Maud Gonne, a woman to whom he proposed on numerous occasions unsuccessfully. Gonne had always been more radical than Yeats within her efforts to secure Ireland’s independence from Britain in the first decades of the 20th century, but Yeats persisted in receiving her love, dedicating many of

  • The Tree it Literary Works: Annotated Bibliography

    2454 Words  | 5 Pages

    the tree personification. Yeats honors the tree by asking for input so that he can better understand the tree (or perhaps his life). Although it can be argued that the chestnut tree is literal reference, I think that Yeats is referring to Maude Gonne. Gonne had reddish, fiery hair, which is referred to in modern times as “ginger,” but the time that Yeats penned this poem, perhaps... ... middle of paper ... ...eories of Charles Darwin and gives a long quote that is significant to my proposal.