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  1. 21 de mai. de 2024 · In 1889 Yeats met Maud Gonne, an Irish beauty, ardent and brilliant. From that moment, as he wrote, “the troubling of my life began.” He fell in love with her, but his love was hopeless. Maud Gonne liked and admired him, but she was not in love with him.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 28 de mai. de 2024 · La poesia molto probabilmente fu scritta pensando a Maud Gonne, attrice e attivista irlandese impegnata nel femminismo e per liberare l’Irlanda dal controllo Britannico. Yeats incontrò per la prima volta Gonne nel 1889, quando aveva 23 anni, e se ne innamorò immediatamente.

  3. 10 de mai. de 2024 · The great love of Yeats' life was the Irish actress and revolutionary Maud Gonne, who was equally famous for her intense nationalist politics and her beauty. In W.B. Yeats: A Life , biographer Robert Fitzroy Foster describes Gonne as 'majestic' and 'unearthly', a woman whose 'classic beauty came straight out of epic poetry' (88).

  4. Há 3 dias · There were constant mentions of Gonne’s epic beauty but in all the pictures they had, she looked like a man dressed as a woman. And not a very attractive man. And with a giant pointy chin. And a thousand yard stare. Maude Gonne. They had pictures of Yeats’ other lovers. They didn’t look much better.

  5. 22 de mai. de 2024 · Always mentioned with respect and admiration by her more famous contemporaries-Yeats, .£, Maud Gonne, Thomas MacDonagh, to name a few-Milligan has not been accorded her rightful place as one of the foremost women of the Irish revolutionary period.

  6. Há 4 dias · Maud Gonne, for example, viewed the ‘nurturing and teaching of children … as important activities in their own right and not merely as the means to a more radical end’, as scholars such as Karen Steele have suggested (p. 115). At times there’s almost an air of debunking.

  7. 22 de mai. de 2024 · Karen Steele Raising Her Voice for Justice: Maud Gonne and the United Irishman Feminist critics have often claimed that an Irish nationalist identity is inherently chauvinistic. Eavan Boland, for example, has repeatedly described the challenges for a woman poet writing in a constraining national tradition that emblematizes females as ...