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  1. Walter de la Mare, Bertha Georgie Yeats (née Hyde-Lees), William Butler Yeats, unknown woman, summer 1930; photo by Lady Ottoline Morrell. Georgie Hyde-Lees Yeats (born Bertha Hyde-Lees, 1892 – 1968) was the wife of the poet William Butler Yeats.

  2. 5 de dez. de 2018 · The newly married Yeatsfamous for lines like “Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold” and “I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree”—was also the newly twice-rejected Yeats. Georgie was his third in a series of quick-fire marriage proposals that began with his longtime obsession, Maud Gonne.

  3. 1 de mar. de 2013 · After his marriage to Bertha Georgie Hyde Lees in a register office in Paddington on 20 October 1917, W. B. Yeats fell into ‘great gloom’. He accused himself of having ‘betrayed three people’, his ex-lover Maud Gonne, Gonne's daughter Iseult who had rejected his proposal of marriage earlier that year, and his new wife.

    • Barry Sheils
    • 2013
  4. THE last thing Mrs. William Butler Yeats wanted was a biography. Georgie Hyde Lees was an ex-art student with some experience of dabbling in the spirit world and a comfortable private...

  5. 18 de mai. de 2011 · This is one way of describing the life of Bertha Georgie Hyde Lees Yeats, the fascinating woman who devoted her entire adult life to the needs and, after his death, reputation of an...

  6. 20 de fev. de 2003 · Thus in October 1917 George Hyde-Lees found herself on her honeymoon with W.B. Yeats, who was suffering from nervous stomach disorders. They went first to his flat in London and then to a hotel on the edge of Ashdown Forest, where he received a note from Iseult wishing him well.

  7. 22 de fev. de 2013 · YEATS’S FIRST extant letters to his 24-year-old fiancee, Georgie Hyde Lees, were written from Coole. The 52-year-old suitor had travelled there from London to gain Lady Gregory’s...