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  1. 8 de mar. de 2019 · Maud spoke of the clear political necessity of the Queen’s visit to “the country she hates and whose inhabitants are the victims of the criminal policy of her reign, the survivors of sixty years of organised famine”. She said that the political importance of the Queen’s journey was to ask Ireland for soldiers. Having “sacrificed all ...

  2. 19 de jan. de 2013 · Yeats would propose to Gonne in 1891, and be refused; largely through Maud's influence, Yeats would become involved with Irish nationalism, later joining the Irish Republican Brotherhood. In a quotation to which many a man through history might nod in agreement, Yeats would later refer to his meeting with Gonne, saying, "all the trouble of my life began" then.

  3. Maud Gonne est la fille de Thomas Gonne, un colonel de l’armée britannique issu d'une riche famille irlandaise et d'Edith Cook. Deux ans après sa naissance, son père est affecté en Irlande. En 1871, sa mère meurt prématurément. Elle est envoyée à Paris pour y être élevée. En 1882, après un séjour à Rome, elle retrouve son père ...

  4. Maud Gonne. Maud Gonne MacBride (en irlandés: Maud Nic Ghoinn Bean Mac Giolla Bhríghde, 21 de diciembre de 1866-27 de abril de 1953) fue una revolucionaria irlandesa, de origen inglés, sufragista y actriz, especialmente recordada por su relación turbulenta con el poeta William Butler Yeats.

  5. Maud Gonne, the daughter of a colonel in the British Army, was born on 20th December, in Aldershot in 1865. After her mother's early death she was sent to be educated in Paris. Her father was from a wealth Irish family and in 1882 she joined him in Dublin. Maude Gonne's father died in 1886 and left her financially independent.

  6. 7 de jan. de 2015 · Born in England on December 21, 1866, Maud Gonne came from a wealthy Anglo-Irish family from Mayo. Maud’s mother died while she was very young and her father, a captain in the British Army, sent her to boarding school in France. Her father was posted in Dublin in 1882 and Maud joined him there.

  7. Yeats had a happy marriage with someone else. After her husband was executed in Dublin in 1916 for his part in the Easter Rising, Gonne felt it was safe for her to return to Ireland and Yeats proposed to her for the final time. Gonne rejected him and in his desperation and confusion Yeats asked Gonne’s daughter, Iseult to marry him.