Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. 88 This content downloaded from 138.237.48.248 on Tue, 27 Jan 2015 17:01:27 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions of a Raising Her Voice for Justice: Maud Gonne and the United Irishman columns by female journalists; and alerted readers to the na tionalist writings of women featured in other newspapers.24 The example of the United ...

  2. poemanalysis.com › william-butler-yeats › no-second-troyNo Second Troy (Poem + Analysis)

    Maud Gonne was the Irish revolutionary whom Yeats loved but who rejected his proposals of marriage. ‘ No Second Troy’ was written after the final rejection of Yeats’s love offer and sudden marriage to John MacBride, who, ironically was later made the martyr of Irish Freedom Movement by the efforts of Yeats himself.

  3. nl.wikipedia.org › wiki › Maud_GonneMaud Gonne - Wikipedia

    Maud Gonne werd geboren in Tongham, [1] in de buurt van Farnham ( Surrey ), als Edith Maud Gonne, de oudste dochter van Thomas Gonne (1835–1886) – kapitein bij het cavelerieregiment de 17th Lancers ( lansiers ), wiens voorouders afkomstig waren uit Caithness in Schotland – en Edith Frith Cook (1844–1871). Haar moeder stierf toen zij 4 ...

  4. Maud Gonne på Commons. Maud Gonne MacBride ( irsk: Maud Nic Ghoinn Bean Mac Giolla Bhríghde, født 21. desember 1866, død 27. april 1953) var en engelskfødt irsk revolusjonær, feminist og delvis skuespiller, også husket for hennes turbulente forhold til den irske poeten og nobelprisvinneren i litteratur, William Butler Yeats.

  5. 3 de jan. de 2017 · Maud Gonne was the beautiful and charismatic inspiration of W.B. Yeats’s love poetry, a leading activist in the Irish republican movement and the founder of Inghinidhe na hÉireann ...

  6. 2 de jun. de 2019 · Gonne was a celebrity after all - a wealthy Irish beauty and political rabblement rouser. Her affair with Millevoye didn’t exactly escape their “corridor gossip,” as Gonne called it. The best known among Maud Gonne’s suitors is, of course, William Butler Yeats, whom Gonne and her daughter Iseult referred to as “Poor Willie.”

  7. Pandora, 1993 - Biography & Autobiography - 211 pages. In this biography, Margaret Ward gives the reader a portrait of Maud Gonne as a significant figure in Irish politics and as a remarkable woman. She dispels the popular myth that Maud was little more than a flamboyant beauty and the inspiration of W.B. Yeats's great love poetry.