Mosada: "If suffering brings wisdom, I would wish to be less wise."
By W B Yeats
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About this ebook
William Butler Yeats (1865 – 1939) is best described as Ireland’s national poet in addition to being one of the major twentieth-century literary figures of the English tongue. To many literary critics, Yeats represents the ‘Romantic poet of modernism,’ which is quite revealing about his extraordinary style that combines between the outward emphasis on the expression of emotions and the extensive use of symbolism, imagery and allusions. Yeats also wrote prose and drama and established himself as the spokesman of the Irish cause. His fame was greatly boosted mainly after he received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1923. His life was marked by his many love stories, by his great interest in oriental mysticism and occultism as well as by political engagement since he served as an Irish senator for two terms. Today, although William Butler Yeats’s contribution to literary modernism and to Irish nationalism remains incontestable. With Mosada Yeats creates a dramatic poem and presented as a play. Once more his talents easily stretch to create a work of rich rewards.
W B Yeats
William Butler Yeats was born in 1865 in County Dublin. With his much-loved early poems such as 'The Stolen Child', and 'He Remembers Forgotten Beauty', he defined the Celtic Twilight mood of the late-Victorian period and led the Irish Literary Renaissance. Yet his style evolved constantly, and he is acknowledged as a major figure in literary modernism and twentieth-century European letters. T. S. Eliot described him as 'one of those few whose history is the history of their own time, who are part of the consciousness of an age which cannot be understood without them'. W. B. Yeats died in 1939.
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Mosada - W B Yeats
Mosada by William Butler Yeats
A dramatic poem
William Butler Yeats (1865 – 1939) was born in Dublin, educated both there and in London.
He is best described as Ireland’s national poet in addition to being one of the major twentieth-century literary figures of the English tongue. To many literary critics, Yeats represents the ‘Romantic poet of modernism’ – an extraordinary style that combines the outward emphasis on the expression of emotions and the extensive use of symbolism, imagery and allusions.
Yeats also wrote extensively for prose and drama and established himself as the spokesman of the Irish cause.
His fame was greatly boosted after he received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1923.
Yeat’s life was marked by his many love stories, by his great interest in oriental mysticism and occultism as well as by political engagement; he served as an Irish senator for two terms.
Today William Butler Yeats’s contribution to literary modernism and to Irish nationalism remains incontestable.
With Mosada Yeats creates a dramatic poem and presented as a play. Once more his talents easily stretch to create a work of rich rewards.
Index Of Contents
A Frontispiece Portrait of the Author by J. B. YEATS.
Mosada Scene I
Mosada Scene II
Mosada Scene III
W. B. Yeats – A Short Biography
MOSADA.
And my Lord Cardinal hath had strange days in his youth.
Extract from a Memoir of the Fifteenth Century.
MOSADA,