Abstract
When o’leary died I could not bring myself to go to his funeral, though I had been once his close fellow-worker, for I shrank from seeing about his grave so many whose Nationalism was different from anything he had taught or that I could share. He belonged, as did his friend John F. Taylor, to the romantic conception of Irish Nationality on which Lionel Johnson and myself founded, so far as it was founded on anything but literature, our art and our Irish criticism. Perhaps his spirit, if it can care for or can see old friends now, will accept this apology for an absence that has troubled me. I learned much from him and much from Taylor, who will always seem to me the greatest orator I have heard; and that ideal Ireland, perhaps from this out an imaginary Ireland, in whose service I labour, will always be in many essentials their Ireland. They were the last to speak an understanding of life and Nationality, built up by the generation of Grattan, which read Homer and Virgil, and by the generation of Davis, which had been pierced through by the idealism of Mazzini,1 and of the European revolutionists of the mid-century.
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© 1961 Mrs W. B. Yeats
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Yeats, W.B. (1961). Poetry and Tradition. In: Essays and Introductions. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-00618-2_22
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-00618-2_22
Publisher Name: Palgrave Macmillan, London
Print ISBN: 978-1-349-00620-5
Online ISBN: 978-1-349-00618-2
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