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  1. William Butler Yeats was infatuated with Maud Gonne, an Irish nationalist and English heiress, since the time they met when she was 23. Yeats’ poetry was heavily influenced by her, and he had a lifelong admiration for her.

  2. In 1889, Yeats met Maud Gonne, a 23-year-old English heiress and ardent Irish nationalist. [ c ] She was eighteen months younger than Yeats and later claimed she met the poet as a "paint-stained art student."

  3. She died in 1951, when she was 44. During her marriage to Raymond Lovell she had an affair with Yeats. When they met in 1934, Yeats was 69 and Ruddock`was 27. Their affair was conducted fitfully over the next few years. The affair broke down and Ruddock became mentally unstable.

  4. The schoolgirl he looks upon now seems to be the old Maud reincarnated as a young woman, ‘a living child’. In the fourth stanza, he pictures Maud now, later in life, ageing as he himself is. It’s as if her late beauty was fashioned by a Renaissance artist.

  5. May 11, 2020 · William Butler Yeats (1865-1939) is one of the greatest of all Irish poets. His first collection, Crossways, appeared in 1889 when he was still in his mid-twenties, and his early poetry bore the clear influence of Romanticism.

  6. Aug 6, 1999 · 'You Are Too Old' There are Yeats's encounters with the pricklier figures of 20th-century letters. When he met James Joyce, who was 17 years his junior, Joyce reputedly said: ''I have met you...

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  8. Aug 31, 2005 · From his wife's communications with the spirit world, and his own occult studies, Yeats developed the elaborate system of symbols used extensively in his work from A Vision (1925) onward. Harriet Monroe had met Yeats in Chicago in 1912 while he was on an American tour.

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