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Zusatztext From reviews of Volume I:`magnificent ... The detail is immense and spot on! so that the footnotes read as a continuous! densely peopled! unfailingly informative documentary on the life and times of the sedulous correspondent ... the start of an edition that is going to be one of the great publishing events of the decade.' Seamus Heaney! Observer Informationen zum Autor John Kelly edited Volume I of Yeats Collected Letters. He lives in Oxford. Ronald Schuchard is Professor of English at Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, where he also lives. He was visiting fellow to Wolfson College, Oxford in 1986/7, and has written many articles for the Yeats Annual, and other literary journals. Klappentext The first two volumes of Yeats's collected letters met with enormous critical acclaim. This third, like the others, presents the letters complete with characteristic misspellings and peculiar punctuation, and gives a full flavour of his idiosyncrasy and haste as a correspondent. The letters are in themselves fascinating and highly revealing of the man behind the poetry. They show both the political fervour and the poetic sensibility, and represent Yeats as friend,adversary, critic, and man passionately involved in the state of Ireland, culturally and politically. These are the years which saw the setting-up of the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, as the permanent home of the Irish National Theatre Company run by his friends the Fays.Annotation is particularly full and far-reaching, supplying a wealth of hitherto unresearched information about the background to the letters, and in itself adding very considerably to what is known of Yeats and his circle. There is a biographical register of the main figures who appear in the volume, and a full index. Zusammenfassung Showing both the political fervour and the poetic sensibility, this collection of letters represent Yeats' as friend, adversary, critic, and man passionately involved in the state of Ireland, culturally and politically. It is suitable to those interested in the development of modern poetry, drama, and cultural history....