In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markievicz

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Mapa Mental sobre In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markievicz, creado por maish98 el 17/03/2015.
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Resumen del Recurso

In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markievicz
  1. Context
    1. Yeats wrote this poem in memoriam of Eva and Con
      1. They were born in the Lissadell House and into an aristocratic family
      2. They were friends from his youth and both sisters came from a rich family. However they both gave this up to fight against social injustice.
        1. Eva Gore-Booth played a big role in the Suffragette movement
          1. And was also part of the Irish Women's Rights Movement
            1. Eva was also a writer and took advice from Yeats about her writing
          2. Constance Markievicz, however, was an Irish Revolutionist
            1. She was sentenced to death after Easter 1916 but was then pardoned. Due to the public outcry, of her being a woman. She was then imprisoned, as punishment.
            2. Published in October 1927
            3. Aging and Time
              1. 'The innocent and the beautiful Have no enemy but time'
                1. Repetitive
                  1. Empahsise on the beauty they have lost to time
                2. 'When withered old and skeleton-gaunt'
                  1. Eva did not achieve her "utopia", her illusive dream world where everything is equal. Her image of perfection remains unfulfilled because of the destructive consequences of age .
                  2. 'Arise and bid me strike a match And strike another til time catch; Should the conflagration climb.'
                    1. Striking a match - the last straw
                      1. Conflagration - A big fire. An act of defiance? as it destroys time. Cleanses and cleans?
                    2. 'But a raving autumn shears Blossom from summer's wreath'
                      1. Time has ruined the two women.
                        1. "shears" is a violent act. Yeats does not see time as a positive thing but a loss of power and very destructive to our identities.
                          1. Idea of physical and metaphoric decay
                          2. TIME DOES NOT STAND STILL
                          3. Beauty
                            1. 'Two girls in silk kimonos, both Beautiful, one a gazelle.'
                              1. Gazelles and kimonos both have connotations of cultural beauty
                            2. Structure and Form
                              1. Irregular rhyme scheme. Could be reflecting Yeats emotions of discontent
                                1. In the form of an Elergy
                                  1. Loss of physical and spiritual beauty
                                  2. At first, rhyme scheme is abca
                                2. Links
                                  1. EASTER 1916
                                    1. AMONG SCHOOL CHILDREN
                                    2. Human morality
                                      1. old age is an inevitable factor in humanity. This is an aspect Yeats despises...
                                      2. Politics
                                        1. 'The older is condemned to death, Pardoned, drags out lonely years Conspiring amongst the ignorant.'
                                          1. Reference to the event of Easter 1916 and also Constance's association with rebels
                                          2. 'An image of such politics'
                                            1. Eva being an image of a feminist
                                            2. 'All the folly of a fight With a common wrong or right.'
                                              1. Rhyme between fight and right shows the idiocy and childishness of their fighting and rebellion
                                              2. 'Run till all the sages know. We the great gazebo built, They convicted us of guilt'
                                                1. Sages- profoundly wise man
                                                  1. Gazebo- foolishness? or the idea that Ireland is built onto England/ is a smaller structure by England's side.
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