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  1. Anne Yeats is known for Landscape, still life and figure painting, theatre design. Anne Butler Yeats (1919-2001) The Irish painter and theatre designer Anne Yeats was born in Dublin in 1919, the daughter of the poet William Butler Yeats and a niece of the painter Jack B. Yeats and botanic artist Elizabeth Yeats.

  2. Yeats, William Butler (1865–1939), poet and dramatist, was born 13 June 1865 at Georgeville, Sandymount Avenue, Dublin, the eldest child of John Butler Yeats (qv) (1839–1922) and Susan Mary Yeats (née Pollexfen; 1841–1900). The couple had six children: besides William there were two other sons, one of whom died in infancy, and three ...

  3. William Butler Yeats. 1865–1939. DN-0071801, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago History Museum. William Butler Yeats is widely considered to be one of the greatest poets of the 20th century. He belonged to the Protestant, Anglo-Irish minority that had controlled the economic, political, social, and cultural life of Ireland since ...

  4. W. B. Yeats. William Butler Yeats [a] (13 June 1865 – 28 January 1939) was an Irish poet, dramatist and writer, and one of the foremost figures of 20th-century literature. He was a driving force behind the Irish Literary Revival, and along with Lady Gregory founded the Abbey Theatre, serving as its chief during its early years.

  5. William Butler Yeats (1865-1939) Poet, Dramatist, Man of the Theatre W.B. Yeats, generally acknowledged to be the greatest poet of the modern era, lived an extraordinarily rich and productive life as the founder and guiding spirit of the Irish Literary Revival and the Abbey Theatre, the National Theatre of Ireland.

  6. Anne Yeats spent her first 3 years between Ballylee County Galway and Oxford before her family moved to 82 Merrion Square, Dublin in 1922. She was very sick as a child. She spent three years in two different hospitals.

  7. Yeats, unlike Pound or Eliot, the poets with whom he is most closely connected in the early decades of the twentieth century, awkwardly occupies the roles of eminent precursor, revolutionary pioneer, sceptical antagonist and belated exponent of modernism. Multiplying such complications, in his later work, he appears in part to renege on some of ...