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Topic: Coole Park


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  Coole Lady review
The manifest achievement of the McCready’s Coole Lady is the play’s economy.
She remembers her marriage in 1880 to Sir William Gregory of Coole Park, Galway, a favorite of Queen Victoria and a Governor of Ceylon (a man some 35 years her senior and a widower).
Coole Lady is not a nostalgic monologue, nor a sentimental memory play, but rather a play which reminds us of the big achievements of Lady Augusta Gregory and, perhaps more important, introduces us to the character of the woman behind those achievements.
www.yeatssociety.org /coole.html   (1683 words)

  
 Marjorie Perloff
Keynote Address, "Jolas and Multilingual Poetics," Karakis Conference on Greek Avant-Garde and Diaspora, U of Missouri, St. Louis, April 1999.
Keynote Address: British Society of American Studies, April 6, 2001, Keele University, UK, "Watchman and Spy: Johns, Cage, O’Hara in the Cool Sixties.
"'Another Emblem There': Theme and Convention in Yeats's 'Coole Park and Ballylee 1931'," Journal of English and Germanic Philology 69 (April 1970): 223-40.
www.wings.buffalo.edu /epc/authors/perloff/vita.html   (8908 words)

  
 [No title]
1888 (Mar.) Yeats family moves to Bedford Park
1917 (Mar.) W. buys Thoor Ballylee, a Norman tower near Coole Park in Galway
1917 (Nov.) The Wild Swans at Coole published
research.umbc.edu /~mccready/yeats2.html   (805 words)

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