Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism


Abbey Theatre in the Irish Literary Renaissance | W. B. Yeats (interview date 25 May 1910)

W. B. Yeats (interview date 25 May 1910)

SOURCE: Yeats, W. B. “Irish National Drama.” In The Abbey Theatre: Interviews and Recollections, edited by E. H. Mikhail, pp. 98-100. London, United Kingdom: Macmillan Press Ltd., 1988.

[In the following interview, originally published in 1910, one of the founders of the Abbey Theatre discusses the peasant plays of the Abbey Theatre as part of a dramatic movement “that is representative of the social life and the economic conditions of Ireland.”]

‘The side of our work with which we have achieved our greatest successes,’ said Mr. Yeats to our representative, ‘is undoubtedly the peasant comedy and tragedy. We have placed upon the stage for the first time the real Irish life as opposed to the traditional. The dialect of Lever and of Lover1 was a composite thing, and displayed a very limited understanding of the peasant mind. The proper understanding of the peasant mind only...

[The entire page is 1098 words long]

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