William Butler Yeats was born on June 13th, 1865 in Sandymount, Dublin, Ireland. Yeats is an Irish poet, known across the world for being an astounding balladist. Yeats was part of the Anglo-Irish minority, in other words, he was privileged and the minority he was part of controlled economic, political, social and cultural life of Ireland. Most of the people in the Anglo-Irish minority were English, although they were born in Ireland, but Yeats made sure everyone knew he was Irish. With that being said, he stood out. In 1885, Yeats saw one of his poems in the Dublin University Review, which was quite big for him at the time. He was astonished. In that same year, Yeats met a role-model of his, John O'Leary. After meeting O'Leary, Yeats …show more content…
Yeats' Irish identity significantly influenced his work. All of his work that he has done is because of him being Irish. Yeats stands strong with his ethnic minority. People from all over the world have looked up to Yeats because he has changed people's lives in his country and everywhere else due to his work. He figured that sticking with his own identity would be the best for him and it very well did. As I said earlier, his creativity was all over the place. He has done Irish plays, Irish songs, Irish folklore and Irish legends. "When I first wrote I went here and there for my subjects as my reading led me, and preferred to all other countries Arcadia and the India of romance, but presently I convinced myself ... that I should never go for the scenery of a poem to any country but my own, and I think that I shall hold to that conviction to the end." said directly from William Butler Yeats. He took pride in his country. When Yeats moved to London with his family, he was even more devoted to writing and focusing on his country because he was thousands of miles away. Being so far away from your country can influence beyond expectations. All of Yeats' work evovled around his Irish …show more content…
A year later in 1923, he was awarded a Nobel Prize in Literature. He was then considered a "celebrity" although he was famous far more prior to that. ("In 1936 his Oxford Book of Modern Verse, 1892–1935, a gathering of the poems he loved, was published. Still working on his last plays, he completed The Herne’s Egg, his most raucous work, in 1938. Yeats’s last two verse collections, New Poems and Last Poems and Two Plays, appeared in 1938 and 1939 respectively.") -