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Synge And The Ireland Of His Time-第1章

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PREFACE

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at times during synges last illness; lady gregory and i would speak of his work and always find some pleasure in the thought that unlike ourselves; who had made our experiments in public; he would leave to the world nothing to be wished away??nothing that was not beautiful or powerful in itself; or necessary as an expression of his life and thought。 when he died we were in much anxiety; for a letter written before his last illness; and printed in the selection of his poems published at the cuala press; had shown that he was anxious about the fate of his manuscripts and scattered writings。 on the evening of the night he died he had asked that i might e to him the next day; and my diary of the days following his death shows how great was our anxiety。 presently however; all seemed to have e right; for the executors sent me the following letter that had been found among his papers; and promised to carry out his wishes。

may 4th; 1908 dear yeats;

this is only to go to you if anything should go wrong with me under the operation or after it。 i am a little bothered about my papers。 i have a certain amount of verse that i think would be worth preserving; possibly also the 1st and 3rd acts of deirdre; and then i have a lot of kerry and wicklow articles that would go together into a book。 the other early stuff i wrote i have kept as a sort of curiosity; but i am anxious that it should not get into print。 i wonder could you get someone??say 。。。 who is now in dublin to go through them for you and do whatever you and lady gregory think desirable。 it is rather a hard thing to ask you but i do not want my good things destroyed or my bad things printed rashly?? especially a morbid thing about a mad fiddler in paris which i hate。 do what you can??good luck。

j。m。 synge

in the summer of 1909; the executors sent me a large bundle of papers; cuttings from newspapers and magazines; manuscript and typewritten prose and verse; put together and annotated by synge himself before his last illness。 i spent a portion of each day for weeks reading and re?reading early dramatic writing; poems; essays; and so forth; and with the exception of ninety pages which have been published without my consent; made consulting lady gregory from time to time the selection of his work published by messrs。 maunsel。 it is because of these ninety pages; that neither lady gregorys name nor mine appears in any of the books; and that the introduction which i now publish; was withdrawn by me after it had been advertised by the  publishers。 before the publication of the books the executors discovered a scrap of paper with a sentence by j。m。 synge saying that selections might be taken from his essays on the congested districts。 i do not know if this was written before his letter to me; which made no mention of them; or contained his final directions。 the matter is unimportant; for the publishers decided to ignore my offer to select as well as my original decision to reject; and for this act of theirs they have given me no reasons except reasons of convenience; which neither lady gregory nor i could accept。

w。b。 yeats。

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Synge And The Ireland Of His TimeI


j。m。 synge and the ireland of his time

on saturday; january 26th; 1907; i was lecturing in aberdeen; and when my lecture was over i was given a telegram which said; play great success。 it had been sent from dublin after the second act of the playboy of the western world; then being performed for the first time。 after one in the morning; my host brought to my bedroom this second telegram; audience broke up in disorder at the word shift。 i knew no more until i got the dublin papers on my way from belfast to dublin on tuesday morning。 on the monday night no word of the play had been heard。 about forty young men had sat on the front seats of the pit; and stamped and shouted and blown trumpets from the rise to the fall of the curtain。 on the tuesday night also the forty young men were there。 they wished to silence what they considered a slander upon irelands womanhood。 irish women would never sleep under the same roof with a young man without a chaperon; nor admire a murderer; nor use a word like shift; nor could anyone recognise the country men and women of davis and kickham in these poetical; violent; grotesque persons; who used the name of god so freely; and spoke of all things that hit their fancy。

a patriotic journalism which had seen in synges capricious imagination the enemy of all it would have young men believe; had for years prepared for this hour; by that which is at once the greatest and most ignoble power of journalism; the art of repeating a name again and again with some ridiculous or evil association。 the preparation had begun after the first performance of the shadow of the glen; synges first play; with an assertion made in ignorance but repeated in dishonesty; that he had taken his fable and his characters; not from his own mind nor that profound knowledge of cot and curragh he was admitted to possess; but from a writer of the roman decadence。 some spontaneous dislike had been but natural; for genius like his can but slowly; amid what it has of harsh and strange; set forth the nobility of its beauty; and the depth of its passion; but the frenzy that would have silenced his master?work was; like most violent things artificial; the defence of virtue by those that have but little; which is the pomp and gallantry of journalism and its right to govern the world。

as i stood there watching; knowing well that i saw the dissolution of a school of patriotism that held sway over my youth; synge came and stood beside me; and said; a young doctor has just told me that he can hardly keep himself from jumping on to a seat; and pointing out in that howling mob those whom he is treating for venereal disease。

m。



Synge And The Ireland Of His TimeII

小说
thomas davis; whose life had the moral simplicity which can give to actions the lasting influence that style alone can give to words; had understood that a country which has no national institutions must show its young men images for the affections; although they be but diagrams of what it should be or may be。 he and his school imagined the soldier; the orator; the patriot; the poet; the chieftain; and above all the peasant; and these; as celebrated in essay and songs and stories; possessed so many virtues that no matter how england; who as mitchell said had the ear of the world; might slander us; ireland; even though she could not e at the worlds other ear; might go her way unabashed。 but ideas and images which have to be understood and  loved by large numbers of people; must appeal to no rich personal experience; no patience of study; no delicacy of sense; and if at rare moments some memory of the dead can take its strength from one; at all other moments manner and matter will be rhetorical; conventional; sentimental; and language; because it is carried beyond life perpetually; will be as wasted as the thought; with unmeaning pedantries and silences; and a dread of all that has salt and savour。 after a while; in a land that has given itself to agitation over?much; abstract thoughts are raised up be
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