Thoor Ballylee
Thoor Ballylee, home of William Butler Yeats
Thoor Ballylee was
Yeats's monument and symbol; in both aspects it had multiple significance. It
satisified his desire for a rooted place in a known countryside, not far from
Coole and his life-long friend Lady Gregory.To live in a Tower complemented,
perhaps, his alignment with a tradition of cultivated aristocracy which he had
envied and a leisured peace which he had enjoyed.
The tower or castle that Yeats bought was a
sixteenth century Norman castle built by the family de Burgo, or Burke. It
consisted of four floors with one room on each, connected by a spiral stone
stairway built into the seven-foot thickness of the massive outer wall. Each
floor had a window overlooking the river which flowed alongside. At the top
here was a flat roof reached by a final steep flight of steps from the floor
below
The tower had to be
restored before Yeats could live in it. By the summer of 1919 Yeats and his
wife and daughter had moved in. Yeats mentions Ballylee in a letter to Maud
Gonne May 1918.
' We hope to be in Ballylee in a month and
there I dream of making a house that may encourage people to avoid ugly
manufactured things - an ideal poor man's house. Except a very few things
imported as models we should get all made in Galway or Limerick. I am told that
our neighbours are pleased that we are not getting 'grand things but old irish
furniture'
The tower had to be
restored before Yeats could live in it. By the summer of 1919 Yeats and his
wife and daughter had moved in. Yeats mentions Ballylee in a letter to Maud
Gonne May 1918.
' We hope to be in Ballylee in a month and there I
dream of making a house that may encourage people to avoid ugly manufactured
things - an ideal poor man's house. Except a very few things imported as models
we should get all made in Galway or Limerick. I am told that our neighbours are
pleased that we are not getting 'grand things but old irish furniture'
The tower had to be
restored before Yeats could live in it. By the summer of 1919 Yeats and his
wife and daughter had moved in. Yeats mentions Ballylee in a letter to Maud
Gonne May 1918.
' We hope to be in
Ballylee in a month and there I dream of making a house that may encourage
people to avoid ugly manufactured things - an ideal poor man's house. Except a
very few things imported as models we should get all made in Galway or
Limerick. I am told that our neighbours are pleased that we are not getting
'grand things but old Irish furniture’ recorded
commentary can be played on a push-button system. In addition part of the
ground floor has been adapted for an audio-visual presentation on the years of
Yeats's occupancy.
For information on the location of
Thoor Ballylee click
here
|