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The Celtic Twilight
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Margaret
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Jan 07, 2020 05:30AM

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Emily wrote: "I randomly picked it up on Sunday and have read half. It's really short (about 140 pages I think) so a quick read."
Good to know.
Good to know.

It is quite rambling and anecdotal, but I get a real sense of social history in Ireland in the early twentieth century, through the mix of folklore and Irish Catholicism.
These are the kind of people who inhabit Hannah Kent's The Good People.

Amanda wrote: "Free from Amazon Kindle and Gutenberg https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10459"
Thank you Amanda!
Thank you Amanda!

It is epidsodic and obviously doesn't have anything in the way of plot, but it wasn't just jotted down as is. I read somewhere (possibly the introduction to my version) that Yeats was unsatisfied with much of what he had written, having written it in a somewhat ornate, portentous style that was popular at the time, and that a friend of his recommended paring it down and trying to make the language as simple as possible. He did so, some years after the writing, and it saved the material for him (proof positive that it's harder to write something simple than something complex!)
I believe it was also a central text to what Yeats and his friends were trying to do... rebuild a notion of Irishness and Irish culture as distinct from the British who had ruled Ireland for hundreds of years. James Joyce, for example, was quite critical of this movement, thinking it misrepresented Ireland (as almost nobody spoke Gaelic any more at the time) but many intellectuals were relearning Gaelic and celebrating folklore sources, and Yeats was part of this movement (the Celtic Revival or Irish Literary Revival). It's likely that rather than just chatting to people and writing down what they said, he specifically went looking for the kind of people who would tell this kind of story.
Emily wrote: "I believe it was also a central text to what Yeats and his friends were trying to do... rebuild a notion of Irishness and Irish culture as distinct from the British who had ruled Ireland for hundreds of years. James Joyce, for example, was quite critical of this movement, thinking it misrepresented Ireland (as almost nobody spoke Gaelic any more at the time) but many intellectuals were relearning Gaelic and celebrating folklore sources, and Yeats was part of this movement (the Celtic Revival or Irish Literary Revival). It's likely that rather than just chatting to people and writing down what they said, he specifically went looking for the kind of people who would tell this kind of story."
Interesting history, Emily. So many fairytale collections were written for similar reasons--an attempt to preserve the folklore and culture of a society from oppressors.
I have read parts of this, but never the entire text. I have some articles due the 15th that require me to read some recent and upcoming releases, but after that, I'll check this out and join the discussion.
Interesting history, Emily. So many fairytale collections were written for similar reasons--an attempt to preserve the folklore and culture of a society from oppressors.
I have read parts of this, but never the entire text. I have some articles due the 15th that require me to read some recent and upcoming releases, but after that, I'll check this out and join the discussion.
Emily wrote: "Hazelmaddie wrote: "The book is fine so far, i'm going to put down and try something else though. It's an interesting collection of myths, but it feels like he just jotted them down and published a..."
This is interesting to know Emily! Thanks for sharing this information!
This is interesting to know Emily! Thanks for sharing this information!

Like Maddie though, I've taking breaks to read some more plotty fiction as I go. ;-)


I also have something in a similar vein from the British Museum's big 'Celts' exhibition a while back https://www.michaelharvey.org/new-blo...
If you are after a discussion of Celtic identity from a Welsh perspective you could try The Taliesin Tradition by Emyr Humphreys


Yes, thank you for the links and also the reminder that all cultures and languages can be subject to appropriation.


I'm glad I wasn't alone, Annette. It took me more than I realized it would to get into this book. I had to stop and restart a number of times before I was able to adapt to his style of writing, but I still felt that the best of his stories were in the middle. Still, this has awakened my desire to go to Ireland and visit the mystical land =)