Preview

Cathleen Ni Houlihan

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
350 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Cathleen Ni Houlihan
Cathleen Ni Houlihan is a play written by William Butler Yeats. The setting of Cathleen Ni Houlihan is Killala. Killala is a small village, which located in Ballina, Ireland. It is an important place in Irish history. Before Ireland gained independence from Britain through the Irish War of Independence in the end of 1921 or in the middle of 1922(It is only approximate since the exact date could not be found), three Irish Rebellions occurred in 1641, 1798 and 1916 respectively. Irish Rebellion 1798 which happened in Killala Bay has its story told on the play of Cathleen Ni Houlihan. According to Irish legend, Cathleen Ni Houlihan as known as Poor Old Woman, which translated from Sean-Bhean Bhocht, is a personification of Ireland. In my opinion, Cathleen Ni Houlihan is a mirror of the spirit of Irish unity. It showed Yeats’ patriotism too. We could prove it through some lines in the play. For example, Old woman said “The hope of getting my beautiful fields back again; the hope of putting the strangers out of my house.” The fields that mentioned in the play are referring to four provinces of Ireland. There are Connaught, Ulster, Leinster and Munster. Besides, the strangers refer to those English people who invaded Ireland. She can never rest until the English left the place and returned all the lands back to her. Second, Michael shows his love for his country by joining the rebellion war voluntarily.
From the very beginning of the story, it is clearly show that Peter and Bridget are concerned in Michael’s wedding preparation whereas Patrick is more interested in the noise outside. Peter has built his wealth from scratch so Bridge attaches great importance to Michael’s wedding but Peter is more occupied himself with the money (Delia’s fortune) that Michael brings back. Through the Patrick’s line “Will Delia remember, do you think, to bring the greyhound pup she promised me when she would be coming to the house?” we know that Delia is from a wealthy family because

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    This shows how the Irish really feel about themselves and others. It also shows how they defend themselves against the oppressing Americans of other, more affluent descendents. With this Mackey also says about the families who talked about his behind his back that if he was old enough to understand he would’ve “given it right back.”…

    • 1099 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Last Look” is no exception to the recurring theme of referring to local Irish people that is evident in much of Heaney’s poetry. Heaney talks about the…

    • 1522 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Elizabethans thought of the Irish to be less then human, this attitude was particularly expressed by an contemporary English observer who said ' ....are more uncivil, more uncleanly, more barbarous in their customs and demeanours than in any part of the world known'. This shows how their habits and customs had been critiqued and used against them in a negative nature. Furthermore, Ireland assumed England's new government was going to be ineffective like the last which held as an excuse for the governments rigour ' the Irish live like beasts' emphasising how they didn't see the Irish as humans but as animals. Therefore allowing them to justify their reasons for wanting to sort out Ireland. It also shows that Elizabeth knew what Ireland thought of her and how they somewhat undermined her authority by their assumptions, therefore influencing how she treated the Irish back.…

    • 1354 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Easter 1916 not only gives insight into the obvious physical conflicts between individuals but also focuses on the inner conflicts of the rebels, and further Yeats’ own underlying inner conflicts. One of the main representations of inner conflict throughout the poem is Yeats’ inner conflict concerning the rebels, particularly MacBride, and the worth of the rebellion in itself. In the second stanza Yeats talks of MacBride as a “drunken, vainglorious lout” however soon after comments “Yet I number him in song”. This paradox expresses Yeats’ inner turmoil between his personal opinions of the man, verse his acknowledgment of his patriotic and heroic actions for Ireland. However, by not directly naming MacBride in this stanza the ambiguity of the turmoil remains, allowing audiences to relate to such inner conflict despite their unique contexts. Similarly to Easter 1916, The Second Coming ambiguously explores Yeats’ inner conflicts allowing audiences to connect the poem to the basic components of every human life. Yeats’ inner conflict over the concepts of time and eventual change pervades throughout The Second Coming. The first stanza reveals Yeats’ disdain with current…

    • 1089 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Yeat’s pursuit to retain permanence for age and love, and the cultural impacts of the Irish revolution around him are the universal tensions and desires reflected in his poetry. “The Wild Swan’s at Coole” and “Easter 1916” unifies the understanding of life complexities and also its contradictions; the “beauty” of life, yet still the cruel existence of suffering. Yeat’s poetry, intends to release emotions beyond earthly bounds and provides insight of relating as a human being, and ultimately leaving behind a legacy, his art, to underpin the importance of desire.…

    • 1206 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dubliners

    • 951 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In Dubliners, James Joyce uses fictional stories to depict the society of Ireland during the early 1900s. During this time in Ireland, attitudes of the Irish were extremely negative and the society was regressing. Joyce uses these characters to illustrate not only the faults of the Irish people, but of all people. He is able to achieve this through the use of several different literary themes, which are used to show the humanity of the people in Ireland. The theme of journey to escape is evident in many of Joyce’s stories and is closely connected to the humanities theme of autonomy and responsibility. Through the characters everyday experiences, they have to deal with many situations that have to do with their responsibilities to society and feelings of self sufficiency. Through the overuse of alcohol, the envy of those who travel the world and the use of routines; Joyce portrays the characters as stuck in Ireland to show the desire to escape but inability to follow through.…

    • 951 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The narrator begins by leading us down a path. He seems sincere and thinks it is a pity how everywhere you walk in the streets of Dublin you see the poor begging people for hand outs. He is seeking a solution to help the commonwealth.…

    • 1445 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    1 The Grail Quest in the Play At the Hawk's Well by William Butler Yeats A search for that which gives meaning to life has always occupied human minds. The ancient scholars, philosophers, writers and intellectuals devoted many years of their lives to find the answer. They created various theories – religious and philosophical – to explain the system of the universe and find the source of all things. On example of William Butler Yeats' play At the Hawk's Well and Chretien's romance Le Conte du Graal I shall show the way the both authors concern this subject. First, I shall give the historical background of the play and explain the symbolic importance of Cuchulain for Yeats. Second, I shall find and interpret the Celtic symbols in the play, and finally, I shall draw a parallel between the play At the Hawk's Well and the romance Le Conte du Graal. The play At the Hawk's Well was written one year after the Easter Rising of 1916 in Dublin, in which 2,000 Irish soldiers rose in a hope to create an independent Irish Republic. The attempt failed but the struggle for independence continued and led to a brutal civil war in 1919 – 21 (Black 283 – 86). William Butler Yeats, as a struggler for the spiritual regeneration of Ireland, founded the National Literary Society, which aimed at publicizing the literature, legends and folklore of Ireland. Reg Skene interprets Yeats works as „promoting the ideal of an independent republic free from the taint of anglicisation“ (20). The most important of them were the Cuchulain plays about the Irish hero Cuchulain. The political impact of the plays was strong. Cuchulain brought back a heroic ideal to the Irishmen and commanded their admiration. It was in the name of the ancient heroes that the manhood defended their national idea. That is why the Irish government commemorated the Easter Rising by a statue of Cuchulain (Skene 20 – 23). Red Skene defines one of the central aims of Yeats' prose as an attempt “to establish... a literature...…

    • 1828 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    During the time Dubliners was written, Ireland was in deep political turmoil following the death of Charles Parnell, the Nationalist leader who had rallied much of the county in support of Irish independence. Joyce subsequently incorporates the feelings of exhaustion, emptiness and numbness into his characters as a result of this political upheaval. "Araby", "The Dead" and "A Little Cloud" are remarkable not only for their reaction of Dublin in the early Twentieth century, but also for their brilliant understanding of human character in its moment of revelation.…

    • 1443 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the last two stanzas of the poem, the poet repeats the same role of passive observer and links past and present. He compares the brutality of tribal men of first century AD and brutality of Irish Revolutionary Army. What he observes is that the perpetrators are different but the form of brutality is the same. In both past and present innocents are victimized for the crime. In Ireland Irish girls who married British soldiers were brutally killed by Irish Revolutionary Armies. The marriage between and Irish girl and British soldiers was viewed as an act of betraying Irish nationalism or Irish Revolution as suggested by the term “your betraying sisters”. The poet seems to be mocking the claim of modern men being civilized.…

    • 1271 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Sailing to Byzantium

    • 452 Words
    • 2 Pages

    There is a lot of imagery throughout this poem. I believe it has a lot to do with living, dying and being forgotten. Starting with the first and second sentences in stanza one. “There is no country for old men. The young/ In one another’s arms, birds in the trees” (1-2) He himself, Yeats is expressing that he is one of these old men that is in a country that the young have taken over, and full of happiness and love. Then we go into the last two lines in stanza one. “Caught in that sensual music all neglect/ Monuments of unaging intellect”. In an article I have read, says that “The birds in the trees sings “sensual music” praising the natural process of procreation, birth and death. But the old man who narrates the poem prefers “monuments” of unaging intellect”, which the sensual youth “neglects.” “Sensual opposes “intellect” and “begotten, born, and dies” opposes “unaging.”(O’Donnell) I also believe this means the narrator is again displaying the hatred of himself being unnoticed by these young people that are enjoying the lives of happiness. The younger people are ignoring all the knowledge that surrounds them. Yeats modulates from “old men” in the first stanza to a “tattered coat upon a…

    • 452 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    When You Are Old and Gray

    • 458 Words
    • 2 Pages

    ♦ In the poem “When You Are Old”, most of the sentenses are “coordination“ which became easier to the writer to exhibit his ideas on the paper. William Butler Yeats, Irish poet, dramatist and prose writer, his central theme is Ireland,with bitter history, folklore, and contemporary public life. The poem tries to describe how the woman whose poet loves, will comprehend in her old age that she has missed the chance to own the true love. It presumes an old lady tired by the time and the true love that she ever had and now they had gone. By writing this poem, Yeats tries to moderate the lady’s beauty - he loved her beyond physical attraction, he loved her "pilgrim soul” - and increase her greatness. Yeats's handling of metaphors and language make both the tones of regret and resentment found in the poem possible. The uncertainty of the last stanza of the poem, added illustrates that the poem is not only about woman’s disappointed when she becomes conscious of what she has lost; it strengthens the argument that this work is in fact about the bitterness he wants the woman to recognize. As an alternative of focusing upon the present or the past, as is frequently the case with this often used theme, Yeats looks to the future, a future in which the two people in the poem are fated to be forever apart. By the graceful and hushed words, the poet express the perspective that no matter how time flies, when love was imprinted with a intensely…

    • 458 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Yeats- Byzantium

    • 1330 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Of course, it is a strictly spiritual journey and not a real one as the city of Byzantium was renamed Constantinople in the 4th century AD. However, the speaker is merely describing the city as he imagines as an ideal home for his soul. He sees the architecture of the ancient city as the perfect place for his immortal artistic soul to reside for eternity. He no longer sees Ireland as his home, referring to it as “no country for old men”. Indeed, Yeats sees it as a land full of youth and life, with the young laying in one another’s arms, birds singing in the trees, and fish swimming in the waters. There, “all summer long” the world rings with the “sensual music” that makes the young forget the old, whom the speaker unashamedly describes as “Monuments of unageing intellect.” His old country is a symbol of a world he has outgrown through his old age, as both a world he can neither understand nor be understood in (SparkNotes Editors, “SparkNote on Yeats’s Poetry.” SparkNotes.com, SparkNotes LLC. 2002. Web. 6 Mar. 2012, http://www.sparknotes.com/poetry/yeats/section6.rhtml).…

    • 1330 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One of the elements of democratic citizenship is the freedom of expression of oneself, the right to education and to choose representatives in governments, among others. The freedom of expression of oneself is a legacy of the free world. It is not a philosophy waiting to be proven; but has been proven to be the most important engine with education in overcoming the barriers and challenges to democracy itself. This thesis therefore will serve to highlight four major areas of this concern. A challenge in literal means a demanding situation that requires some kind of action. Challenges to democracy means problems that comes while ensuring a democratic set up in the country. It discusses the issues that need to be solved to sustain democracy in the country. Some of these challenges are deepening democracy, illiteracy, expansion and corruption and inefficiency.…

    • 1192 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Prayer for My Daughter

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Yeats wants his daughter to possess some qualities so that she can face the future years independently and with confidence. Yeats says: Let her be given beauty but a more important thing is that her beauty should not be of a kind which may either make her proud of her beauty or distract a stranger’s mind and eyes. Those whose beauty is capable of making them proud consider beauty an end in itself. The result is that pride leads to their losing natural kindness in some cases of that heart revealing intimacy which helps them to make the right choice in life. Being able to make the right choices in life is a very important thing but those who have excessive beauty are unable to do so and never find a good fried in the true sense of the world. The great thing about the poem is that it has a specific as well as general applicability. At the same time the poem makes an indirect…

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics