Description:

Yeats William 1865 - 1939 Nobel laureate William Butler Yeats writes a note to Sir Hugh Lane, a prominent art collector and dealer



A vibrant ANS on laid paper with the watermark "Japanese Note Paper", 4.5" x 7". Autographed scripted address of "18 Woburn Building/Euston Road (London)", and signed by Williams Butler Yeats as "WB Yeats". An autograph with high contrast with but a few letters/words displaying somewhat pale ink. One tiny ink spot with slight haloing, else near fine with center fold.

Yeats pens a quick note to Sir Hugh Lane, whose career was of strong, personal importance to Yeats. Lane was a foremost collector and Irish art dealer of Impressionistic paintings in Europe, and also He wrote from his London address in full:

"18 Woburn Building

Euston Road (London)

Thursday

My Dear Lane: I may have to go to Dublin Monday or Sunday night so it had better be Sunday.

Very Many Thanks../WB Yeats"

Yeats, although considered an elitist, belonged to the Protestant, Anglo-Irish minority that had controlled the economic, political, social, and cultural life of Ireland since at least the end of the 17th century. Most members of this minority considered themselves English people who happened to have been born in Ireland, but Yeats was staunch in affirming his Irish nationality. Although he lived in London for 14 years of his childhood (and kept a permanent home there during the first half of his adult life), Yeats maintained his cultural roots, featuring Irish legends and heroes in many of his poems and plays. Lane was a friend and peer of Yeats, and at the time had intended to give his great collection of 39 French Impressionist paintings to the Dublin Gallery of Modern Art, with the caveat that they build a gallery to show them. When they failed to comply, Lane in anger lent the works of art to the National Gallery in London. His unfortunate accidental death in 1915 led to both Galleries claiming his art. (Today through multiple contractual revisions between the galleries, his art now resides in Dublin). However Yeats had entered the quarrel between the two galleries before Lanes death because he thought that this aristocratic gesture was spurned by Dublin. Many of the poems in Yeat's Responsibilities (1914) were inspired by the Lane controversy, which marked a new phase in the relation between Yeats and Ireland.

A beautiful example with an important association, which resounded in many of Yeats writings.

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