The Irish Dramatic Movement: Chapter One
The Irish Dramatic Movement: Chapter One
The Irish Dramatic Movement: Chapter One
CHAPTER ONE :
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THE IRISH DRAMATIC MOVEMMENT
The most notable name in this respect is W.B. Yeats, the leader
of the movement, who, in theory as well as practice, accorded the
aesthetic element in drama the very highest importance:
All art is the disengaging of a
soul from place and history, its
suspension in a beautiful or
terrible light to await the Judgement,
though it must be, seeing that
its days, were a last Day, judged
already.1
1. TWENTIETH CENTURY View Series: The Playboy of the Western World, p.3.
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W.B. Yeats and Lady Gregory are, ofcourse, the most popular
choice but two things must be clearly understood after examing the
various phases of the growth of the entire Irish movement from the
inception of Gaelic league to the establishment of Irish Theatre. The !
credit for such a powerful and widespread movement cannot be given ;
to just one or two individuals. All these writers, A.E., Edward Martyn., |
Lord Dunsany, Hyde, Yeats and Lady Gregory were the undisputed j
Headers and belonged to the Inner circle but many more writers i
The reasons for this revival are not very clear but they were
almost certainly palitical rather than literary. Freedom was in the air
aand it was a century of revolution, political bodies, like the Fenians
(founded in America in the sixties) were pressing for Home' Rule and
this led to some heart- searching among literary and other leaders:
if we are proposing to rule our own country wed better know a littke
I more about ourselves! In 1891,W.B. yeats and founded the Irish
i
One of the merits of this theatre was that it gave the unfledged
playwright an opportunity to try his wings. Its reward was sometimes
the discovery of genius. What the little Theatre in Province town,
Massachusetts, did twenty years later for the American dramatists
Eugene O’ Neill, the Abbey Theatre did for John Millington Synge,
the outstanding playwright of the Irish Dramatic Movement. .
Yeats met Synge, a young man of twenty eight in Paris in
1898, earning a meagre living as a journalist and trying to write. He
persuaded him to leave the decadent atmosphere of the French
}
the ‘Irish Dramatic Movement’, but the body of his dramatic work is
i
small. In a short span of seven years of dramatic career, he produced
six plays sometimes grouped as comedies- THE SHADOW OF THE
GLEN, THE TINKER’S WEDDING, THE WELL OF THE SAINTS and
THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD; and sometimes
tragedies-RIDERS TO THE SEA and DEIRDRE OF THE SORROWS.
Again he writes:
As they talked to me and gave
me a little poteen and a
little bread when they thought
I was hungry, I could not
help feeling that I was
talking with men who were
under a judgement of death.
I knew that every one of
them would be drowned in
the sea in a few years and
battered naked on the rocks,
or would die in his own
cottage and be buried with
another fearful scene in the
graveyard I had come from.*11
Wedding is not based on Synge’s Aran experience but the plot hero
is also Irish in nature. i
Synge was proud of his Irishness and all his writings and his
life show his abiding interest in ordinary folk. The people in his writings
•were the familiar faces he had seen on the islands. But Synge was
15. Ibid.
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