Letters between WB Yeats and lifelong friend Olivia Shakespear go on display at the National Library of Ireland

Pictured is one of the newly acquired letters between WB Yeats and his first lover and close friend, the English writer Olivia Shakespear (1863-1938) at the National Library of Ireland (NLI). The letters date from 1895 to 1936 and most are from Yeats to Shakespear. PHOTO: Mark Stedman

3930
0
SHARE

To mark Valentine’s Day, letters between WB Yeats and lifelong friend Olivia Shakespear have gone on display at the National Library of Ireland. The selection of newly acquired letters between WB Yeats and his first lover and close friend, the English writer Olivia Shakespear (1863-1938), were put on display on the 14th of February, at the National Library of Ireland.

Like Maud Gonne, Lady Gregory, and his wife George, Olivia Shakespear played an important role in Yeats’ life and often his work. At the time they met in 1894, Shakespear, an accomplished writer, was in an unfulfilling marriage. She soon became the object of Yeats’ affection. Their affair began as a physical one. While the physical part of their relationship did not last, their relationship deepened into a tender intimacy that was cherished by both of them for the rest of their lives.

The letters between them date from 1895 to 1936 and include a detailed discussion of some of his most important literary works and critiques of Shakespear’s own writing. Also contained in the letters is their shared fascination with the occult. There are many reflections of their long friendship while providing insight into the violence and instability of life in Ireland during the revolutionary period.

Written before their relationship became physical, on 12th April, 1895,  a letter from WB Yeats to Olivia Shakespear, opens very formally – “My dear Mrs Shakespear” – and includes Yeats’ response to her writing: “I have never come across a new work so full of a kind of tremulous delicacy, so full of a kind of fragile beauty, as these books of yours.”

On 9th April 1921, WB Yeats wrote to Shakespear from Berkshire. The letter ranges from the dramatic events in Ireland during the War of Independence to the everyday realities of domestic life. At this stage, Yeats was married to George Hyde-Lees and had a daughter, Anne, and George was pregnant with their son, Michael.

9 April 1921, Yeats writes to Shakespear

The letter reads: “We are nerving ourselves, however, to go to Ireland … at the first sign of a lull in the storm there as George pines for Ballylee. I begin to think she would be in better health there with even an occasional murder in the district than in this place or any other spot. We cannot move, … if we do move until Anne stops whooping, and whooping cough seems a long business. I remember nothing of it except a moment of surpassing pride when I whooped in the middle of a large classroom at the age of twelve, drew all eyes and was sent home.

In a letter to Shakespear dated 6th December 1926, Yeats reflects with a note of regret on the time when they first knew each other: “I came upon two early photographs of you yesterday, while going through my file — one from ‘Literary Year Book’. Who ever had a like profile? — a profile from a Sicilean coin. One looks back at one’s youth as to a cup that a madman dying of thirst left half tasted. I wonder if you feel like that.”

Olivia Shakespear wrote on Valentine’s Day 1926 to WB Yeats. In this letter, Shakespear has an interesting observation to make about love: “I believe that men are so made that they naturally hate one another & all their talk about Love is Bunkum.” There is also evidence of her continuing keen interest in literature and Yeats’ life: “I see you had a row at the Abbey when O’Casey’s play was produced. I shall go to see it when it is over here.”

Olivia Shakespear wrote on Valentine’s Day 1926 to WB Yeats

On 24th May 1933, Olivia Shakespear responds to Yeats’ admiration of ‘Lady Chatterly’s Lover’ with the amused candour of long friendship: “I don’t agree with you about ‘Lady Chatterly‘ – If you have the expurgated edition, I can’t imagine what is left! It is the same thing over and over and bored me considerably. There are good passages, of course.”

24 May 1933 – Olivia Shakespear responds to Yeats’ admiration of ‘Lady Chatterly’s
Lover’

The NLI purchased the extensive series of about 100 autograph-signed letters for €293,326 in December 2018 from its 2018 funding allocation, designated by Minister for Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, Josepha Madigan TD. The letters had been held in reserve following the auction of the Yeats Family Collection at Sotheby’s in late 2017.

Minister for Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, Josepha Madigan TD said of the acquisition:

“It is wonderful to see these letters join the National Library of Ireland’s substantial Yeats collection – an acquisition that was made possible by funding from my Department. Both WB Yeats and Olivia Shakespear are important figures in literary history, and these letters allow us a glimpse into their extraordinary minds. I encourage everyone to take the opportunity to view them at the NLI before the end of the month.”

Paul Shovlin, Chairman of the NLI’s Board said:

“This forty-year correspondence between WB Yeats and Olivia Shakespear reads as an ongoing conversation between the closest of friends, whose initial romantic relationship developed into a lifelong affinity. They join the Yeats Collection at the National Library, the largest archive of Yeats manuscripts and books anywhere in the world. The collection is at the heart of the award-winning exhibition: ‘Yeats: The Life and Works of William Butler Yeats’, which is free and open to all, and welcomes 70,000 visitors each year. We are delighted to share a selection of these newly acquired letters with the public through a display in our main hall on Valentine’s Day.” 

The letters between WB Yeats and Olivia Shakespear will be displayed in the main hall of The National Library of Ireland until Thursday, 28th February.