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Irish Nationalist Movement Essay

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The Irish and the British have had a long and complicated relationship for hundreds of years. After World War I, the British Empire started to dissolve, resulting in independent nations around the globe. However, Ireland still remained under British rule, which frustrated the Irish for a variety of reasons, the main one being religious differences (Catholic vs. Protestant) between the Irish and the British. The Anglo-Irish war started in 1919 was a result of the growing frustration and the Irish nationalist movement that emerged from said frustration. The Irish nationalist movement was started by a group of revolutionaries known as the IRA (Irish Republican Army) who believed that the only way Ireland could achieve independence was through …show more content…

The last two lines of the stanza imply that Yeats is feeling upset about the current state of Ireland by saying, “Romantic Ireland’s dead and gone,”. Yeats concludes the stanza and repeats this line an additional three times by saying “It’s with O’Leary in the grave”, suggests that the prosperous, romantic Ireland Yeats previously described is dead along with John O’Leary, an Irish nationalist. Yeats felt sympathy in particular for John O’Leary because O’Leary inspired Yeats to contribute to the nationalism movement by contributing literature (Norton …show more content…

Causality is based on events that happened on Bloody Sunday, a day in which the British forces shot and killed 13 Irish nationalist demonstrators in the city of Derry (Dawson 1). Heaney decides to recount these events in the poem Causality through the eyes of a fisherman. Heaney uses the fisherman in the poem as a pawn to show how he feels in regards to the Troubles without explicitly stating his position. The narrator (presumably Heaney) in this poem seeks to divert the conversation to fishing instead of focusing on the

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