The Curse of the Fires and of the Shadows
Short story by William Butler Yeats
"The Curse of the Fires and of the Shadows" is a short story by William Butler Yeats. It is based on Sir Frederick Hamilton's burning of Sligo Abbey in 1642 during the Irish Confederate Wars. In Yeats's story, five soldiers who shoot the monks are cursed by the abbot and, when ordered by Hamilton to intercept two messengers sent by the people of Sligo to call for help, they lose their way in the forest and are then led over a cliff by a vengeful sidhe.[1]
Notes and references
- ^ Yeats 1914, p. 134.
- Yeats, William Butler (1914), Stories of Red Hanrahan - The Secret Rose - Rosa Alchemica, New York: The MacMillan Company, pp. 134–144
External links
- The Curse of the Fires and of the Shadows public domain audiobook at LibriVox
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W. B. Yeats
- Mosada (1886)
- The Land of Heart's Desire (1894)
- Diarmuid and Grania (1901)
- Cathleen ni Houlihan (1902)
- On Baile's Strand (1903)
- The Countess Cathleen (1911)
- At the Hawk's Well (1916)
- The Resurrection (1927)
- Purgatory (1938)
- The Works of William Blake: Poetic, Symbolic and Critical (1893; co-author)
- A Vision (1925)
- The Bounty of Sweden (1925)
- "The Curse of the Fires and of the Shadows"
- Oxford Book of Modern Verse 1892–1935 (editor)
- Georgie Hyde-Lees (wife)
- Anne Yeats (daughter)
- Michael Yeats (son)
- John Butler Yeats (father)
- Susan Pollexfen (mother)
- Jack Butler Yeats (brother)
- Elizabeth Yeats (sister)
- Lily Yeats (sister)
- Maud Gonne (lover)
- W. B. Yeats bibliography
- Rhymers' Club
- Dun Emer Press
- An Appointment with Mr Yeats
- "Troy"
- Thoor Ballylee
- Samhain magazine
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