Four Plays for Dancers

William Butler YEATS

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Four Plays for Dancers
Four Plays for Dancers

"NOTHING BUT BEAUTY CAN REMAIN": YEATS' FOUR PLAYS FOR DANCERS

YEATS, William Butler. Four Plays for Dancers. New York: Macmillan, 1921. Octavo, half black cloth, pictorial boards, uncut, original dust jacket.

First American edition of this collection of four of Yeats' verse dramas, including "Calvary," published in this collection for the first time, with seven black-and-white photographic illustrations of the designs by Edmund Dulac for the masks and costumes to be used in the plays.

After 1915, as Yeats experienced a heightened interest in drama, he began to view certain dramatic principles as central to his conception of poetry. "A further literary stimulus was Yeats' introduction by Ezra Pound to the Japanese Noh plays. This led to the production in 1916 of 'At the Hawk's Well,' the first of Yeats' Four Plays for Dancers, plays which used masks, which Yeats saw as shifting the emphasis from the actor to the language. Like the thought of A Vision, the notion of the mask extended into Yeats' poetry to salutary effect" (Hamilton, 595). "The Dreaming of Bones" and "The Only Jealousy of Emer" were first published as Two Plays for Dancers in 1919; "At the Hawk's Well" was first published in the 1917 edition The Wild Swans at Coole (printed at Yeats' sister's press); this is the first published appearance of "Calvary." Wade, 129. Contemporary newspaper clipping tipped to recto of frontispiece leaf; bookplate and original owner ink signature on verso of title page, dated 1921.

Book fine, price-clipped dust jacket with a few shallow rubs to spine ends only, about-fine. A lovely copy.

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