May These Characters Remain, When All is Ruin Once Again*

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Thoor Ballylee, County Galway is a 15th/16th century tower house originally built by the de Burgo family but now best known as the former property of poet William Butler Yeats who acquired it a century ago and subsequently undertook a restoration of the old building. Opened to the public in 1965, the tower closed seven years ago after being flooded by adjacent Streamstown river. It might have remained shut thereafter but for the endeavours of a local group, the Yeats Thoor Ballylee Society, which tirelessly worked for the building’s refurbishment in time for last year’s 150th anniversary of the poet’s birth. These pictures were taken two months ago, since when the tower – like so much of the surrounding country – has once more been subjected to severe flooding. However, according to the society’s website (http://yeatsthoorballylee.org) determined efforts are being made to ensure it will reopen later in the spring: an example of local, private initiative that deserves to be applauded and emulated elsewhere.

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*A plaque on the castle’s wall contains the following text: ‘I the poet William Yeats/With old millboards and sea-green slates/And smithy work from the Gort forge/Restored this tower for my wife George./And may these characters remain/When all is ruin once again.’

 

3 comments on “May These Characters Remain, When All is Ruin Once Again*

  1. Yeats’ book of poems, The Tower, I suppose refers to Thoor Ballylee.

  2. James Canning says:

    Bravo!

  3. melcoo says:

    I was reading a book called Willie and Maud – A love story by Barry Shortall over Christmas and Thoor Ballylee and Yeats renovation and love for the tower is recounted in the book, it really made me want to go and visit it. I can see why he loved the place, it looks idyllic.

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