An Amusing Anecdote of Dunsany and Yeats

Douglas A. Anderson at A Shiver in the Archives relates the following story about Lord Dunsany’s election to the Irish Academy of Letters:

In his third volume of autobiography, The Sirens Wake (1945), Dunsany wrote:

Yeats had invented the Irish Academy of Letters [in 1932] and had omitted me, which was no surprise; though his reason for doing so was surprising, which was that I did not write about Ireland. I told one or two Irish writers that I too was going to start an Academy, an academy to honour the names of writers of the fourteenth century in Italy; for I said that, since writers work for posterity, it was not a bit too late to honour fourteenth-century writers now. Who, I asked, would they suggest? Dante of course was suggested; but I was shocked. “Most certainly not,” I said, stroking my hair as Yeats used to stroke his. “Dante did not write about Italy, but of a very different place. Most unsuitable!”

Dunsany then admits that this “may have been the trifling sting that stimulated my energies” and he started writing his Irish novel, The Curse of the Wise Woman, on February 12th, 1933, and finished it three and a half months later, on May 27th.

When Dunsany was finally admitted to the Irish Academy, Oliver St. John Gogarty joked at the dinner:

Since this Academy was founded to keep Dunsany out we ought to dissolve it, now that he’s admitted.

Read the rest here.