Lady Gregory: Diferenzas entre revisións

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===Primeiros escritos===
A parella realizou diversas viaxes por Ceilán, [[India]], [[España]], [[Italia]] e [[Exipto]]. Durante a súa estancia neste último, Lady Gregory mantivo unha aventura co poeta inglés [[Wilfrid Scawen Blunt]], tralo que escribiu unha serie de poemas de amor titulados ''A Woman's Sonnets''.<ref>{{cita web|apelidos=Hennessy|nome=Caroline|url=http://www.rte.ie/arts/2005/1230/ladygregory.html|título=Lady Gregory: An Irish Life by Judith Hill|páxina-web=[[Raidió Teilifís Éireann|RTE]]|ano=2007|data-acceso=1 de setembro de 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cita libro|apelidos=Holmes|nome=John|título=Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the Late Victorian Sonnet Sequence|lugar=Aldershot|editorial=Ashgate|ano=2005|p=103|ISBN=9780754651086}}</ref>
<!-- The Gregorys travelled in Ceylon, India, Spain, Italy and Egypt. While in Egypt, Lady Gregory had an affair with the English poet [[Wilfrid Scawen Blunt]], during which she wrote a series of love poems, ''A Woman's Sonnets''.<ref>Hennessy 2007; Holmes 2005, p. 103.</ref>
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Her earliest work to appear under her own name was ''Arabi and His Household'' (1882), a pamphlet—originally a letter to ''[[The Times]]''—in support of [[Ahmed 'Urabi|Ahmed Orabi Pasha]], leader of what has come to be known as the [[Urabi Revolt]], an 1879 Egyptian nationalist revolt against the oppressive regime of the [[Khedive]] and the European domination of Egypt. She later said of this booklet, "whatever political indignation or energy was born with me may have run its course in that Egyptian year and worn itself out".<ref>Gregory 1976, p. 54.</ref> Despite this, in 1893 she published ''A Phantom's Pilgrimage, or Home Ruin'', an anti-Nationalist pamphlet against [[William Ewart Gladstone]]'s proposed second [[Home Rule]] Act.<ref>Kirkpatrick 2000, p. 109.</ref>