The Rose Tree (poem)

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The Rose Tree is a poem by William Butler Yeats.[1] It was published in 1921 as part of his collection Michael Robartes and the Dancer.

It describes a fictional conversation between James Connolly and Patrick Pearse, the leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising. First, Pearse says that a "breath of politic words" or a "wind that blows / across the bitter sea" (Britain[2]) might have withered their "Rose Tree," or, Ireland.[3] Connolly replies that the tree "needs to be but watered." Pearse then says that "all the wells are parched away," and argues for the necessity of blood sacrifice,[1][4] saying that only their "own red blood / can make a right Rose Tree".

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