5 Woburn Walk

What did William Butler Yeats do at 5 Woburn Walk?

By Legacy Team·

Woburn Walk, Bloomsbury Standing before this elegant Victorian townhouse in Bloomsbury, you're looking at the creative hub where William Butler Yeats spent twenty-four formative years—a quarter-century during which he transformed from a young Irish poet into the towering literary figure of his age. Here at what was then known as 18 Woburn Buildings, Yeats wrote some of his most influential works, including *The Shadowy Waters*, *In the Seven Woods*, and crucial collections that would define modernist poetry; the modest study on an upper floor became a crucible where he refined his revolutionary artistic vision and experimented with symbolism that would influence generations to come.

Beyond the solitary act of writing, this address became a magnetic gathering point for London's artistic and intellectual elite—fellow poets, playwrights, occultists, and political thinkers would climb these stairs to debate Irish independence, mysticism, and the future of theatre, making the house itself a living salon of the Irish Literary Revival. When Yeats finally departed in 1919, he left behind not just manuscripts but the imprint of a place where private artistic struggle met public cultural transformation—a threshold where the Irish poet worked to reshape both his own voice and the very language of English literature.

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The commemorative plaque at 5 Woburn Walk