Lily continued to work under May Morris for six years, but their relationship was strained (she called her employer "the Gorgon" in her scrapbook) After their mother's death in 1900, Lily and her sister Elizabeth returned to Ireland with their friend
Evelyn Gleeson. In 1902 the sisters and Gleeson founded a craft studio near Dublin which they named Dun Emer (the Fort of Emer) after
Emer, the wife of Irish legendary hero
Cuchullain. Dun Emer became a focus of the burgeoning Irish Arts and Crafts Movement, focusing on embroidery,
printing, and
rug and
tapestry-making. They recruited young local women to the enterprise, teaching them painting, drawing, cooking, sewing, and the
Irish language in addition to the Guild's core crafts. In 1904, the operation was reorganized into two parts, the Dun Emer Guild run by Gleeson and Dun Emer Industries under the direction of the Yeats sisters, and in 1908 the groups separated completely. Gleeson retained the Dun Emer name, and the Yeats sisters established Cuala Industries at nearby Churchtown, which ran a small press, the
Cuala Press, and an embroidery workshop. William Butler Yeats's wife George (Bertha Georgina), helped Lily run the embroidery arm of the studio which produced clothing and linens. On her recovery, she returned to Cuala, but the embroidery department was never a resounding success. Lily's health deteriorated again in 1931 (her ailment had finally been correctly diagnosed as a malformed
thyroid in 1929), and the decision was made to dissolve the embroidery branch of Cuala. At the time, Lily wrote Lily Yeats continued to sell embroidered pictures in the following years. ==Notes==