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W. B. Yeats
đźđȘ
(
13 Jun 1865
â
28 Jan 1939
)
âAdamâs Curseâ
âAfter Long Silenceâ
âAgainst Unworthy Praiseâ
âAll Soulsâ Nightâ
âAll Things Can Tempt Meâ
âAmong School Childrenâ
âAnother Song of a Foolâ
âThe Apparitionsâ
âAn Appointmentâ
âAre You Content?â
âThe Arrowâ
âAt Algecirasâ
âAt Galway Racesâ
âAt the Abbey Theatreâ
âThe Attach on âThe Playboy of the Western Worldââ
âBaile and Aillinnâ
âThe Ballad of Father Gilliganâ
âThe Ballad of Father OâHartâ
âThe Ballad of Moll Mageeâ
âThe Ballad of the Foxhunterâ
âBeggar to Beggar Criedâ
âThe Black Towerâ
âThe Blessedâ
âBlood and the Moonâ
âBroken Dreamsâ
âByzantiumâ
âThe Cap and Bellsâ
âThe Cat and the Moonâ
âThe Chambermaidâs First Songâ
âThe Choiceâ
âThe Circus Animalâs Desertionâ
âThe Cloak, the Boat and the Shoesâ
âA Coatâ
âThe Cold Heavenâ
âThe Collar-bone of a Hareâ
âColonel Martinâ
âComing of Wisdom with Timeâ
âThe Consolationâ
âA Crazed Girlâ
âThe Crazed Moonâ
âCrazy Jane and Jack the Journeymanâ
âCrazy Jane and the Bishopâ
âCrazy Jane Grown Old Looks at the Dancersâ
âCrazy Jane on Godâ
âCrazy Jane on the Day of Judgmentâ
âCrazy Jane on the Mountainâ
âCrazy Jane Reprovedâ
âCrazy Jane Talks with the Bishopâ
âCuchulain Comfortedâ
âThe Curse of Cromwellâ
âThe Dawnâ
âDeathâ
âThe Death of Cuchulainâ
âA Deep-Sworn Vowâ
âA Dialogue of Self and Soulâ
âThe Dollsâ
âDown by the Salley Gardensâ
âA Dream of Deathâ
âA Drinking Songâ
âA Drunken Manâs Praise of Sobrietyâ
âEasterâ
âEgo Dominus Tuusâ
âEphemeraâ
âFallen Majestyâ
âThe Falling of the Leavesâ
âThe fascination of whatâs difficult âŠâ
âFergus and the Druidâ
âThe Fishâ
âThe Fishermanâ
âFled Foam Underneath Usâ
âThe Folly of Being Comfortedâ
âThe Fool by the Roadsideâ
âFor Anne Gregoryâ
âThe Four Ages of Manâ
âFragmentsâ
âFriendsâ
âA Friendâs Illnessâ
âGirlâs Songâ
âThe Green Helmetâ
âThe Grey Rockâ
âThe Gyresâ
âThe Happy Townlandâ
âThe Harp of Aengusâ
âHe and Sheâ
âHe Bids His Beloved Be at Peaceâ
âHe Hears the Cry of the Sedgeâ
âHe Mourns for the Change That Has Come Upon Him and His Beloved, and Longs for the End of the Worldâ
âHe Remembers Forgotten Beautyâ
âHe Tells of a Valley Full of Loversâ
âHe Tells of the Perfect Beautyâ
âThe Heart of the Womanâ
âHer Anxietyâ
âHer Dreamâ
âHer Praiseâ
âHer Reproves the Curlewâ
âHigh Talkâ
âHis Bargainâ
âHis Confidenceâ
âHis Dreamâ
âHis Phoenixâ
âThe Host of the Airâ
âHound Voiceâ
âThe Hour before Dawnâ
âI thought no more was needed âŠâ
âAn Image from a Past Lifeâ
âImitated from the Japaneseâ
âIn Taraâs Hallsâ
âIn the Seven Woodsâ
âThe Indian to His Loveâ
âThe Indian upon Godâ
âInto the Twilightâ
âAn Irish Airman Foresees His Deathâ
âKing and No Kingâ
âThe Ladyâs Songâ
âThe Lake Isle of Innisfreeâ
âThe Lamentation of the Old Pensionerâ
âLapis Lazuliâ
âThe Leaders of the Crowdâ
âLeda and the Swanâ
âLines Written in Dejectionâ
âThe Living Beautyâ
âLong-Legged Flyâ
âThe Lover Asks Forgiveness Because of His Many Moodsâ
âThe Lover Tells of the Rose in His Heartâ
âLoveâs Lonelinessâ
âMad as the Mist and Snowâ
âThe Madness of King Gollâ
âThe Magiâ
âThe Man and the Echoâ
âThe Man Who Dreamed of Faerylandâ
âA Man Young and Oldâ
âThe Maskâ
âThe Meditation of the Old Fishermanâ
âMeditations in Time of Civil Warâ
âMemoryâ
âA Memory of Youthâ
âMeruâ
âThe Mother of Godâ
âThe Mountain Tombâ
âNever Give All the Heartâ
âThe New Facesâ
âNews for the Delphic Oracleâ
âNo Second Troyâ
âO Do Not Love too Longâ
âThe Old Age of Queen Maeveâ
âOld Memoryâ
âThe Old Men Admiring Themselves in the Waterâ
âThe Old Stone Crossâ
âOn a Political Prisonerâ
âOn Hearing That The Students Of Our New University Have Joined The Ancient Order Of Hibernians And The Agitation Against Immoral Literatureâ
âOwen Aherne and His Dancersâ
âPaudeenâ
âPeaceâ
âThe Peopleâ
âThe Phases of the Moonâ
âThe Pilgrimâ
âThe Pity of Loveâ
âThe Player Queenâ
âA Prayer for My Daughterâ
âA Prayer for My Sonâ
âA Prayer for Old Ageâ
âPresencesâ
âQuarrel in Old Ageâ
âThe Ragged Woodâ
âThe Realistsâ
âReconciliationâ
From âResponsibilitiesâ
âRibh at the Tomb of Baile and Aillinnâ
âRibh Considers Christian Love Insufficientâ
âRibh Denounces Patrickâ
âRibh in Ecstasyâ
âThe Rose of Battleâ
âThe Rose of the Worldâ
âThe Rose Treeâ
âRunning to Paradiseâ
âThe Sad Shepherdâ
âSailing to Byzantiumâ
âThe Scholarsâ
âThe Second Comingâ
âSeptemberâ
âThe Seven Sagesâ
âThe Shadowy Watersâ
âShepherd and Goatherdâ
âSixteen Dead Menâ
âSolomon and the Witchâ
âSolomon to Shebaâ
âThe Song of the Happy Shepherdâ
âThe Song of the Old Motherâ
âThe Song of Wandering Aengusâ
âThe Sorrow of Loveâ
âThe Stolen Childâ
âSweet Dancerâ
âThat the Night Comeâ
âThese Are the Cloudsâ
âThose Dancing Days are Goneâ
âThe Three Beggarsâ
âThe Three Bushesâ
âThe Three Hermitsâ
âThree Marching Songsâ
âThree Thingsâ
âTo a Child Dancing in the Windâ
âTo a Friend Whose Work Has Come to Nothingâ
âTo a Shadeâ
âTo a Young Girlâ
âTo His Heart, Bidding It Have No Fearâ
âTo Some I Have Talked with by the Fireâ
âTo the Rose upon the Rood of Timeâ
âTom the Lunaticâ
âThe Towerâ
âThe Travail of Passionâ
âThe Two Kingsâ
âTwo Songs of a Foolâ
âThe Two Treesâ
âTwo Years Laterâ
âThe Unappeasable Hostâ
âUpon a Dying Ladyâ
âUpon a House Shaken by the Land Agitationâ
âVacillationâ
âThe Wanderings of Oisinâ
âThe Well and the Treeâ
âWhat Magic Drum?â
âWhat Then?â
âWhat Was Lostâ
âThe Wheelâ
âWhen Helen Livedâ
âWhen You Are Oldâ
âThe White Birdsâ
âWho Goes with Fergus?â
âWhy should not old men be mad? âŠâ
âThe Wild Old Wicked Manâ
âThe Witch and The Peacockâ
âThe Withering of the Boughsâ
âA Woman Homer Sungâ
âA Woman Young and Oldâ
âThe Young Manâs Songâ
âYoung Manâs Songâ