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9780684839356

The Collected Works of W. B. Yeats Volume I: The Poems, 2nd Edition

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  • ISBN13:

    9780684839356

  • ISBN10:

    0684839350

  • Edition: 2nd
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1997-10-01
  • Publisher: Scribner
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Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

Summary

The lateRichard J. Finneranwas general editor, with George Mills Harper, ofThe Collected Works of W. B. Yeatsfor many years; series editor ofThe Poemsin the Cornell Yeats; and editor ofYeats: An Annual of Critical and Textual Studies,among other works. He held the Hodges Chair of Excellence at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville; was a past president of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association; and served as executive director of the Society for Textual Scholarship.

Author Biography

The late Richard J. Finneran was general editor, with George Mills Harper, of The Collected Works of W. B. Yeats for many years; series editor of The Poems in the Cornell Yeats; and editor of Yeats: An Annual of Critical and Textual Studies, among other works. He held the Hodges Chair of Excellence at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville; was a past president of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association; and served as executive director of the Society for Textual Scholarship.

William Butler Yeats is generally considered to be Ireland’s greatest poet, living or dead, and one of the most important literary figures of the twentieth century. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1923.

Table of Contents

Preface xxv
PART ONE Lyrical 5(454)
CROSSWAYS (1889) 5(22)
1 The Song of the Happy Shepherd
5(1)
2 The Sad Shepherd
6(1)
3 The Cloak, the Boat, and the Shoes
7(1)
4 Anashuya and Vijaya
8(3)
5 The Indian upon God
11(1)
6 The Indian to his Love
12(1)
7 The Falling of the Leaves
12(1)
8 Ephemera
13(1)
9 The Madness of King Goll
14(2)
10 The Stolen Child
16(2)
11 To an Isle in the Water
18(1)
12 Down by the Salley Gardens
18(1)
13 The Meditation of the Old Fisherman
19(1)
14 The Ballad of Father O'Hart
19(2)
15 The Ballad of Moll Magee
21(2)
16 The Ballad of the Foxhunter
23(4)
THE ROSE (1893) 27(24)
17 To the Rose upon the Rood of Time
27(1)
18 Fergus and the Druid
28(1)
19 Cuchulain's Fight with the Sea
29(3)
20 The Rose of the World
32(1)
21 The Rose of Peace
32(1)
22 The Rose of Battle
33(1)
23 A Faery Song
34(1)
24 The Lake Isle of Innisfree
35(1)
25 A Cradle Song
35(1)
26 The Pity of Love
36(1)
27 The Sorrow of Love
36(1)
28 When You are Old
37(1)
29 The White Birds
37(1)
30 A Dream of Death
38(1)
31 The Countess Cathleen in Paradise
38(1)
32 Who goes with Fergus?
39(1)
33 The Man who dreamed of Faeryland
39(2)
34 The Dedication to a Book of Stories selected from the Irish Novelists
41(1)
35 The Lamentation of the Old Pensioner
42(1)
36 The Ballad of Father Gilligan
42(2)
37 The Two Trees
44(1)
38 To Some I have Talked with by the Fire
45(1)
39 To Ireland in the Coming Times
46(5)
THE WIND AMONG THE REEDS (1899) 51(24)
40 The Hosting of the Sidhe
51(1)
41 The Everlasting Voices
51(1)
42 The Moods
52(1)
43 The Lover tells of the Rose in his Heart
52(1)
44 The Host of the Air
52(2)
45 The Fish
54(1)
46 The Unappeasable Host
54(1)
47 Into the Twilight
55(1)
48 The Song of Wandering Aengus
55(1)
49 The Song of the Old Mother
56(1)
50 The Heart of the Woman
57(1)
51 The Lover mourns for the Loss of Love
57(1)
52 He mourns for the Change that has come upon Him and his Beloved, and longs for the End of the World
58(1)
53 He bids his Beloved be at Peace
58(1)
54 He reproves the Curlew
59(1)
55 He remembers forgotten Beauty
59(1)
56 A Poet to his Beloved
60(1)
57 He gives his Beloved certain Rhymes
60(1)
58 To his Heart, bidding it have no Fear
60(1)
59 The Cap and Bells
61(1)
60 The Valley of the Black Pig
62(1)
61 The Lover asks Forgiveness because of his Many Moods
62(1)
62 He tells of a Valley full of Lovers
63(1)
63 He tells of the Perfect Beauty
64(1)
64 He hears the Cry of the Sedge
64(1)
65 He thinks of Those who have spoken Evil of his Beloved
64(1)
66 The Blessed
65(1)
67 The Secret Rose
66(1)
68 Maid Quiet
67(1)
69 The Travail of Passion
68(1)
70 The Lover pleads with his Friend for Old Friends
68(1)
71 The Lover speaks to the Hearers of his Songs in Coming Days
68(1)
72 The Poet pleads with the Elemental Powers
69(1)
73 He wishes his Beloved were Dead
69(1)
74 He wishes for the Cloths of Heaven
70(1)
75 He thinks of his Past Greatness when a Part of the Constellations of Heaven
70(1)
76 The Fiddler of Dooney
71(4)
IN THE SEVEN WOODS (1904) 75(12)
77 In the Seven Woods
75(1)
78 The Arrow
75(1)
79 The Folly of being Comforted
76(1)
80 Old Memory
76(1)
81 Never give all the Heart
77(1)
82 The Withering of the Boughs
77(1)
83 Adam's Curse
78(1)
84 Red Hanrahan's Song about Ireland
79(1)
85 The Old Men admiring Themselves in the Water
80(1)
86 Under the Moon
80(1)
87 The Ragged Wood
81(1)
88 O do not Love Too Long
82(1)
89 The Players ask for a Blessing on the Psalteries and on Themselves
82(1)
90 The Happy Townland
83(4)
THE GREEN HELMET AND OTHER POEMS (1910) 87(14)
91 His Dream
87(1)
92 A Woman Homer sung
88(1)
93 Words
88(1)
94 No Second Troy
89(1)
95 Reconciliation
90(1)
96 King and no King
90(1)
97 Peace
91(1)
98 Against Unworthy Praise
91(1)
99 The Fascination of What's Difficult
92(1)
100 A Drinking Song
92(1)
101 The Coming of Wisdom with Time
93(1)
102 On hearing that the Students of our New University have joined the Agitation against Immoral Literature
93(1)
103 To a Poet, who would have me Praise certain Bad Poets, Imitators of His and Mine
93(1)
104 The Mask
94(1)
105 Upon a House shaken by the Land Agitation
94(1)
106 At the Abbey Theatre
95(1)
107 These are the Clouds
95(1)
108 At Galway Races
96(1)
109 A Friend's Illness
96(1)
110 All Things can tempt Me
97(1)
111 Brown Penny
97(4)
RESPONSIBILITIES (1914) 101(30)
112 Introductory Rhymes
101(1)
113 The Grey Rock
102(4)
114 To a Wealthy Man who promised a second Subscription to the Dublin Municipal Gallery if it were proved the People wanted Pictures
106(1)
115 September 1913
107(1)
116 To a Friend whose Work has come to Nothing
108(1)
117 Paudeen
108(1)
118 To a Shade
109(1)
119 When Helen lived
110(1)
120 On Those that hated `The Playboy of the Western World,' 1907
110(1)
121 The Three Beggars
110(2)
122 The Three Hermits
112(1)
123 Beggar to Beggar cried
113(1)
124 Running to Paradise
114(1)
125 The Hour before Dawn
115(4)
126 A Song from `The Player Queen'
119(1)
127 The Realists
119(1)
128 I. The Witch
120(1)
129 II. The Peacock
120(1)
130 The Mountain Tomb
120(1)
131 I. To a Child dancing in the Wind
121(1)
132 II. Two Years Later
121(1)
133 A Memory of Youth
122(1)
134 Fallen Majesty
123(1)
135 Friends
123(1)
136 The Cold Heaven
124(1)
137 That the Night come
124(1)
138 An Appointment
125(1)
139 The Magi
125(1)
140 The Dolls
126(1)
141 A Coat
127(1)
142 Closing Rhyme
127(4)
THE WILD SWANS AT COOLE (1919) 131(46)
143 The Wild Swans at Coole
131(1)
144 In Memory of Major Robert Gregory
132(3)
145 An Irish Airman foresees his Death
135(1)
146 Men improve with the Years
136(1)
147 The Collar-bone of a Hare
136(1)
148 Under the Round Tower
137(1)
149 Solomon to Sheba
138(1)
150 The Living Beauty
139(1)
151 A Song
139(1)
152 To a Young Beauty
140(1)
153 To a Young Girl
140(1)
154 The Scholars
141(1)
155 Tom O'Roughley
141(1)
156 Shepherd and Goatherd
142(4)
157 Lines written in Dejection
146(1)
158 The Dawn
146(1)
159 On Woman
147(1)
160 The Fisherman
148(1)
161 The Hawk
149(1)
162 Memory
150(1)
163 Her Praise
150(1)
164 The People
151(1)
165 His Phoenix
152(1)
166 A Thought from Propertius
153(1)
167 Broken Dreams
153(1)
168 A Deep-sworn Vow
154(1)
169 Presences
155(1)
170 The Balloon of the Mind
155(1)
171 To a Squirrel at Kyle-na-no
156(1)
172 On being asked for a War Poem
156(1)
173 In Memory of Alfred Pollexfen
156(2)
Upon a Dying Lady: 158(19)
174 I. Her Courtesy
158(1)
175 II. Certain Artists bring her Dolls and Drawings
158(1)
176 III. She turns the Dolls' Faces to the Wall
159(1)
177 IV. The End of Day
159(1)
178 V. Her Race
160(1)
179 VI. Her Courage
160(1)
180 VII. Her Friends bring her a Christmas Tree
161(1)
181 Ego Dominus Tuus
161(3)
182 A Prayer on going into my House
164(1)
183 The Phases of the Moon
164(5)
184 The Cat and the Moon
169(1)
185 The Saint and the Hunchback
170(1)
186 Two Songs of a Fool
170(1)
187 Another Song of a Fool
171(1)
188 The Double Vision of Michael Robartes
172(5)
MICHAEL ROBARTES AND THE DANCER (1921) 177(20)
189 Michael Robartes and the Dancer
177(2)
190 Solomon and the Witch
179(1)
191 An Image from a Past Life
180(1)
192 Under Saturn
181(1)
193 Easter, 1916
182(2)
194 Sixteen Dead Men
184(1)
195 The Rose Tree
185(1)
196 On a Political Prisoner
186(1)
197 The Leaders of the Crowd
186(1)
198 Towards Break of Day
187(1)
199 Demon and Beast
188(1)
200 The Second Coming
189(1)
201 A Prayer for my Daughter
190(2)
202 A Meditation in Time of War
192(1)
203 To be carved on a Stone at Thoor Ballylee
193(4)
THE TOWER (1928) 197(40)
204 Sailing to Byzantium
197(1)
205 The Tower
198(6)
Meditations in Time of Civil War: 204(21)
206 I. Ancestral Houses
204(1)
207 II. My House
205(1)
208 III. My Table
206(1)
209 IV. My Descendants
207(1)
210 V. The Road at My Door
208(1)
211 VI. The Stare's Nest by My Window
208(1)
212 VII. I see Phantoms of Hatred and of the Heart's Fullness and of the Coming Emptiness
209(1)
213 Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen
210(4)
214 The Wheel
214(1)
215 Youth and Age
215(1)
216 The New Faces
215(1)
217 A Prayer for my Son
215(1)
218 Two Songs from a Play
216(1)
219 Fragments
217(1)
220 Leda and the Swan
218(1)
221 On a Picture of a Black Centaur by Edmund Dulac
219(1)
222 Among School Children
219(3)
223 Colonus' Praise
222(1)
224 Wisdom
223(1)
225 The Fool by the Roadside
223(1)
226 Owen Aherne and his Dancers
224(1)
A Man Young and Old: 225(12)
227 I. First Love
225(1)
228 II. Human Dignity
226(1)
229 III. The Mermaid
226(1)
230 IV. The Death of the Hare
226(1)
231 V. The Empty Cup
227(1)
232 VI. His Memories
227(1)
233 VII. The Friends of his Youth
228(1)
234 VIII. Summer and Spring
229(1)
235 IX. The Secrets of the Old
229(1)
236 X. His Wildness
230(1)
237 XI. From `Oedipus at Colonus'
230(1)
238 The Three Monuments
231(1)
239 All Souls' Night
231(6)
THE WINDING STAIR AND OTHER POEMS (1933) 237(48)
240 In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markiewicz
237(1)
241 Death
238(1)
242 A Dialogue of Self and Soul
238(3)
243 Blood and the Moon
241(2)
244 Oil and Blood
243(1)
245 Veronica's Napkin
243(1)
246 Symbols
243(1)
247 Spilt Milk
244(1)
248 The Nineteenth Century and After
244(1)
249 Statistics
244(1)
250 Three Movements
244(1)
251 The Seven Sages
245(1)
252 The Crazed Moon
246(1)
253 Coole Park, 1929
246(1)
254 Coole and Ballylee, 1931
247(2)
255 For Anne Gregory
249(1)
256 Swift's Epitaph
250(1)
257 At Algeciras--a Meditation upon Death
250(1)
258 The Choice
251(1)
259 Mohini Chatterjee
251(1)
260 Byzantium
252(1)
261 The Mother of God
253(1)
262 Vacillation
254(3)
263 Quarrel in Old Age
257(1)
264 The Results of Thought
257(1)
265 Gratitude to the Unknown Instructors
258(1)
266 Remorse for Intemperate Speech
258(1)
267 Stream and Sun at Glendalough
259(1)
Words for Music Perhaps: 260(15)
268 I. Crazy Jane and the Bishop
260(1)
269 II. Crazy Jane Reproved
261(1)
270 III. Crazy Jane on the Day of Judgment
261(1)
271 IV. Crazy Jane and Jack the Journeyman
262(1)
272 V. Crazy Jane on God
263(1)
273 VI. Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop
263(1)
274 VII. Crazy Jane Grown Old Looks at the Dancers
264(1)
275 VIII. Girl's Song
265(1)
276 IX. Young Man's Song
265(1)
277 X. Her Anxiety
266(1)
278 XI. His Confidence
266(1)
279 XII. Love's Loneliness
267(1)
280 XIII. Her Dream
267(1)
281 XIV. His Bargain
268(1)
282 XV. Three Things
268(1)
283 XVI. Lullaby
269(1)
284 XVII. After Long Silence
269(1)
285 XVIII. Mad as the Mist and Snow
270(1)
286 XIX. Those Dancing Days are Gone
270(1)
287 XX. `I am of Ireland'
271(1)
288 XXI. The Dancer at Cruachan and Cro-Patrick
272(1)
289 XXII. Tom the Lunatic
273(1)
290 XXIII. Tom at Cruachan
273(1)
291 XXIV. Old Tom again
274(1)
292 XXV. The Delphic Oracle upon Plotinus
274(1)
A Woman Young and Old: 275(10)
293 I. Father and Child
275(1)
294 II. Before the World was Made
275(1)
295 III. A First Confession
276(1)
296 IV. Her Triumph
276(1)
297 V. Consolation
277(1)
298 VI. Chosen
277(1)
299 VII. Parting
278(1)
300 VIII. Her Vision in the Wood
279(1)
301 IX. A Last Confession
280(1)
302 X. Meeting
281(1)
303 XI. From the `Antigone'
281(4)
[PARNELL'S FUNERAL AND OTHER POEMS (1935)] 285(14)
304 Parnell's Funeral
285(1)
305 Alternative Song for the Severed Head in `The King of the Great Clock Tower'
286(1)
306 Two Songs Rewritten for the Tune's Sake
287(1)
307 A Prayer for Old Age
288(1)
308 Church and State
289(1)
Supernatural Songs:
309 I. Ribh at the Tomb of Baile and Aillinn
289(1)
310 II. Ribh denounces Patrick
290(1)
311 III. Ribh in Ecstasy
291(1)
312 IV. There
291(1)
313 V. Ribh considers Christian Love insufficient
291(1)
314 VI. He and She
292(1)
315 VII. What Magic Drum?
293(1)
316 VIII. Whence had they Come?
293(1)
317 IX. The Four Ages of Man
294(1)
318 X. Conjunctions
294(1)
319 XI. A Needle's Eye
294(1)
320 XII. Meru
295(4)
NEW POEMS (1938) 299(34)
321 The Gyres
299(1)
322 Lapis Lazuli
300(2)
323 Imitated from the Japanese
302(1)
324 Sweet Dancer
302(1)
325 The Three Bushes
303(2)
326 The Lady's First Song
305(1)
327 The Lady's Second Song
305(1)
328 The Lady's Third Song
306(1)
329 The Lover's Song
307(1)
330 The Chambermaid's First Song
307(1)
331 The Chambermaid's Second Song
307(1)
332 An Acre of Grass
308(1)
333 What Then?
308(1)
334 Beautiful Lofty Things
309(1)
335 A Crazed Girl
310(1)
336 To Dorothy Wellesley
310(1)
337 The Curse of Cromwell
311(1)
338 Roger Casement
312(1)
339 The Ghost of Roger Casement
313(1)
340 The O'Rahilly
314(1)
341 Come Gather Round Me Parnellites
315(1)
342 The Wild Old Wicked Man
316(2)
343 The Great Day
318(1)
344 Parnell
318(1)
345 What Was Lost
318(1)
346 The Spur
319(1)
347 A Drunken Man's Praise of Sobriety
319(1)
348 The Pilgrim
320(1)
349 Colonel Martin
321(2)
350 A Model for the Laureate
323(1)
351 The Old Stone Cross
324(1)
352 The Spirit Medium
325(1)
353 Those Images
326(1)
354 The Municipal Gallery Re-visited
326(3)
355 Are You Content
329(4)
[LAST POEMS (1938-1939)] 333(28)
356 Under Ben Bulben
333(3)
357 Three Songs to the One Burden
336(3)
358 The Black Tower
339(1)
359 Cuchulain Comforted
340(1)
360 Three Marching Songs
341(3)
361 In Tara's Halls
344(1)
362 The Statues
344(1)
363 News for the Delphic Oracle
345(2)
364 Long-legged Fly
347(1)
365 A Bronze Head
348(1)
366 A Stick of Incense
349(1)
367 Hound Voice
349(1)
368 John Kinsella's Lament for Mrs. Mary Moore
350(1)
369 High Talk
351(1)
370 The Apparitions
352(1)
371 A Nativity
352(1)
372 Man and the Echo
353(2)
373 The Circus Animals' Desertion
355(1)
374 Politics
356(5)
Narrative and Dramatic 361(98)
375 The Wanderings of Oisin (1889)
361(34)
376 The Old Age of Queen Maeve (1903)
395(8)
377 Baile and Aillinn (1903)
403(10)
The Shadowy Waters (1906) 413(46)
378 Introductory Lines
413(2)
379 The Harp of Aengus
415(2)
380 The Shadowy Waters
417(26)
381 The Two Kings (1914)
443(8)
382 The Gift of Harun Al-Rashid (1923)
451(8)
PART TWO Additional Poems 459(140)
A1 The Island of Statues
459(30)
A2 Love and Death
489(1)
A3 The Seeker
490(3)
A4 Life
493(1)
A5 The Two Titans
494(2)
A6 On Mr. Nettleship's Picture at the Royal Hibernian Academy
496(1)
A7 Mosada
497(11)
A8 Remembrance
508(1)
A9 A Dawn-Song
508(1)
A10 The Fairy Pedant
509(2)
A11 Song of Spanish Insurgents
511(1)
A12 [How beautiful thy colors are, oh marvellous morn of May]
512(1)
A13 How Ferencz Renyi Kept Silent
512(4)
A14 She Who Dwelt among the Sycamores
516(1)
A15 The Fairy Doctor
517(1)
A16 The Protestants' Leap
518(2)
A17 Love Song
520(1)
A18 The Phantom Ship
520(1)
A19 A Legend
521(2)
A20 Time and the Witch Vivien
523(3)
A21 [Full moody is my love and sad]
526(1)
A22 Kanva on Himself
527(1)
A23 A Lover's Quarrel among the Fairies
527(2)
A24 The Priest and the Fairy
529(3)
A25 Street Dancers
532(2)
A26 Quatrains and Aphorisms
534(1)
A27 In Church
535(1)
A28 A Summer Evening
536(1)
A29 In the Firelight
537(1)
A30 Mourn--And Then Onward!
537(1)
A31 When you are Sad
538(1)
A32 Where My Books Go
538(1)
A33 The Ballad of Earl Paul
539(2)
A34 The Danaan Quicken Tree
541(1)
A35 Wisdom and Dreams
542(1)
A36 [The wind blows out of the gates of the day]
542(1)
A37 [The poet, Owen Hanrahan, under a bush of may]
543(1)
A38 [Impetuous heart be still, be still]
543(1)
A39 [Lift up the white knee]
544(1)
A40 [Out of sight is out of mind]
544(1)
A41 A Song of the Rosy-Cross
544(1)
A42 [Seven paters seven times]
545(1)
A43 The Glove and the Cloak
545(1)
A44 The Blood Bond
546(1)
A45 Spinning Song
546(1)
A46 [I will go cry with the woman]
547(1)
A47 [Do not make a great keening]
547(1)
A48 [They shall be remembered for ever]
547(1)
A49 [O Biddy Donahoe]
548(1)
A50 [The spouse of Naoise, Erin's woe]
548(1)
A51 [There's broth in the pot for you, old man]
548(1)
A52 [There's nobody'll call out for him]
549(1)
A53 [The four rivers that run there]
550(1)
A54 [`Why is it,' Queen Edain said]
550(1)
A55 [Come ride and ride to the garden]
551(1)
A56 [May this fire have driven out]
552(1)
A57 [Cuchulain has killed kings]
553(1)
A58 [Love is an immoderate thing]
553(1)
A59 [They are gone, they are gone. The proud may lie by the proud]
554(1)
A60 [I put under the power of my prayer]
554(1)
A61 [O come all ye airy bachelors]
555(1)
A62 [O, Johnny Gibbons, my five hundred healths to you]
555(1)
A63 [O, the lion shall lose his strength]
556(1)
A64 [Three that are watching my time to run]
556(1)
A65 [My man is the best]
556(1)
A66 [The friends that have it I do wrong]
557(1)
A67 [I was going the road one day]
558(1)
A68 [Accursed who brings to light of day]
558(1)
A69 [Nothing that he has done]
559(1)
A70 [Laegaire is best]
559(1)
A71 [Who stole your wits away]
560(1)
A72 [I hear the wind a-blow]
560(1)
A73 [Were I but crazy for love's sake]
560(1)
A74 [The man that I praise]
561(1)
A75 [I call to the eye of the mind]
561(1)
A76 [The boughs of the hazel shake]
562(1)
A77 [O God, protect me]
562(1)
A78 [He has lost what may not be found]
563(1)
A79 [Come to me, human faces]
563(1)
A80 [Why does my heart beat so]
564(1)
A81 [Why should the heart take fright]
564(1)
A82 [At the grey round of the hill]
565(1)
A83 [A woman's beauty is like a white]
566(1)
A84 [White shell, white wing]
567(1)
A85 [Why does your heart beat thus]
567(1)
A86 Reprisals
568(1)
A87 [Motionless under the moon-beam]
569(1)
A88 [O, but the mockers' cry]
570(1)
A89 [Take but His love away]
570(1)
A90 [Lonely the sea-bird lies at her rest]
570(1)
A91 The Hero, the Girl, and the Fool
571(1)
A92 [Shall I fancy beast or fowl]
572(1)
A93 [Upon the round blue eye I rail]
573(1)
A94 Song of the Drunkard
573(1)
A95 [What message comes to famous Thebes from the Golden House]
573(1)
A96 [The Delphian rock has spoken out, now must a wicked mind]
574(1)
A97 [For this one thing above all I would be praised as a man]
574(1)
A98 [Oedipus' nurse, mountain of many a hidden glen]
575(1)
A99 [What can the shadow-like generations of man attain]
576(1)
A100 [Make way for Oedipus. All people said]
576(1)
A101 [Huddon, Duddon, and Daniel O'Leary]
577(1)
A102 [Astrea's holy child]
577(1)
A103 [Move upon Newton's town]
578(1)
A104 [Should H. G. Wells afflict you]
578(1)
A105 Three Songs to the Same Tune
579(3)
A106 [Let images of basalt, black, immovable]
582(1)
A107 [They dance all day that dance in Tir-nan-oge]
582(1)
A108 [O what may come]
583(1)
A109 [O, but I saw a solemn sight]
583(1)
A110 [To Garret or Cellar a wheel I send]
584(1)
A111 [The bravest from the gods but ask]
584(1)
A112 [Decline of day]
584(1)
A113 [Would I were there when they turn and Theban robbers face]
584(1)
A114 [What is this portent? What does it shadow forth?]
585(1)
A115 [I call upon Persephone, queen of the dead]
586(1)
A116 [He had famished in a wilderness]
586(1)
A117 [Every loutish lad in love]
587(1)
A118 [Child and darling, hear my song]
588(1)
A119 [I sing a song of Jack and Jill]
588(1)
A120 [Why must those holy, haughty feet descend]
589(1)
A121 [Clip and lip and long for more]
590(1)
A122 Dedication
590(1)
A123 [This they nailed upon a post]
591(1)
A124 [When I take a beast to my joyful breast]
591(1)
A125 [When beak and claw their work began]
592(1)
A126 [Why should not Old Men be Mad?]
592(1)
A127 [Crazy Jane on the Mountain]
593(1)
A128 [Avalon]
594(1)
A129 [The harlot sang to the beggarman]
595(4)
Appendix A: Yeats's Notes in The Collected Poems (1933) 599(10)
Notes to Appendix A 609(10)
Appendix B: Music from New Poems (1938) 619(3)
Notes to Appendix B 622(1)
Explanatory Notes 623(100)
Textual Notes 723(10)
Index to Titles 733(9)
Index to First Lines 742

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