IDEAS OF GOOD AND EVIL
Being The Sixth Volume Of The Collected Works
In Verse & Prose
Of William Butler Yeats
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| WHAT IS 'POPULAR POETRY'? | 1 |
| SPEAKING TO THE PSALTERY | 13 |
| MAGIC | 23 |
| THE HAPPIEST OF THE POETS | 55 |
| THE PHILOSOPHY OF SHELLEY'S POETRY | 71 |
| AT STRATFORD-ON-AVON | 111 |
| WILLIAM BLAKE AND THE IMAGINATION | 131 |
| WILLIAM BLAKE AND HIS ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE 'DIVINE COMEDY' | 138 |
| SYMBOLISM IN PAINTING | 176 |
| THE SYMBOLISM OF POETRY | 185 |
| THE THEATRE | 200 |
| THE CELTIC ELEMENT IN LITERATURE | 210 |
| THE AUTUMN OF THE BODY | 230 |
| THE MOODS | 238 |
| THE BODY OF THE FATHER CHRISTIAN ROSENCRUX | 240 |
| THE RETURN OF ULYSSES | 243 |
| IRELAND AND THE ARTS | 249 |
| THE GALWAY PLAINS | 259 |
| EMOTION OF MULTITUDE | 264 |
THE SECRET ROSE.
ROSA ALCHEMICA.
THE TABLES OF THE LAW.
THE
ADORATION OF THE MAGI.
JOHN SHERMAN AND DHOYA
Being The Seventh Volume Of The Collected Works
In Verse & Prose
Of William Butler Yeats
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| THE SECRET ROSE: | |
| DEDICATION | 3 |
| TO THE SECRET ROSE | 5 |
| THE CRUCIFIXION OF THE OUTCAST | 7 |
| OUT OF THE ROSE | 20 |
| THE WISDOM OF THE KING | 31 |
| THE HEART OF THE SPRING | 42 |
| THE CURSE OF THE FIRES AND OF THE SHADOWS | 51 |
| THE OLD MEN OF THE TWILIGHT | 61 |
| WHERE THERE IS NOTHING, THERE IS GOD | 69 |
|
OF COSTELLO THE PROUD, OF OONA THE
DAUGHTER OF DERMOTT AND OF THE BITTER TONGUE
|
78 |
| ROSA ALCHEMICA | 103 |
| THE TABLES OF THE LAW | 141 |
| THE ADORATION OF THE MAGI | 165 |
| EARLY STORIES. | |
| JOHN SHERMAN | 183 |
| DHOYA | 283 |
DISCOVERIES.
EDMUND SPENSER.
POETRY AND TRADITION;
&
OTHER ESSAYS
Being The Eighth Volume Of The Collected Works
In Verse & Prose
Of William Butler Yeats
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| DISCOVERIES: | |
| PROPHET, PRIEST AND KING | 3 |
| PERSONALITY AND THE INTELLECTUAL ESSENCES | 8 |
| THE MUSICIAN AND THE ORATOR | 12 |
| A GUITAR PLAYER | 13 |
| THE LOOKING-GLASS | 14 |
| THE TREE OF LIFE | 15 |
| THE PRAISE OF OLD WIVES' TALES | 18 |
| THE PLAY OF MODERN MANNERS | 20 |
| HAS THE DRAMA OF CONTEMPORARY LIFE A ROOT OF ITS OWN? | 22 |
| WHY THE BLIND MAN IN ANCIENT TIMES WAS MADE A POET | 24 |
| CONCERNING SAINTS AND ARTISTS | 29 |
| THE SUBJECT MATTER OF DRAMA | 32 |
| THE TWO KINDS OF ASCETICISM | 36 |
| IN THE SERPENT'S MOUTH | 38 |
| THE BLACK AND THE WHITE ARROWS | 39 |
| HIS MISTRESS'S EYEBROWS | 39 |
| THE TRESSES OF THE HAIR | 41 |
| A TOWER ON THE APENNINE | 42 |
| THE THINKING OF THE BODY | 43 |
| RELIGIOUS BELIEF NECESSARY TO SYMBOLIC ART | 45 |
| THE HOLY PLACES | 48 |
| EDMUND SPENSER | 51 |
| POETRY AND TRADITION | 91 |
| MODERN IRISH POETRY | 113 |
| LADY GREGORY'S CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE | 131 |
| LADY GREGORY'S GODS AND FIGHTING MEN | 147 |
| MR. SYNGE AND HIS PLAYS | 171 |
| LIONEL JOHNSON | 183 |
| THE PATHWAY | 189 |
| BIBLIOGRAPHY | 197 |
STORIES OF RED HANRAHAN
By W.B. Yeats
CONTENTS
| RED HANRAHAN. |
| THE TWISTING OF THE ROPE. |
| HANRAHAN AND CATHLEEN THE DAUGHTER OF HOOLIHAN. |
| RED HANRAHAN'S CURSE. |
| HANRAHAN'S VISION. |
| THE DEATH OF HANRAHAN. |
THE SECRET ROSE
By W.B. Yeats
CONTENTS
IRISH FAIRY TALES
Edited With An Introduction
By W. B. Yeats
Illustrated By Jack B. Yeats
CONTENTS
FAIRY AND FOLK TALES
OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY
Edited And Selected By W. B. Yeats
CONTENTS
| THE TROOPING FAIRIES— | PAGE | |
| The Fairies | 3 | |
| Frank Martin and the Fairies | 5 | |
| The Priest's Supper | 9 | |
| The Fairy Well of Lagnanay | 13 | |
| Teig O'Kane and the Corpse | 16 | |
| Paddy Corcoran's Wife | 31 | |
| Cusheen Loo | 33 | |
| The White Trout; A Legend of Cong | 35 | |
| The Fairy Thorn | 38 | |
| The Legend of Knockgrafton | 40 | |
| A Donegal Fairy | 46 | |
| Changelings— | ||
| The Brewery of Egg-shells | 48 | |
| The Fairy Nurse | 51 | |
| Jamie Freel and the Young Lady | 52 | |
| The Stolen Child | 59 | |
| The Merrow— | ||
| The Soul Cages | 61 | |
| Flory Cantillon's Funeral | 75 | |
| THE SOLITARY FAIRIES— | ||
| The Lepracaun; or, Fairy Shoemaker | 81 | |
| Master and Man | 84 | |
| Far Darrig in Donegal | 90 | |
| The Piper and the Puca | 95 | |
| Daniel O'Rourke | 97 | |
| The Kildare Pooka | 105 | |
| How Thomas Connolly met the Banshee | 108 | |
| A Lamentation for the Death of Sir Maurice Fitzgerald | 112 | |
| The Banshee of the MacCarthys | 113 | |
| GHOSTS— | ||
| A Dream | 129 | |
| Grace Connor | 130 | |
| A Legend of Tyrone | 132 | |
| The Black Lamb | 134 | |
| The Radiant Boy | 136 | |
| The Fate of Frank M'Kenna | 139 | |
| WITCHES, FAIRY DOCTORS— | ||
| Bewitched Butter (Donegal) | 149 | |
| A Queen's County Witch | 151 | |
| The Witch Hare | 154 | |
| Bewitched Butter (Queen's County) | 155 | |
| The Horned Women | 165 | |
| The Witches' Excursion | 168 | |
| The Confessions of Tom Bourke | 170 | |
| The Pudding Bewitched | 185 | |
| T'YEER-NA-N-OGE— | ||
| The Legend of O'Donoghue | 201 | |
| Rent-Day | 203 | |
| Loughleagh (Lake of Healing) | 206 | |
| Hy-Brasail.—The Isle of the Blest | 212 | |
| The Phantom Isle | 213 | |
| SAINTS, PRIESTS— | ||
| The Priest's Soul | 215 | |
| The Priest of Coloony | 220 | |
| The Story of the Little Bird | 222 | |
| Conversion of King Laoghaire's Daughters | 224 | |
| King O'Toole and his Goose | 224 | |
| THE DEVIL— | ||
| The Demon Cat | 229 | |
| The Long Spoon | 231 | |
| The Countess Kathleen O'Shea | 232 | |
| The Three Wishes | 235 | |
| GIANTS— | ||
| The Giant's Stairs | 260 | |
| A Legend of Knockmany | 266 | |
| KINGS, QUEENS, PRINCESSES, EARLS, ROBBERS— | ||
| The Twelve Wild Geese | 280 | |
| The Lazy Beauty and her Aunts | 286 | |
| The Haughty Princess | 290 | |
| The Enchantment of Gearoidh Iarla | 294 | |
| Munachar and Manachar | 296 | |
| Donald and his Neighbours | 299 | |
| The Jackdaw | 303 | |
| The Story of Conn-eda | 306 | |
| NOTES | 319 |
SEVEN POEMS AND A FRAGMENT
By William Butler Yeats
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| All Souls’ Night | 1 |
| Suggested by a Picture of a Black Centaur | 6 |
| Thoughts upon the Present State of the World | 7 |
| The New Faces | 14 |
| A Prayer for My Son | 14 |
| Cuchulain the Girl and the Fool | 16 |
| The Wheel | 18 |
| A New End for ‘The King’s Threshold’ | 18 |
| NOTES | |
| Note on ‘Thoughts Upon the Present State of the World’ Section Six | 23 |
| Note on The New End to ‘The King’s Threshold’ | 24 |