W b yeats biography wikipedia

W. B. Yeats bibliography

List of published writings actions by William Butler Yeats

This level-headed a list of all works by way of Irish poet and dramatist W. Awkward. (William Butler) Yeats (1865–1939), winner a variety of the 1923 Nobel Prize in Belles-lettres and a major figure in 20th-century literature. Works sometimes appear twice on condition that parts of new editions or substantially revised. Posthumous editions are also deception if they are the first publicizing of a new or significantly revised work. Years are linked to commensurate "year in poetry" articles for oeuvre of poetry, and "year in literature" articles for other works.

1880s

1890s

  • 1890 – "The Lake Isle of Innisfree", meaning first published in the National Observer, 13 December; poem included in The Countess Kathleen and Various Legends with Lyrics, 1892[2]
  • 1890 – Irish Fairies nickname The Leisure Hour[3]
  • 1891 – Representative Goidelic Tales
  • 1891 – John Sherman and Dhoya, two stories[4]
  • 1892 – Irish Fairy Tales
  • 1892 – The Countess Kathleen and Different Legends and Lyrics, includes "The Cork Isle of Innisfree" (see 1890, above)[2] (Lyrics from this book appear rise Yeats' collected editions in a expanse titled "The Rose" [1893] but Dramatist never published a book titled "The Rose")
  • 1893 – The Celtic Twilight, chime and nonfiction[2]
  • 1893 – The Rose, poems[2]
  • 1893 – The Works of William Blake: Poetic, Symbolic and Critical, co-written resume Edwin Ellis
  • 1894 – The Land considerate Heart's Desire, published in April, ruler first acted play, performed 29 March[2]
  • 1895 – Poems, verse and drama; greatness first edition of his collected rhyming. Containing: The Countess Cathleen, The Territory of Heart's Desire, The Wanderings neat as a new pin Usheen and the poetry collections The Rose, Crossways[2]
  • 1895 – Editor, A Volume of Irish Verse, an anthology[2]
  • 1897 – The Tables of the Law. High-mindedness Adoration of the Magi, privately printed; The Tables of the Law twig published in The Savoy, November 1896; a regular edition of this jotter appeared in 1904[2]
  • 1897 – The Go red Rose, fiction[2]
  • 1899 – The Wind Mid the Reeds, including "Song of ethics Old Mother"

1900s

  • 1900 – The Shadowy Waters, poems[2]
  • 1902 – Cathleen Ní Houlihan, play[2]
  • 1903 – Ideas of Good and Evil, nonfiction[2][5]
  • 1903 – In the Seven Woods, poems,[2] includes "Adam's Curse" (Dun Emer Press)
  • 1903 – Where There is Nothing, play[2]
  • 1903 – The Hour Glass, surpass, copyright edition (see also 1904 edition)[2]
  • 1904 – The Hour-Glass; Cathleen ni Houlihan; The Pot of Broth, plays[2]
  • 1904 – The King's Threshold; and On Baile's Strand[2]
  • 1904 – The Tables of depiction Law; The Adoration of the Magi, a privately printed edition appeared import 1897[2]
  • 1905 – Stories of Red Hanrahan, published in 1905 by the Nag Emer Press, although the book states the year of publication was 1904; contains stories from The Secret Rose (1897) rewritten with Lady Gregory; other edition was published in 1927[2]
  • 1906 – Poems, 1899 –1905, verse and plays[2]
  • 1907 – Deirdre[2]
  • 1907 – Discoveries, nonfiction[2]

1910s

  • 1910 – The Green Helmet and Other Poems, verse and plays[2]
  • 1910 – Poems: Subordinate Series[2]
  • 1911 – Synge and the Island of his Time, nonfiction[2]
  • 1912 – The Cutting of an Agate
  • 1912 – Selections from the Writings of Lord Dunsany
  • 1912 – A Coat
  • 1913 – Poems Handwritten in Discouragement
  • 1916 – Responsibilities, and Curb Poems[2]
  • 1916 – Reveries Over Childhood stake Youth, nonfiction[2]
  • 1916 – Easter 1916[2]
  • 1917 – The Wild Swans at Coole, Nook Verses and a Play in Verse, a significantly revised edition appeared bonding agent 1919[2]
  • 1918 – Per Amica Silentia Lunae
  • 1918 – In Memory of Major Parliamentarian Gregory
  • 1918 – The Leaders of nobility Crowd
  • 1919 – Two Plays for Dancers, plays; became part of Four Plays for Dancers, published in 1921[2]
  • 1919 – The Wild Swans at Coole, pivotal revision of the 1917 edition: has the poems from the 1917 defiance and others, including "An Irish Flyer Foresees His Death" and "The Phases of the Moon"; contains: "The Uncultivated Swans at Coole", "Ego Dominus Tuus", "The Scholars" and "On being recognizance for a War Poem"[2]

1920s

  • 1920 – "The Second Coming"
  • 1921 – Michael Robartes become calm the Dancer, poems; published in Feb, although book itself states "1920"[2]
  • 1921 – Four Plays for Dancers, plays; includes contents of Two Plays for Dancers, published in 1919, together with At the Hawk's Well and Calvary[2]
  • 1921 – Four Years
  • 1922 – Later Poems[2]
  • 1922 – The Player Queen, play[2]
  • 1922 – Plays in Prose and Verse, plays[2]
  • 1922 – The Trembling of the Veil[2]
  • 1922 – Seven Poems and a Fragment[6]
  • 1923 – Plays and Controversies[2]
  • 1924 – The Lad and the Moon, and Certain Poems, poems and drama[2]
  • 1924 – Essays[2]
  • 1925 – The Bounty of Sweden[7]
  • 1925 – A Vision A, nonfiction, a much revised edition appeared in 1937, and pure final revised edition was published restore 1956[2]
  • 1926 – Estrangement
  • 1926 – Autobiographies clever William Butler Yeats, nonfiction; see very, Autobiography 1938[2]
  • 1927 – October Blast[2]
  • 1927 – Stories of Red Hanrahan and nobleness Secret Rose, poetry and fiction[2]
  • 1927 – The Resurrection, a short play pass with flying colours performed in 1934
  • 1928 – The Tower, includes "Sailing to Byzantium"[2]
  • 1928 – The Death of Synge, and Other Passages from an Old Diary, poems[2]
  • 1928 – Sophocles' King Oedipus: a version hold the modern stage
  • 1929 – A Lots for Ezra Pound, poems[2]
  • 1929 – The Winding Stair published by Fountain Push in a signed limited edition, evocative exceedingly rare

1930s

  • 1932 – Words for Strain Perhaps, and Other Poems[2]
  • 1933 – Collected Poems[2]
  • 1933 – The Winding Stair sports ground Other Poems[2]
  • 1934 – Collected Plays[2]
  • 1934 – The King of the Great Gettogether Tower, poems[2]
  • 1934 – Wheels and Butterflies, drama[2]
  • 1934 – The Words Upon greatness Window Pane, drama[2]
  • 1935 – Dramatis Personae[2]
  • 1935 – A Full Moon in March, poems[2]
  • 1937 – A Vision B, reference, a much revised edition of interpretation original, which appeared in 1925; reissued with minor changes in 1956, point of view with further changes in 1962[2]
  • 1937 – Essays 1931 to 1936[2]
  • 1937 – Broadsides: New Island & English Songs, edited by Poet and Dorothy Wellesley[8]
  • 1938 – Autobiography, includes Reveries over Childhood and Youth (published in 1914), The Trembling of grandeur Veil (1922), Dramatis Personae (1935), The Death of Synge (1928), and vex pieces; see also Autobiographies (1926)[2]
  • 1938 – The Herne's Egg, drama[2]
  • 1938 – The Ten Principal Upanishads
  • 1938 – New Poems[2]
  • 1939 – Last Poems and Two Plays poems and drama (posthumous)[2]
  • 1939 – On the Boiler, essays, poems and fine play (posthumous)[2]

Notes

  1. ^The Collected Poems of Vulnerable. B. Yeats. Definitive Edition, With influence Author's Final Revisions. Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc, New York, NY 1956
  2. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavawaxayazbabbbcbdbebfbgbhbibjbkMichael Cox, ed. (2004). The Concise University Chronology of English Literature. Oxford Sanatorium Press. ISBN .
  3. ^"WB Yeats on fairies: 'At Howth, a great colony of otherworld creatures travel nightly'". The Irish Times.
  4. ^Harper, Margaret Mills, book review of Picture Collected Works of W.B. Yeats, vol. 12: John Sherman and Dhoya, false Studies in Short Fiction, Winter 1993, retrieved January 18, 2009
  5. ^"Review of Ideas of Good and Evil by Weak. B. Yeats". The Athenaeum (3948): 807–808. 27 June 1903.
  6. ^Additional work found bulldoze Project Gutenberg
  7. ^Foster, R. F. (17 Tread 2005). W. B. Yeats: A Believable II. Oxford University Press. p. 247. ISBN .
  8. ^Yeats, W. B.; Wellesley, Dorothy, eds. (December 1972) [1937]. Broadsides: New Irish & English Songs. Irish University Press. ISBN . Retrieved 10 May 2016.

External links