When
Yeats came to, thinking he had got away with one, the ref gave him a red card as well.!!
«Ron
Yeats came into my office and told me there was a young Danish goalkeeper who was a Liverpool fan and was willing to pay his own travel and hotel in exchange for some time with us.
Not exact matches
W.B.
Yeats» words, then,
comes true again in our day: «the best lack all conviction while the worst are full of passionate intensity.»
William Butler
Yeats anticipated the mood of these times in his poem «The Second
Coming»:
just because u
come and win a lot in a few
yeats does not justify u siting on that sucess and not built on it.
«The best lack all conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity — W.B.
Yeats, «The Second
Coming»
It has become something of a cliche, I know, but no one ever put this sort of thing better than William Butler
Yeats in his poem «The Second
Coming.»
No Country for Old Men — the title
comes from William Butler
Yeats» «Sailing to Byzantium» — is really about the terrible ravages of change, and the way that only old men, men who have lived a while, can see it.
The effect was to set people free for a new and more oppressive bondage, unrestrained by the custom and ceremony from which, as the Irish poet William Butler
Yeats reminded us, innocence and beauty
come to enrich our lives.
Willie
Yeats was 23 years old in 1889, when Maud Gonne, six feet tall, elegantly beautiful and passionately political,
came...
Brent Green's video sees an American life through artificial lights and the rain, while Chloe Piene starts with William Butler
Yeats in «The Second
Coming» — but things do not fall apart, the center holds, and a skeletal falcon takes flight.
wrote W.B.
Yeats in his poem «The Second
Coming» (1919).
Ever since the days of Kandinsky, the spiritual in art has been a subject of interest to abstract artists — to all those who seek a path beyond the physical — those who, in the words of
Yeats, «live for the moment when vision
comes to our weariness like a terrible lightning.»
«Turning and turning in the widening gyre The falcon can not hear the falconer; Things fall apart; the centre can not hold; -LSB-...]» -LCB- From «The Second
Coming» by William Butler
Yeats (1865 - 1939)-RCB-
Those with a poetical bent might recall these words, from «The Second
Coming» by W.B.
Yeats, albeit without my substitution and elision.
Cloths of Heaven I
came across this poem last week by William Butler
Yeats.