Sentences with phrase «yeats wrote»

W.B. Yeats wrote in a famous poem about how «the center» no longer «holds,» about how «the good» lack «passionate intensity» while evil men and women have just such zeal, and how in the result things are «breaking up» wherever one looks.
Poet W.B. Yeats wrote that «happiness is neither virtue nor pleasure nor this thing nor that, but simply growth.
In imitating a kind of crucifixion, Merrick also invokes the traditional poetry of an older religion that for some of the Late Romantics retained its «traditional sanctity and loveliness» (as Yeats wrote) if not its grounding in historical truth.
In his poem, «The Cloths of Heaven,» WB Yeats writes: «I have spread my dreams under your feet; Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.»

Not exact matches

Yeats, who wrote the original line, was relatively untroubled by irony, and if that sometimes meant he sounded absurd, it also made possible his many unforgettable lines.
They work well with any yeat group from Year 9 upwards and the monologue and duologue script writing is ideal for classes that are not too keen on getting up and performing.
For such a small island, Ireland has a vast history of notable (though often incredibly sad) writing: Swift, Joyce, Yeats, Beckett, Heaney, McCourt, George Bernard Shaw, etc..
For example, when Orna Ross, director of the Alliance of Independent Authors (ALLi) wrote about her new W.B. Yeats Secret Rose project at The FutureBook, she mentioned that she'd used Pubslush to fund it with # 7,890 ($ 12,157) in contributions from 49 backers.
wrote W.B. Yeats in his poem «The Second Coming» (1919).
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