The cloak, the boat, and the shoes -- The Indian to his love -- The falling of the leaves -- The stolen child -- To an isle in the water -- Down by the Salley Gardens -- The rose of the world -- The lake isle of Innisfree -- The pity of love -- The sorrow of love -- When you are old -- Who goes with Fergus? -- The lamentation of the old pensioner -- The two trees -- To some I have talked with by the fire -- The fisherman -- The song of wandering Aengus -- He mourns for the change that has come upon him and his beloved and longs for the end of the world -- He remembers forgotten beauty -- A poet to his beloved -- The cap and bells -- He thinks of those who have spoken evil of his beloved -- The secret rose -- The lover pleads with his friends for old friends -- He wishes his beloved were dead -- The fiddler of Dooney -- In the seven woods -- The arrow -- Never give all the heart -- Adam's curse.
(Cont.) Red Hanrahan's song about Ireland -- The old men admiring themselves in the water -- His dream -- Words -- No second Troy -- A drinking song -- To a poet, who would have me praise certain bad poets, imitators of his and mine -- The mask -- At Galway races -- All things can tempt me -- Brown penny -- September 1913 -- To a friend whose work has come to nothing -- To a shade -- When Helen lived -- The three hermits -- The hour before dawn -- The realists -- The witch (I) -- The peacock (II) -- To a child dancing in the wid (I) -- Two years later (II) -- A memory of youth -- Friends -- The cold heaven -- That the night come -- An appointment -- The magi -- The dolls -- A coat -- The old age of Queen Maeve.
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