FREE BOOKS

Author's List




entries : 2
<<<   1  
titlecreatorlanguagedescriptiontableOfContentscontributorsubjectcreated
Humanity's Gain from Unbelief Reprinted from the "North American Review" of March, 1889Bradlaugh, Charles, 1833-1891enFree thought; Atheism2009-10-06
The Celtic TwilightYeats, W. B. (William Butler), 1865-1939enThis book -- A teller of tales -- Belief and unbelief -- Mortal help -- A visionary -- Village ghosts -- 'Dust hath closed Helen's eye' -- A knight of the sheep -- An enduring heart -- The sorcerers -- The devil -- Happy and unhappy theologians -- The last gleeman -- Regina, regina pigmeorum, veni -- 'And fair, fierce women' -- Enchanted woods -- Miraculous creatures -- Aristotle of the books -- The swine of the gods -- A voice -- Kidnappers -- The untiring ones -- Earth, fire and water -- The old town -- The man and his boots -- A coward -- The three O'Byrnes and the evil faeries -- Drumcliff and Rosses -- The thick skull of the fortunate -- The religion of a sailor -- Concerning the nearness together of heaven, earth, and purgatory -- The eaters of precious stones -- Our Lady of the hills -- The golden age -- A remonstrance with Scotsmen for having soured the disposition of their ghosts and faeries -- War -- The queen and the fool -- The friends of the people of faery -- Dreams that have no moral -- By the roadside -- Into the twilight.Yeats, W. B. (William Butler), 1865-1939 -- Homes and haunts -- Ireland -- Sligo (County); Yeats, W. B. (William Butler), 1865-1939 -- Childhood and youth; Tales -- Ireland -- Sligo (County); Poets, Irish -- Homes and haunts -- Ireland -- Sligo (County); Mythology, Celtic -- Ireland -- Sligo (County); Poets, Irish -- 19th century -- Biography; Folklore -- Ireland -- Sligo (County); Sligo (Ireland : County) -- Social life and customs2003-12-01




Top keywords:

Ireland

 

County

 

Butler

 

William

 

ghosts

 

Celtic

 

haunts

 

faeries

 

Scotsmen

 
precious

eaters
 

purgatory

 

heaven

 
stones
 

golden

 

remonstrance

 
coward
 

Rosses

 
Drumcliff
 

religion


Byrnes
 

Concerning

 

nearness

 

fortunate

 

sailor

 

Mythology

 

century

 

twilight

 

Childhood

 

Biography


Folklore

 

customs

 

Social

 
roadside
 

friends

 

soured

 

disposition

 
people
 

Dreams

 
Belief

unbelief
 
teller
 

Twilight

 

Mortal

 

closed

 

visionary

 

Village

 

American

 
Review
 

Reprinted