Yeats, B William. Poems of WB Yeats. New York: Macmillan, 1996.318 The important point of this book is that it contains works by poetry by William Yeats. The most striking feature of this book is to try to describe the transformation of Yeats in his work and as a result his work is ordered chronologically to emphasize this point of view. The symbol and legend of the resurrected Rose Cross, depicting his work as a minstrel of Celtic Twilight, is the most positive.
It is worth noting that Yeats is waiting for this aesthetic reason to gather this poem: he is thinking about books and book works and is extremely worried about the order of poetry. "Easter, 1916" etc in books such as "Easter", "Prayer for birth", "Order of myths", "Bloody of history", "Easter" and "Pray for my daughter" The famous singles. Poems about rebellion: "Six people dead", "Rose tree", "Political prisoners". Donald David believes that the complete introduction of "Easter, 1916" can be understood only in this book. This is the artistic nature of Yeats. In other words reading a poet necessarily leads to reading another verse without sacrificing the formal integrity of each poem.
The stolen children of W. B Yeats were included in the poetry called Crossways in 1889. It was written in 1886 and published in 1889. When he wrote this poem William Butler Yeats was 21 years old. This poem celebrates the story of Ireland the mother loves. It expands the children centered around fairy groups to attract children to the fairytale world far from his house. Stanza 1: The poet explains about the fairy 's "green islands". Namiki's island lies in the rocky highlands of Sleuth Wood in contact with the lake. Sleepy rats awoke to the Hawaiian, and their feathers fluttered their voices. The fairies hid their stolen bowls full of stolen fruits and red cherries. Fairies summoned human children to lake and wild rock. The world in which the child lives is more painful and sad than he can understand, so the fairy asks the children to join them on their fairytale island.