| + | Nation. 84: 34. Ja. 10, ’07. 430w. (Review of v. 1.) |
“The fact that he is occasionally carried away by his love for the old fairy legends of his native land must not be held against him. It is only occasionally that he transcends common sense and loses sight of reason in a fog of mysticism.” Bliss Carman.
| + − | N. Y. Times. 12: 68. F. 2, ’07. 1770w. |
“Foremost—indeed, as far as permanent value goes, entirely alone—in this year’s output stands the volume of Mr. Yeats’s collected dramas.” Louise Collier Willcox.
| + + | No. Am. 186: 92. S. ’07. 840w. | |
| Outlook. 85: 238. Ja. 26, ’07. 80w. (Review of v. 1.) |
“For Mr. Yeats’s poetry I have more respectful sympathy than liking. I wish I liked it better. I feel quite sure that it deserves affection. Often in phrases and occasionally in whole lyrics it is exquisite. And it is always admirable in intention, but, somehow, it lacks something. It does not give the thrill. It is wanting in the pull on the heart.”
| + − | Putnam’s. 2: 118. Ap. ’07. 770w. |
“Here the intangible, the illusive and elusive weave their shadowy world, and one knows not when he returns from it what shapes he has met; but he knows that he has been in an enchanted place and that his spirit was stirred.” Jessie B. Rittenhouse.
| + | Putnam’s. 3: 363. D. ’07. 590w. |
Yost, Casper S. Making of a successful husband: letters of a happily married man to his son. **$1. Dillingham.