Yeats, W. B. (William Butler), 1865-1939 (Personal Name)
- D. E. D. I., 1865-1939
- Daemon Est Deus Inversus, 1865-1939
- Ganconagh, 1865-1939
- I., D. E. D., 1865-1939
- Iĕit̆s, U. B. (Uilʹia͡m Batler), 1865-1939
- Iĕit̆s, Uilʹia͡m Batler, 1865-1939
- Weilian Batele Yezhi, 1865-1939
- Earlier heading: Yeats, William Butler, 1865-1939
- Yeṭs, Ṿilyam Baṭler, 1865-1939
Horton, W. T. The book of images ... 1898.
Riapolova, V. A. U.B. Ieits i irlandskaia khudozhestvennaia kul'tura, 1985: p. 5 (Uil'iam Batler Ieits)
Shishah mahazot u-frozah, c1968: t.p. (Vilyam Batler Yets [voc.])
Is the order of R.R. & A.C. to remain a magical order? 1891: p. 30 (signed at end: D.E.D.I.)
Wade, A. A bibliography of the writings of W.B. Yeats. 3rd ed., 1968: no. 33 ("The order Rubidae Rosae & Aureae Crucis was apparently a section of the Order of the Golden Dawn, the mystical society to which Yeats belonged. Each member adopted a motto, usually in Latin, and was known in the Order by the initials of the motto; Yeats was Daemon Est Deus Inversus")
Wei jian feng, 2004: t.p. (W.B. Yeats; = Weilian Batele Yezhi)
Oxford dictionary of national biography, 3 June 2014 (Yeats, William Butler (1865-1939), poet, was born on 13 June 1865 at 1 George s Ville, 5 Sandymount Avenue, Dublin, the eldest child of John Butler Yeats (1839-1922) and Susan Mary, neÌe Pollexfen (1841-1900); he died at Roquebrune on the Riviera on 28 January 1939)
Nobel Foundation, WWW, viewed on May 23, 2019: The Nobel Prize in Literature 1923 (The Nobel Prize in Literature 1923 was awarded to William Butler Yeats "for his always inspired poetry, which in a highly artistic form gives expression to the spirit of a whole nation")