- Project Gutenberg's Seven Poems and a Fragment, by William Butler Yeats
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- Title: Seven Poems and a Fragment
- Author: William Butler Yeats
- Release Date: April 12, 2010 [EBook #31959]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEVEN POEMS AND A FRAGMENT ***
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- SEVEN POEMS AND A FRAGMENT
- BY WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS.
- [Illustration]
- THE CUALA PRESS
- DUNDRUM
- MCMXXII
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- All Souls' Night Page 1
- Suggested by a Picture of a Black Centaur 6
- Thoughts upon the Present State of the World 7
- The New Faces 14
- A Prayer for My Son 14
- Cuchulain the Girl and the Fool 16
- The Wheel 18
- A New End for 'The King's Threshold' 18
- NOTES
- Note on 'Thoughts Upon the Present State of the
- World' Section Six 23
- Note on The New End to 'The King's Threshold' 24
- SEVEN POEMS AND A FRAGMENT: BY WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS.
- ALL SOULS' NIGHT
- 'Tis All Souls' Night and the great Christ Church bell,
- And many a lesser bell, sound through the room,
- For it is now midnight;
- And two long glasses brimmed with muscatel
- Bubble upon the table. A ghost may come,
- For it is a ghost's right,
- His element is so fine
- Being sharpened by his death,
- To drink from the wine-breath
- While our gross palates drink from the whole wine.
- I need some mind that, if the cannon sound
- From every quarter of the world, can stay
- Wound in mind's pondering,
- As mummies in the mummy-cloth are wound;
- Because I have a marvellous thing to say,
- A certain marvellous thing
- None but the living mock,
- Though not for sober ear;
- It may be all that hear
- Should laugh and weep an hour upon the clock.
- H--'s the first I call. He loved strange thought
- And knew that sweet extremity of pride
- That's called platonic love,
- And that to such a pitch of passion wrought
- Nothing could bring him, when his lady died,
- Anodyne for his love.
- Words were but wasted breath;
- One dear hope had he:
- The inclemency
- Of that or the next winter would be death.
- Two thoughts were so mixed up I could not tell
- Whether of her or God he thought the most,
- But think that his mind's eye,
- When upward turned, on one sole image fell,
- And that a slight companionable ghost,
- Wild with divinity,
- Had so lit up the whole
- Immense miraculous house,
- The Bible promised us,
- It seemed a gold-fish swimming in a bowl.
- On Florence Emery I call the next,
- Who finding the first wrinkles on a face
- Admired and beautiful,
- And knowing that the future would be vexed
- With 'minished beauty, multiplied commonplace,
- Preferred to teach a school,
- Away from neighbour or friend
- Among dark skins, and there
- Permit foul years to wear
- Hidden from eyesight to the unnoticed end.
- Before that end much had she ravelled out
- From a discourse in figurative speech
- By some learned Indian
- On the soul's journey. How it is whirled about,
- Wherever the orbit of the moon can reach,
- Until it plunged into the sun;
- And there free and yet fast,
- Being both Chance and Choice,
- Forget its broken toys
- And sink into its own delight at last.
- And I call up MacGregor from the grave,
- For in my first hard springtime we were friends,
- Although of late estranged.
- I thought him half a lunatic, half knave,
- And told him so, but friendship never ends;
- And what if mind seem changed,
- And it seem changed with the mind,
- When thoughts rise up unbid
- On generous things that he did
- And I grow half contented to be blind.
- He had much industry at setting out,
- Much boisterous courage, before loneliness
- Had driven him crazed;
- For meditations upon unknown thought
- Make human intercourse grow less and less;
- They are neither paid nor praised.
- But he'd object to the host,
- The glass because my glass;
- A ghost-lover he was
- And may have grown more arrogant being a ghost.
- But names are nothing. What matter who it be,
- So that his elements have grown so fine
- The fume of muscatel
- Can give his sharpened palate ecstasy
- No living man can drink from the whole wine.
- I have mummy truths to tell
- Whereat the living mock,
- Though not for sober ear,
- For maybe all that hear
- Should laugh and weep an hour upon the clock.
- Such thought--such thought have I that hold it tight
- Till meditation master all its parts,
- Nothing can stay my glance
- Until that glance run in the world's despite
- To where the damned have howled away their hearts,
- And where the blessed dance;
- Such thought, that in it bound
- I need no other thing
- Wound in mind's wandering,
- As mummies in the mummy-cloth are wound.
- SUGGESTED BY A PICTURE OF A BLACK CENTAUR
- Your hooves have stamped at the black margin of the wood,
- Even where the horrible green parrots call and swing.
- My works are all stamped down into the sultry mud.
- I knew that horse play, knew it for a murderous thing.
- What wholesome sun has ripened is wholesome food to eat
- And that alone, yet I being driven half insane
- Because of some green wing, gathered old mummy wheat
- In the mad abstract dark and ground it grain by grain
- And after baked it slowly in an oven; but now
- I bring full flavoured wine out of a barrel found
- Where seven Ephesian topers slept and never knew
- When Alexander's empire past, they slept so sound.
- Stretch out your limbs and sleep a long Saturnian sleep;
- I have loved you better than my soul for all my words,
- And there is none so fit to keep a watch and keep
- Unwearied eyes upon those horrible green birds.
- THOUGHTS UPON THE PRESENT STATE OF THE WORLD.
- I
- Many ingenious lovely things are gone
- That seemed sheer miracle to the multitude;
- Above the murderous treachery of the moon
- Or all that wayward ebb and flow. There stood
- Amid the ornamental bronze and stone
- An ancient image made of olive wood;
- And gone are Phidias' carven ivories
- And all his golden grasshoppers and bees.
- We too had many pretty toys when young;
- A law indifferent to blame or praise
- To bribe or threat; habits that made old wrong
- Melt down, as it were wax in the sun's rays;
- Public opinion ripening for so long
- We thought it would outlive all future days.
- O what fine thought we had because we thought
- That the worst rogues and rascals had died out.
- All teeth were drawn, all ancient tricks unlearned,
- And a great army but a showy thing;
- What matter that no cannon had been turned
- Into a ploughshare; parliament and king
- Thought that unless a little powder burned
- The trumpeters might burst with trumpeting
- And yet it lack all glory; and perchance
- The guardsmen's drowsy chargers would not prance.
- Now days are dragon-ridden, the nightmare
- Rides upon sleep: a drunken soldiery
- Can leave the mother, murdered at her door,
- To crawl in her own blood, and go scot-free;
- The night can sweat with terror as before
- We pieced our thoughts into philosophy,
- And planned to bring the world under a rule
- Who are but weasels fighting in a hole.
- He who can read the signs nor sink unmanned
- Into the half-deceit of some intoxicant
- From shallow wits, who knows no work can stand,
- Whether health, wealth or peace of mind were spent
- On master work of intellect or hand,
- No honour leave its mighty monument,
- Has but one comfort left: all triumph would
- But break upon his ghostly solitude.
- And other comfort were a bitter wound:
- To be in love and love what vanishes.
- Greeks were but lovers; all that country round
- None dared admit, if such a thought were his,
- Incendiary or bigot could be found
- To burn that stump on the Acropolis,
- Or break in bits the famous ivories
- Or traffic in the grasshoppers or bees?
- II
- When Loie Fuller's Chinese dancers enwound
- A shining web, a floating ribbon of cloth,
- It seemed that a dragon of air
- Had fallen among dancers, had whirled them round
- Or hurried them off on its own furious path;
- So the platonic year
- Whirls out new right and wrong
- Whirls in the old instead;
- All men are dancers and their tread
- Goes to the barbarous clangour of gong.
- III
- Some moralist or mythological poet
- Compares the solitary soul to a swan;
- I am content with that,
- Contented that a troubled mirror show it
- Before that brief gleam of its life be gone,
- An image of its state;
- The wings half spread for flight,
- The breast thrust out in pride
- Whether to play or to ride
- Those winds that clamour of approaching night.
- A man in his own secret meditation
- Is lost amid the labyrinth that he has made
- In art or politics;
- Some platonist affirms that in the station
- Where we should cast off body and trade
- The ancient habit sticks,
- And that if our works could
- But vanish with our breath
- That were a lucky death,
- For triumph can but mar our solitude.
- The swan has leaped into the desolate heaven:
- That image can bring wildness, bring a rage
- To end all things, to end
- What my laborious life imagined, even
- The half imagined, the half written page;
- O but we dreamed to mend
- Whatever mischief seemed
- To afflict mankind, but now
- That winds of winter blow
- Learn that we were crack-pated when we dreamed.
- IV
- We, who seven years ago
- Talked of honour and of truth,
- Shriek with pleasure if we show
- The weasel's twist, the weasel's tooth.
- V
- Come let us mock at the great
- That had such burdens on the mind
- And toiled so hard and late
- To leave some monument behind,
- Nor thought of the levelling wind.
- Come let us mock at the wise;
- With all those calendars whereon
- They fixed old aching eyes,
- They never saw how seasons run,
- And now but gape at the sun.
- Come let us mock at the good
- That fancied goodness might be gay,
- Grown tired of their solitude,
- Upon some brand-new happy day:
- Wind shrieked--and where are they?
- Mock mockers after that
- That would not lift a hand maybe
- To help good, wise or great
- To bar that foul storm out, for we
- Traffic in mockery.
- VI
- Violence upon the roads: violence of horses;
- Some few have handsome riders, are garlanded
- On delicate sensitive ear or tossing mane,
- But wearied running round and round in their courses
- All break and vanish, and evil gathers head:
- Herodias' daughters have returned again
- A sudden blast of dusty wind and after
- Thunder of feet, tumult of images,
- Their purpose in the labyrinth of the wind;
- And should some crazy hand dare touch a daughter
- All turn with amorous cries, or angry cries,
- According to the wind, for all are blind.
- But now wind drops, dust settles; thereupon
- There lurches past, his great eyes without thought
- Under the shadow of stupid straw-pale locks,
- That insolent fiend Robert Artisson
- To whom the love-lorn Lady Kyteler brought
- Bronzed peacock feathers, red combs of her cocks.
- THE NEW FACES
- If you, that have grown old were the first dead
- Neither Caltapa tree nor scented lime
- Should hear my living feet, nor would I tread
- Where we wrought that shall break the teeth of time.
- Let the new faces play what tricks they will
- In the old rooms; night can outbalance day,
- Our shadows rove the garden gravel still,
- The living seem more shadowy than they.
- A PRAYER FOR MY SON
- Bid a strong ghost stand at the head
- That my Michael may sleep sound,
- Nor cry, nor turn in the bed
- Till his morning meal come round;
- And may departing twilight keep
- All dread afar till morning's back
- That his mother may not lack
- Her fill of sleep.
- Bid the ghost have sword in hand:
- There are malicious things, although
- Few dream that they exist,
- Who have planned his murder, for they know
- Of some most haughty deed or thought
- That waits upon his future days,
- And would through hatred of the bays
- Bring that to nought.
- Though You can fashion everything
- From nothing every day, and teach
- The morning stars to sing,
- You have lacked articulate speech
- To tell Your simplest want, and known,
- Wailing upon a woman's knee,
- All of that worst ignominy
- Of flesh and bone;
- And when through all the town there ran
- The servants of Your enemy
- A woman and a man,
- Unless the Holy Writings lie,
- Have borne You through the smooth and rough
- And through the fertile and waste,
- Protecting till the danger past
- With human love.
- CUCHULAIN THE GIRL AND THE FOOL
- THE GIRL.
- I am jealous of the looks men turn on you
- For all men love your worth; and I must rage
- At my own image in the looking-glass
- That's so unlike myself that when you praise it
- It is as though you praise another, or even
- Mock me with praise of my mere opposite;
- And when I wake towards morn I dread myself
- For the heart cries that what deception wins
- My cruelty must keep; and so begone
- If you have seen that image and not my worth.
- CUCHULAIN.
- All men have praised my strength but not my worth.
- THE GIRL.
- If you are no more strength than I am beauty
- I will find out some cavern in the hills
- And live among the ancient holy men,
- For they at least have all men's reverence
- And have no need of cruelty to keep
- What no deception won.
- CUCHULAIN.
- I have heard them say
- That men have reverence for their holiness
- And not their worth.
- THE GIRL.
- God loves us for our worth;
- But what care I that long for a man's love.
- THE FOOL BY THE ROADSIDE.
- When my days that have
- From cradle run to grave
- From grave to cradle run instead;
- When thoughts that a fool
- Has wound upon a spool
- Are but loose thread, are but loose thread;
- When cradle and spool are past
- And I mere shade at last
- Coagulate of stuff
- Transparent like the wind,
- I think that I may find
- A faithful love, a faithful love.
- THE WHEEL
- Through winter-time we call on spring,
- And through the spring on summer call,
- And when abounding hedges sing
- Declare that winter's best of all;
- And after that there's nothing good
- Because the spring-time has not come--
- Nor know that what disturbs our blood
- Is but its longing for the tomb.
- A NEW END FOR 'THE KING'S THRESHOLD'
- YOUNGEST PUPIL.
- Die Seanchan and proclaim the right of the poets.
- SEANCHAN.
- Come nearer me, that I may know how face
- Differs from face, and touch you with my hands.
- O more than kin, O more than children could be,
- For children are but born out of our blood
- And share our frailty. O my chicks, my chicks,
- That I have nourished underneath my wings
- And fed upon my soul. (He stands up and begins to walk
- down steps) I need no help.
- He needs no help that joy has lifted up
- Like some miraculous beast out of Ezekiel.
- The man that dies has the chief part in the story,
- And I will mock and mock and mock that image yonder
- That evil picture in the sky--no, no--
- I have all my strength again, I will outface it.
- O look upon the moon that's standing there
- In the blue daylight--notice her complexion
- Because it is the white of leprosy
- And the contagion that afflicts mankind
- Falls from the moon. When I and these are dead
- We should be carried to some windy hill
- To lie there with uncovered face awhile
- That mankind and that leper there may know
- Dead faces laugh.
- (He falls and then half rises.)
- King, king, dead faces laugh.
- (He dies)
- OLDEST PUPIL.
- King, king, he is dead; some strange triumphant thought
- So filled his heart with joy that it has burst
- Being grown too mighty for our frailty,
- And we who gaze grow like him and abhor
- The moments that come between us and that death
- You promised us.
- KING.
- Take up his body.
- Go where you please and lay it where you please,
- So that I cannot see his face or any
- That cried him towards his death.
- YOUNGEST PUPIL.
- Dead faces laugh!
- The ancient right is gone, the new remains
- And that is death.
- (They go towards the king holding out their halters)
- We are impatient men,
- So gather up the halters in your hands.
- KING.
- Drive them away.
- (He goes into the palace. The soldiers block the way before
- the pupils.)
- SOLDIER.
- Here is no place for you,
- For he and his pretensions now are finished.
- Begone before the men at arms are bidden
- To hurl you from the door.
- OLDEST PUPIL.
- Take up his body
- And cry that driven from the populous door
- He seeks high waters and the mountain birds
- To claim a portion of their solitude.
- (They make a litter with cloak and staffs and lay Seanchan
- on it.)
- YOUNGEST PUPIL.
- And cry that when they took his ancient right
- They took all common sleep; therefore he claims
- The mountain for his mattress and his pillow.
- OLDEST PUPIL.
- And there he can sleep on, not noticing
- Although the world be changed from worse to worse,
- Amid the changeless clamour of the curlew.
- (They raise the litter on their shoulders and move a few steps)
- YOUNGEST PUPIL.
- (motioning to them to stop)
- Yet make triumphant music; sing aloud
- For coming times will bless what he has blessed
- And curse what he has cursed.
- OLDEST PUPIL.
- No, no, be still;
- Or pluck a solemn music from the strings.
- You wrong his greatness speaking so of triumph.
- YOUNGEST PUPIL.
- O silver trumpets, be you lifted up
- And cry to the great race that is to come.
- Long-throated swans upon the waves of time
- Sing loudly, for beyond the wall of the world
- That race may hear our music and awake.
- OLDEST PUPIL.
- (motioning the musicians to lower their trumpets)
- Not what it leaves behind it in the light
- But what it carries with it to the dark
- Exalts the soul; nor song nor trumpet-blast
- Can call up races from the worsening world
- To mend the wrong and mar the solitude
- Of the great shade we follow to the tomb.
- (Fedelm and the pupils go out carrying the litter. Some play
- a mournful music.)
- NOTE ON 'THOUGHTS UPON THE PRESENT STATE OF THE WORLD' SECTION SIX.
- The country people see at times certain apparitions whom they name now
- 'fallen angels' now 'ancient inhabitants of the country,' and describe
- as riding at whiles 'with flowers upon the heads of the horses.' I have
- assumed in the sixth poem that these horsemen, now that the times
- worsen, give way to worse. My last symbol Robert Artisson was an evil
- spirit much run after in Kilkenny at the start of the fourteenth
- century. Are not those who travel in the whirling dust also in the
- Platonic Year?--W. B. Y.
- NOTE ON THE NEW END TO 'THE KING'S THRESHOLD'
- Upon the revival of this play at the Abbey Theatre a few weeks ago it
- was played with this new end. There were a few other changes. I had
- originally intended to end the play tragically and would have done so
- but for a friend who used to say 'O do write comedy & have a few happy
- moments in the Theatre.' My unhappy moments were because a tragic effect
- is very fragile and a wrong intonation, or even a wrong light or costume
- will spoil it all. However the play remained always of the nature of
- tragedy and so subject to vicissitude.
- Here ends, 'Seven Poems and a Fragment:' by William Butler Yeats:
- with a decoration by T. Sturge Moore. Five hundred copies of this book
- have been printed and published by Elizabeth Corbet Yeats on paper made
- in Ireland, at the Cuala Press, Churchtown, Dundrum, in the County of
- Dublin, Ireland. Finished in the third week of April in the year
- nineteen hundred and twenty-two.
- End of Project Gutenberg's Seven Poems and a Fragment, by William Butler Yeats
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