- Project Gutenberg's The Wild Swans at Coole, by William Butler (W.B.) Yeats
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- Title: The Wild Swans at Coole
- Author: William Butler (W.B.) Yeats
- Release Date: May 23, 2010 [EBook #32491]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WILD SWANS AT COOLE ***
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- THE WILD SWANS AT COOLE
- [Illustration]
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- NEW YORK - BOSTON - CHICAGO - DALLAS
- ATLANTA - SAN FRANCISCO
- MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
- LONDON - BOMBAY - CALCUTTA
- MELBOURNE
- THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
- TORONTO
- THE WILD SWANS
- AT COOLE
- BY
- W. B. YEATS
- New York
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 1919
- _All rights reserved_
- COPYRIGHT, 1917 AND 1918,
- BY MARGARET C. ANDERSON.
- COPYRIGHT, 1918,
- BY HARRIET MONROE.
- COPYRIGHT, 1918 AND 1919,
- BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
- Set up and electrotyped. Published March, 1919.
- Norwood Press
- J. S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
- Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
- PREFACE
- This book is, in part, a reprint of _The Wild Swans at Coole_, printed a
- year ago on my sister's hand-press at Dundrum, Co. Dublin. I have not,
- however, reprinted a play which may be a part of a book of new plays
- suggested by the dance plays of Japan, and I have added a number of new
- poems. Michael Robartes and John Aherne, whose names occur in one or
- other of these, are characters in some stories I wrote years ago, who
- have once again become a part of the phantasmagoria through which I can
- alone express my convictions about the world. I have the fancy that I
- read the name John Aherne among those of men prosecuted for making a
- disturbance at the first production of "The Play Boy," which may account
- for his animosity to myself.
- W. B. Y.
- BALLYLEE, CO. GALWAY,
- _September 1918_.
- CONTENTS
- PAGE
- THE WILD SWANS AT COOLE 1
- IN MEMORY OF MAJOR ROBERT GREGORY 4
- AN IRISH AIRMAN FORESEES HIS DEATH 13
- MEN IMPROVE WITH THE YEARS 14
- THE COLLAR-BONE OF A HARE 15
- UNDER THE ROUND TOWER 17
- SOLOMON TO SHEBA 19
- THE LIVING BEAUTY 21
- A SONG 22
- TO A YOUNG BEAUTY 23
- TO A YOUNG GIRL 24
- THE SCHOLARS 25
- TOM O'ROUGHLEY 26
- THE SAD SHEPHERD 27
- LINES WRITTEN IN DEJECTION 39
- THE DAWN 40
- ON WOMAN 41
- THE FISHERMAN 44
- THE HAWK 46
- MEMORY 47
- HER PRAISE 48
- THE PEOPLE 50
- HIS PHOENIX 54
- A THOUGHT FROM PROPERTIUS 58
- BROKEN DREAMS 59
- A DEEP-SWORN VOW 63
- PRESENCES 64
- THE BALLOON OF THE MIND 66
- TO A SQUIRREL AT KYLE-NA-GNO 67
- ON BEING ASKED FOR A WAR POEM 68
- IN MEMORY OF ALFRED POLLEXFEN 69
- UPON A DYING LADY 72
- EGO DOMINUS TUUS 79
- A PRAYER ON GOING INTO MY HOUSE 86
- THE PHASES OF THE MOON 88
- THE CAT AND THE MOON 102
- THE SAINT AND THE HUNCHBACK 104
- TWO SONGS OF A FOOL 106
- ANOTHER SONG OF A FOOL 108
- THE DOUBLE VISION OF MICHAEL ROBARTES 109
- NOTE 115
- THE WILD SWANS AT COOLE
- The trees are in their autumn beauty,
- The woodland paths are dry,
- Under the October twilight the water
- Mirrors a still sky;
- Upon the brimming water among the stones
- Are nine and fifty swans.
- The nineteenth Autumn has come upon me
- Since I first made my count;
- I saw, before I had well finished,
- All suddenly mount
- And scatter wheeling in great broken rings
- Upon their clamorous wings.
- I have looked upon those brilliant creatures,
- And now my heart is sore.
- All's changed since I, hearing at twilight,
- The first time on this shore,
- The bell-beat of their wings above my head,
- Trod with a lighter tread.
- Unwearied still, lover by lover,
- They paddle in the cold,
- Companionable streams or climb the air;
- Their hearts have not grown old;
- Passion or conquest, wander where they will,
- Attend upon them still.
- But now they drift on the still water
- Mysterious, beautiful;
- Among what rushes will they build,
- By what lake's edge or pool
- Delight men's eyes, when I awake some day
- To find they have flown away?
- IN MEMORY OF MAJOR ROBERT GREGORY
- 1
- Now that we're almost settled in our house
- I'll name the friends that cannot sup with us
- Beside a fire of turf in the ancient tower,
- And having talked to some late hour
- Climb up the narrow winding stair to bed:
- Discoverers of forgotten truth
- Or mere companions of my youth,
- All, all are in my thoughts to-night, being dead.
- 2
- Always we'd have the new friend meet the old,
- And we are hurt if either friend seem cold,
- And there is salt to lengthen out the smart
- In the affections of our heart,
- And quarrels are blown up upon that head;
- But not a friend that I would bring
- This night can set us quarrelling,
- For all that come into my mind are dead.
- 3
- Lionel Johnson comes the first to mind,
- That loved his learning better than mankind,
- Though courteous to the worst; much falling he
- Brooded upon sanctity
- Till all his Greek and Latin learning seemed
- A long blast upon the horn that brought
- A little nearer to his thought
- A measureless consummation that he dreamed.
- 4
- And that enquiring man John Synge comes next,
- That dying chose the living world for text
- And never could have rested in the tomb
- But that, long travelling, he had come
- Towards nightfall upon certain set apart
- In a most desolate stony place,
- Towards nightfall upon a race
- Passionate and simple like his heart.
- 5
- And then I think of old George Pollexfen,
- In muscular youth well known to Mayo men
- For horsemanship at meets or at race-courses,
- That could have shown how purebred horses
- And solid men, for all their passion, live
- But as the outrageous stars incline
- By opposition, square and trine;
- Having grown sluggish and contemplative.
- 6
- They were my close companions many a year,
- A portion of my mind and life, as it were,
- And now their breathless faces seem to look
- Out of some old picture-book;
- I am accustomed to their lack of breath,
- But not that my dear friend's dear son,
- Our Sidney and our perfect man,
- Could share in that discourtesy of death.
- 7
- For all things the delighted eye now sees
- Were loved by him; the old storm-broken trees
- That cast their shadows upon road and bridge;
- The tower set on the stream's edge;
- The ford where drinking cattle make a stir
- Nightly, and startled by that sound
- The water-hen must change her ground;
- He might have been your heartiest welcomer.
- 8
- When with the Galway foxhounds he would ride
- From Castle Taylor to the Roxborough side
- Or Esserkelly plain, few kept his pace;
- At Mooneen he had leaped a place
- So perilous that half the astonished meet
- Had shut their eyes, and where was it
- He rode a race without a bit?
- And yet his mind outran the horses' feet.
- 9
- We dreamed that a great painter had been born
- To cold Clare rock and Galway rock and thorn,
- To that stern colour and that delicate line
- That are our secret discipline
- Wherein the gazing heart doubles her might.
- Soldier, scholar, horseman, he,
- And yet he had the intensity
- To have published all to be a world's delight.
- 10
- What other could so well have counselled us
- In all lovely intricacies of a house
- As he that practised or that understood
- All work in metal or in wood,
- In moulded plaster or in carven stone?
- Soldier, scholar, horseman, he,
- And all he did done perfectly
- As though he had but that one trade alone.
- 11
- Some burn damp fagots, others may consume
- The entire combustible world in one small room
- As though dried straw, and if we turn about
- The bare chimney is gone black out
- Because the work had finished in that flare.
- Soldier, scholar, horseman, he,
- As 'twere all life's epitome.
- What made us dream that he could comb grey hair?
- 12
- I had thought, seeing how bitter is that wind
- That shakes the shutter, to have brought to mind
- All those that manhood tried, or childhood loved,
- Or boyish intellect approved,
- With some appropriate commentary on each;
- Until imagination brought
- A fitter welcome; but a thought
- Of that late death took all my heart for speech.
- AN IRISH AIRMAN FORESEES HIS DEATH
- I know that I shall meet my fate
- Somewhere among the clouds above;
- Those that I fight I do not hate
- Those that I guard I do not love;
- My country is Kiltartan Cross,
- My countrymen Kiltartan's poor,
- No likely end could bring them loss
- Or leave them happier than before.
- Nor law, nor duty bade me fight,
- Nor public man, nor angry crowds,
- A lonely impulse of delight
- Drove to this tumult in the clouds;
- I balanced all, brought all to mind,
- The years to come seemed waste of breath,
- A waste of breath the years behind
- In balance with this life, this death.
- MEN IMPROVE WITH THE YEARS
- I am worn out with dreams;
- A weather-worn, marble triton
- Among the streams;
- And all day long I look
- Upon this lady's beauty
- As though I had found in book
- A pictured beauty,
- Pleased to have filled the eyes
- Or the discerning ears,
- Delighted to be but wise,
- For men improve with the years;
- And yet and yet
- Is this my dream, or the truth?
- O would that we had met
- When I had my burning youth;
- But I grow old among dreams,
- A weather-worn, marble triton
- Among the streams.
- THE COLLAR-BONE OF A HARE
- Would I could cast a sail on the water
- Where many a king has gone
- And many a king's daughter,
- And alight at the comely trees and the lawn,
- The playing upon pipes and the dancing,
- And learn that the best thing is
- To change my loves while dancing
- And pay but a kiss for a kiss.
- I would find by the edge of that water
- The collar-bone of a hare
- Worn thin by the lapping of water,
- And pierce it through with a gimlet and stare
- At the old bitter world where they marry in churches,
- And laugh over the untroubled water
- At all who marry in churches,
- Through the white thin bone of a hare.
- UNDER THE ROUND TOWER
- 'Although I'd lie lapped up in linen
- A deal I'd sweat and little earn
- If I should live as live the neighbours,'
- Cried the beggar, Billy Byrne;
- 'Stretch bones till the daylight come
- On great-grandfather's battered tomb.'
- Upon a grey old battered tombstone
- In Glendalough beside the stream,
- Where the O'Byrnes and Byrnes are buried,
- He stretched his bones and fell in a dream
- Of sun and moon that a good hour
- Bellowed and pranced in the round tower;
- Of golden king and silver lady,
- Bellowing up and bellowing round,
- Till toes mastered a sweet measure,
- Mouth mastered a sweet sound,
- Prancing round and prancing up
- Until they pranced upon the top.
- That golden king and that wild lady
- Sang till stars began to fade,
- Hands gripped in hands, toes close together,
- Hair spread on the wind they made;
- That lady and that golden king
- Could like a brace of blackbirds sing.
- 'It's certain that my luck is broken,'
- That rambling jailbird Billy said;
- 'Before nightfall I'll pick a pocket
- And snug it in a feather-bed,
- I cannot find the peace of home
- On great-grandfather's battered tomb.'
- SOLOMON TO SHEBA
- Sang Solomon to Sheba,
- And kissed her dusky face,
- 'All day long from mid-day
- We have talked in the one place,
- All day long from shadowless noon
- We have gone round and round
- In the narrow theme of love
- Like an old horse in a pound.'
- To Solomon sang Sheba,
- Planted on his knees,
- 'If you had broached a matter
- That might the learned please,
- You had before the sun had thrown
- Our shadows on the ground
- Discovered that my thoughts, not it,
- Are but a narrow pound.'
- Sang Solomon to Sheba,
- And kissed her Arab eyes,
- 'There's not a man or woman
- Born under the skies
- Dare match in learning with us two,
- And all day long we have found
- There's not a thing but love can make
- The world a narrow pound.'
- THE LIVING BEAUTY
- I'll say and maybe dream I have drawn content--
- Seeing that time has frozen up the blood,
- The wick of youth being burned and the oil spent--
- From beauty that is cast out of a mould
- In bronze, or that in dazzling marble appears,
- Appears, and when we have gone is gone again,
- Being more indifferent to our solitude
- Than 'twere an apparition. O heart, we are old,
- The living beauty is for younger men,
- We cannot pay its tribute of wild tears.
- A SONG
- I thought no more was needed
- Youth to prolong
- Than dumb-bell and foil
- To keep the body young.
- Oh, who could have foretold
- That the heart grows old?
- Though I have many words,
- What woman's satisfied,
- I am no longer faint
- Because at her side?
- Oh, who could have foretold
- That the heart grows old?
- I have not lost desire
- But the heart that I had,
- I thought 'twould burn my body
- Laid on the death-bed.
- But who could have foretold
- That the heart grows old?
- TO A YOUNG BEAUTY
- Dear fellow-artist, why so free
- With every sort of company,
- With every Jack and Jill?
- Choose your companions from the best;
- Who draws a bucket with the rest
- Soon topples down the hill.
- You may, that mirror for a school,
- Be passionate, not bountiful
- As common beauties may,
- Who were not born to keep in trim
- With old Ezekiel's cherubim
- But those of Beaujolet.
- I know what wages beauty gives,
- How hard a life her servant lives,
- Yet praise the winters gone;
- There is not a fool can call me friend,
- And I may dine at journey's end
- With Landor and with Donne.
- TO A YOUNG GIRL
- My dear, my dear, I know
- More than another
- What makes your heart beat so;
- Not even your own mother
- Can know it as I know,
- Who broke my heart for her
- When the wild thought,
- That she denies
- And has forgot,
- Set all her blood astir
- And glittered in her eyes.
- THE SCHOLARS
- Bald heads forgetful of their sins,
- Old, learned, respectable bald heads
- Edit and annotate the lines
- That young men, tossing on their beds,
- Rhymed out in love's despair
- To flatter beauty's ignorant ear.
- They'll cough in the ink to the world's end;
- Wear out the carpet with their shoes
- Earning respect; have no strange friend;
- If they have sinned nobody knows.
- Lord, what would they say
- Should their Catullus walk that way?
- TOM O'ROUGHLEY
- 'Though logic choppers rule the town,
- And every man and maid and boy
- Has marked a distant object down,
- An aimless joy is a pure joy,'
- Or so did Tom O'Roughley say
- That saw the surges running by,
- 'And wisdom is a butterfly
- And not a gloomy bird of prey.
- 'If little planned is little sinned
- But little need the grave distress.
- What's dying but a second wind?
- How but in zigzag wantonness
- Could trumpeter Michael be so brave?'
- Or something of that sort he said,
- 'And if my dearest friend were dead
- I'd dance a measure on his grave.'
- THE SAD SHEPHERD
- SHEPHERD
- That cry's from the first cuckoo of the year
- I wished before it ceased.
- GOATHERD
- Nor bird nor beast
- Could make me wish for anything this day,
- Being old, but that the old alone might die,
- And that would be against God's Providence.
- Let the young wish. But what has brought you here?
- Never until this moment have we met
- Where my goats browse on the scarce grass or leap
- From stone to stone.
- SHEPHERD
- I am looking for strayed sheep;
- Something has troubled me and in my trouble
- I let them stray. I thought of rhyme alone,
- For rhyme can beat a measure out of trouble
- And make the daylight sweet once more; but when
- I had driven every rhyme into its place
- The sheep had gone from theirs.
- GOATHERD
- I know right well
- What turned so good a shepherd from his charge.
- SHEPHERD
- He that was best in every country sport
- And every country craft, and of us all
- Most courteous to slow age and hasty youth
- Is dead.
- GOATHERD
- The boy that brings my griddle cake
- Brought the bare news.
- SHEPHERD
- He had thrown the crook away
- And died in the great war beyond the sea.
- GOATHERD
- He had often played his pipes among my hills
- And when he played it was their loneliness,
- The exultation of their stone, that cried
- Under his fingers.
- SHEPHERD
- I had it from his mother,
- And his own flock was browsing at the door.
- GOATHERD
- How does she bear her grief? There is not a shepherd
- But grows more gentle when he speaks her name,
- Remembering kindness done, and how can I,
- That found when I had neither goat nor grazing
- New welcome and old wisdom at her fire
- Till winter blasts were gone, but speak of her
- Even before his children and his wife.
- SHEPHERD
- She goes about her house erect and calm
- Between the pantry and the linen chest,
- Or else at meadow or at grazing overlooks
- Her labouring men, as though her darling lived
- But for her grandson now; there is no change
- But such as I have seen upon her face
- Watching our shepherd sports at harvest-time
- When her son's turn was over.
- GOATHERD
- Sing your song,
- I too have rhymed my reveries, but youth
- Is hot to show whatever it has found
- And till that's done can neither work nor wait.
- Old goatherds and old goats, if in all else
- Youth can excel them in accomplishment,
- Are learned in waiting.
- SHEPHERD
- You cannot but have seen
- That he alone had gathered up no gear,
- Set carpenters to work on no wide table,
- On no long bench nor lofty milking shed
- As others will, when first they take possession,
- But left the house as in his father's time
- As though he knew himself, as it were, a cuckoo,
- No settled man. And now that he is gone
- There's nothing of him left but half a score
- Of sorrowful, austere, sweet, lofty pipe tunes.
- GOATHERD
- You have put the thought in rhyme.
- SHEPHERD
- I worked all day
- And when 'twas done so little had I done
- That maybe 'I am sorry' in plain prose
- Had sounded better to your mountain fancy.
- [_He sings._
- 'Like the speckled bird that steers
- Thousands of leagues oversea,
- And runs for a while or a while half-flies
- Upon his yellow legs through our meadows,
- He stayed for a while; and we
- Had scarcely accustomed our ears
- To his speech at the break of day,
- Had scarcely accustomed our eyes
- To his shape in the lengthening shadows,
- Where the sheep are thrown in the pool,
- When he vanished from ears and eyes.
- I had wished a dear thing on that day
- I heard him first, but man is a fool.'
- GOATHERD
- You sing as always of the natural life,
- And I that made like music in my youth
- Hearing it now have sighed for that young man
- And certain lost companions of my own.
- SHEPHERD
- They say that on your barren mountain ridge
- You have measured out the road that the soul treads
- When it has vanished from our natural eyes;
- That you have talked with apparitions.
- GOATHERD
- Indeed
- My daily thoughts since the first stupor of youth
- Have found the path my goats' feet cannot find.
- SHEPHERD
- Sing, for it may be that your thoughts have plucked
- Some medicable herb to make our grief
- Less bitter.
- GOATHERD
- They have brought me from that ridge
- Seed pods and flowers that are not all wild poppy.
- [_Sings._
- 'He grows younger every second
- That were all his birthdays reckoned
- Much too solemn seemed;
- Because of what he had dreamed,
- Or the ambitions that he served,
- Much too solemn and reserved.
- Jaunting, journeying
- To his own dayspring,
- He unpacks the loaded pern
- Of all 'twas pain or joy to learn,
- Of all that he had made.
- The outrageous war shall fade;
- At some old winding whitethorn root
- He'll practice on the shepherd's flute,
- Or on the close-cropped grass
- Court his shepherd lass,
- Or run where lads reform our day-time
- Till that is their long shouting play-time;
- Knowledge he shall unwind
- Through victories of the mind,
- Till, clambering at the cradle side,
- He dreams himself his mother's pride,
- All knowledge lost in trance
- Of sweeter ignorance.'
- SHEPHERD
- When I have shut these ewes and this old ram
- Into the fold, we'll to the woods and there
- Cut out our rhymes on strips of new-torn bark
- But put no name and leave them at her door.
- To know the mountain and the valley grieve
- May be a quiet thought to wife and mother,
- And children when they spring up shoulder high.
- LINES WRITTEN IN DEJECTION
- When have I last looked on
- The round green eyes and the long wavering bodies
- Of the dark leopards of the moon?
- All the wild witches those most noble ladies,
- For all their broom-sticks and their tears,
- Their angry tears, are gone.
- The holy centaurs of the hills are banished;
- And I have nothing but harsh sun;
- Heroic mother moon has vanished,
- And now that I have come to fifty years
- I must endure the timid sun.
- THE DAWN
- I would be ignorant as the dawn
- That has looked down
- On that old queen measuring a town
- With the pin of a brooch,
- Or on the withered men that saw
- From their pedantic Babylon
- The careless planets in their courses,
- The stars fade out where the moon comes,
- And took their tablets and did sums;
- I would be ignorant as the dawn
- That merely stood, rocking the glittering coach
- Above the cloudy shoulders of the horses;
- I would be--for no knowledge is worth a straw--
- Ignorant and wanton as the dawn.
- ON WOMAN
- May God be praised for woman
- That gives up all her mind,
- A man may find in no man
- A friendship of her kind
- That covers all he has brought
- As with her flesh and bone,
- Nor quarrels with a thought
- Because it is not her own.
- Though pedantry denies
- It's plain the Bible means
- That Solomon grew wise
- While talking with his queens.
- Yet never could, although
- They say he counted grass,
- Count all the praises due
- When Sheba was his lass,
- When she the iron wrought, or
- When from the smithy fire
- It shuddered in the water:
- Harshness of their desire
- That made them stretch and yawn,
- Pleasure that comes with sleep,
- Shudder that made them one.
- What else He give or keep
- God grant me--no, not here,
- For I am not so bold
- To hope a thing so dear
- Now I am growing old,
- But when if the tale's true
- The Pestle of the moon
- That pounds up all anew
- Brings me to birth again--
- To find what once I had
- And know what once I have known,
- Until I am driven mad,
- Sleep driven from my bed,
- By tenderness and care,
- Pity, an aching head,
- Gnashing of teeth, despair;
- And all because of some one
- Perverse creature of chance,
- And live like Solomon
- That Sheba led a dance.
- THE FISHERMAN
- Although I can see him still,
- The freckled man who goes
- To a grey place on a hill
- In grey Connemara clothes
- At dawn to cast his flies,
- It's long since I began
- To call up to the eyes
- This wise and simple man.
- All day I'd looked in the face
- What I had hoped 'twould be
- To write for my own race
- And the reality;
- The living men that I hate,
- The dead man that I loved,
- The craven man in his seat,
- The insolent unreproved,
- And no knave brought to book
- Who has won a drunken cheer,
- The witty man and his joke
- Aimed at the commonest ear,
- The clever man who cries
- The catch-cries of the clown,
- The beating down of the wise
- And great Art beaten down.
- Maybe a twelvemonth since
- Suddenly I began,
- In scorn of this audience,
- Imagining a man
- And his sun-freckled face,
- And grey Connemara cloth,
- Climbing up to a place
- Where stone is dark under froth,
- And the down turn of his wrist
- When the flies drop in the stream:
- A man who does not exist,
- A man who is but a dream;
- And cried, 'Before I am old
- I shall have written him one
- Poem maybe as cold
- And passionate as the dawn.'
- THE HAWK
- 'Call down the hawk from the air;
- Let him be hooded or caged
- Till the yellow eye has grown mild,
- For larder and spit are bare,
- The old cook enraged,
- The scullion gone wild.'
- 'I will not be clapped in a hood,
- Nor a cage, nor alight upon wrist,
- Now I have learnt to be proud
- Hovering over the wood
- In the broken mist
- Or tumbling cloud.'
- 'What tumbling cloud did you cleave,
- Yellow-eyed hawk of the mind,
- Last evening? that I, who had sat
- Dumbfounded before a knave,
- Should give to my friend
- A pretence of wit.'
- MEMORY
- One had a lovely face,
- And two or three had charm,
- But charm and face were in vain
- Because the mountain grass
- Cannot but keep the form
- Where the mountain hare has lain.
- HER PRAISE
- She is foremost of those that I would hear praised.
- I have gone about the house, gone up and down
- As a man does who has published a new book
- Or a young girl dressed out in her new gown,
- And though I have turned the talk by hook or crook
- Until her praise should be the uppermost theme,
- A woman spoke of some new tale she had read,
- A man confusedly in a half dream
- As though some other name ran in his head.
- She is foremost of those that I would hear praised.
- I will talk no more of books or the long war
- But walk by the dry thorn until I have found
- Some beggar sheltering from the wind, and there
- Manage the talk until her name come round.
- If there be rags enough he will know her name
- And be well pleased remembering it, for in the old days,
- Though she had young men's praise and old men's blame,
- Among the poor both old and young gave her praise.
- THE PEOPLE
- 'What have I earned for all that work,' I said,
- 'For all that I have done at my own charge?
- The daily spite of this unmannerly town,
- Where who has served the most is most defamed,
- The reputation of his lifetime lost
- Between the night and morning. I might have lived,
- And you know well how great the longing has been,
- Where every day my footfall should have lit
- In the green shadow of Ferrara wall;
- Or climbed among the images of the past--
- The unperturbed and courtly images--
- Evening and morning, the steep street of Urbino
- To where the duchess and her people talked
- The stately midnight through until they stood
- In their great window looking at the dawn;
- I might have had no friend that could not mix
- Courtesy and passion into one like those
- That saw the wicks grow yellow in the dawn;
- I might have used the one substantial right
- My trade allows: chosen my company,
- And chosen what scenery had pleased me best.'
- Thereon my phoenix answered in reproof,
- 'The drunkards, pilferers of public funds,
- All the dishonest crowd I had driven away,
- When my luck changed and they dared meet my face,
- Crawled from obscurity, and set upon me
- Those I had served and some that I had fed;
- Yet never have I, now nor any time,
- Complained of the people.'
- All I could reply
- Was: 'You, that have not lived in thought but deed,
- Can have the purity of a natural force,
- But I, whose virtues are the definitions
- Of the analytic mind, can neither close
- The eye of the mind nor keep my tongue from speech.'
- And yet, because my heart leaped at her words,
- I was abashed, and now they come to mind
- After nine years, I sink my head abashed.
- HIS PHOENIX
- There is a queen in China, or maybe it's in Spain,
- And birthdays and holidays such praises can be heard
- Of her unblemished lineaments, a whiteness with no stain,
- That she might be that sprightly girl who was trodden by a bird;
- And there's a score of duchesses, surpassing womankind,
- Or who have found a painter to make them so for pay
- And smooth out stain and blemish with the elegance of his mind:
- I knew a phoenix in my youth so let them have their day.
- The young men every night applaud their Gaby's laughing eye,
- And Ruth St. Denis had more charm although she had poor luck,
- From nineteen hundred nine or ten, Pavlova's had the cry,
- And there's a player in the States who gathers up her cloak
- And flings herself out of the room when Juliet would be bride
- With all a woman's passion, a child's imperious way,
- And there are--but no matter if there are scores beside:
- I knew a phoenix in my youth so let them have their day.
- There's Margaret and Marjorie and Dorothy and Nan,
- A Daphne and a Mary who live in privacy;
- One's had her fill of lovers, another's had but one,
- Another boasts, 'I pick and choose and have but two or three.'
- If head and limb have beauty and the instep's high and light,
- They can spread out what sail they please for all I have to say,
- Be but the breakers of men's hearts or engines of delight:
- I knew a phoenix in my youth so let them have their day.
- There'll be that crowd to make men wild through all the centuries,
- And maybe there'll be some young belle walk out to make men wild
- Who is my beauty's equal, though that my heart denies,
- But not the exact likeness, the simplicity of a child,
- And that proud look as though she had gazed into the burning sun,
- And all the shapely body no tittle gone astray,
- I mourn for that most lonely thing; and yet God's will be done,
- I knew a phoenix in my youth so let them have their day.
- A THOUGHT FROM PROPERTIUS
- She might, so noble from head
- To great shapely knees,
- The long flowing line,
- Have walked to the altar
- Through the holy images
- At Pallas Athene's side,
- Or been fit spoil for a centaur
- Drunk with the unmixed wine.
- BROKEN DREAMS
- There is grey in your hair.
- Young men no longer suddenly catch their breath
- When you are passing;
- But maybe some old gaffer mutters a blessing
- Because it was your prayer
- Recovered him upon the bed of death.
- For your sole sake--that all heart's ache have known,
- And given to others all heart's ache,
- From meagre girlhood's putting on
- Burdensome beauty--for your sole sake
- Heaven has put away the stroke of her doom,
- So great her portion in that peace you make
- By merely walking in a room.
- Your beauty can but leave among us
- Vague memories, nothing but memories.
- A young man when the old men are done talking
- Will say to an old man, 'Tell me of that lady
- The poet stubborn with his passion sang us
- When age might well have chilled his blood.'
- Vague memories, nothing but memories,
- But in the grave all, all, shall be renewed.
- The certainty that I shall see that lady
- Leaning or standing or walking
- In the first loveliness of womanhood,
- And with the fervour of my youthful eyes,
- Has set me muttering like a fool.
- You are more beautiful than any one
- And yet your body had a flaw:
- Your small hands were not beautiful,
- And I am afraid that you will run
- And paddle to the wrist
- In that mysterious, always brimming lake
- Where those that have obeyed the holy law
- Paddle and are perfect; leave unchanged
- The hands that I have kissed
- For old sakes' sake.
- The last stroke of midnight dies.
- All day in the one chair
- From dream to dream and rhyme to rhyme I have ranged
- In rambling talk with an image of air:
- Vague memories, nothing but memories.
- A DEEP-SWORN VOW
- Others because you did not keep
- That deep-sworn vow have been friends of mine;
- Yet always when I look death in the face,
- When I clamber to the heights of sleep,
- Or when I grow excited with wine,
- Suddenly I meet your face.
- PRESENCES
- This night has been so strange that it seemed
- As if the hair stood up on my head.
- From going-down of the sun I have dreamed
- That women laughing, or timid or wild,
- In rustle of lace or silken stuff,
- Climbed up my creaking stair. They had read
- All I had rhymed of that monstrous thing
- Returned and yet unrequited love.
- They stood in the door and stood between
- My great wood lecturn and the fire
- Till I could hear their hearts beating:
- One is a harlot, and one a child
- That never looked upon man with desire,
- And one it may be a queen.
- THE BALLOON OF THE MIND
- Hands, do what you're bid;
- Bring the balloon of the mind
- That bellies and drags in the wind
- Into its narrow shed.
- TO A SQUIRREL AT KYLE-NA-GNO
- Come play with me;
- Why should you run
- Through the shaking tree
- As though I'd a gun
- To strike you dead?
- When all I would do
- Is to scratch your head
- And let you go.
- ON BEING ASKED FOR A WAR POEM
- I think it better that in times like these
- A poet keep his mouth shut, for in truth
- We have no gift to set a statesman right;
- He has had enough of meddling who can please
- A young girl in the indolence of her youth,
- Or an old man upon a winter's night.
- IN MEMORY OF ALFRED POLLEXFEN
- Five-and-twenty years have gone
- Since old William Pollexfen
- Laid his strong bones down in death
- By his wife Elizabeth
- In the grey stone tomb he made.
- And after twenty years they laid
- In that tomb by him and her,
- His son George, the astrologer;
- And Masons drove from miles away
- To scatter the Acacia spray
- Upon a melancholy man
- Who had ended where his breath began.
- Many a son and daughter lies
- Far from the customary skies,
- The Mall and Eades's grammar school,
- In London or in Liverpool;
- But where is laid the sailor John?
- That so many lands had known:
- Quiet lands or unquiet seas
- Where the Indians trade or Japanese.
- He never found his rest ashore,
- Moping for one voyage more.
- Where have they laid the sailor John?
- And yesterday the youngest son,
- A humorous, unambitious man,
- Was buried near the astrologer;
- And are we now in the tenth year?
- Since he, who had been contented long,
- A nobody in a great throng,
- Decided he would journey home,
- Now that his fiftieth year had come,
- And 'Mr. Alfred' be again
- Upon the lips of common men
- Who carried in their memory
- His childhood and his family.
- At all these death-beds women heard
- A visionary white sea-bird
- Lamenting that a man should die;
- And with that cry I have raised my cry.
- UPON A DYING LADY
- I
- HER COURTESY
- With the old kindness, the old distinguished grace
- She lies, her lovely piteous head amid dull red hair
- Propped upon pillows, rouge on the pallor of her face.
- She would not have us sad because she is lying there,
- And when she meets our gaze her eyes are laughter-lit,
- Her speech a wicked tale that we may vie with her
- Matching our broken-hearted wit against her wit,
- Thinking of saints and of Petronius Arbiter.
- II
- CERTAIN ARTISTS BRING HER DOLLS AND DRAWINGS
- Bring where our Beauty lies
- A new modelled doll, or drawing,
- With a friend's or an enemy's
- Features, or maybe showing
- Her features when a tress
- Of dull red hair was flowing
- Over some silken dress
- Cut in the Turkish fashion,
- Or it may be like a boy's.
- We have given the world our passion
- We have naught for death but toys.
- III
- SHE TURNS THE DOLLS' FACES TO THE WALL
- Because to-day is some religious festival
- They had a priest say Mass, and even the Japanese,
- Heel up and weight on toe, must face the wall
- --Pedant in passion, learned in old courtesies,
- Vehement and witty she had seemed--; the Venetian lady
- Who had seemed to glide to some intrigue in her red shoes,
- Her domino, her panniered skirt copied from Longhi;
- The meditative critic; all are on their toes,
- Even our Beauty with her Turkish trousers on.
- Because the priest must have like every dog his day
- Or keep us all awake with baying at the moon,
- We and our dolls being but the world were best away.
- IV
- THE END OF DAY
- She is playing like a child
- And penance is the play,
- Fantastical and wild
- Because the end of day
- Shows her that some one soon
- Will come from the house, and say--
- Though play is but half-done--
- 'Come in and leave the play.'--
- V
- HER RACE
- She has not grown uncivil
- As narrow natures would
- And called the pleasures evil
- Happier days thought good;
- She knows herself a woman
- No red and white of a face,
- Or rank, raised from a common
- Unreckonable race;
- And how should her heart fail her
- Or sickness break her will
- With her dead brother's valour
- For an example still.
- VI
- HER COURAGE
- When her soul flies to the predestined dancing-place
- (I have no speech but symbol, the pagan speech I made
- Amid the dreams of youth) let her come face to face,
- While wondering still to be a shade, with Grania's shade
- All but the perils of the woodland flight forgot
- That made her Dermuid dear, and some old cardinal
- Pacing with half-closed eyelids in a sunny spot
- Who had murmured of Giorgione at his latest breath--
- Aye and Achilles, Timor, Babar, Barhaim, all
- Who have lived in joy and laughed into the face of Death.
- VII
- HER FRIENDS BRING HER A CHRISTMAS TREE
- Pardon, great enemy,
- Without an angry thought
- We've carried in our tree,
- And here and there have bought
- Till all the boughs are gay,
- And she may look from the bed
- On pretty things that may
- Please a fantastic head.
- Give her a little grace,
- What if a laughing eye
- Have looked into your face--
- It is about to die.
- EGO DOMINUS TUUS
- HIC
- On the grey sand beside the shallow stream
- Under your old wind-beaten tower, where still
- A lamp burns on beside the open book
- That Michael Robartes left, you walk in the moon
- And though you have passed the best of life still trace
- Enthralled by the unconquerable delusion
- Magical shapes.
- ILLE
- By the help of an image
- I call to my own opposite, summon all
- That I have handled least, least looked upon.
- HIC
- And I would find myself and not an image.
- ILLE
- That is our modern hope and by its light
- We have lit upon the gentle, sensitive mind
- And lost the old nonchalance of the hand;
- Whether we have chosen chisel, pen or brush
- We are but critics, or but half create,
- Timid, entangled, empty and abashed
- Lacking the countenance of our friends.
- HIC
- And yet
- The chief imagination of Christendom
- Dante Alighieri so utterly found himself
- That he has made that hollow face of his
- More plain to the mind's eye than any face
- But that of Christ.
- ILLE
- And did he find himself,
- Or was the hunger that had made it hollow
- A hunger for the apple on the bough
- Most out of reach? and is that spectral image
- The man that Lapo and that Guido knew?
- I think he fashioned from his opposite
- An image that might have been a stony face,
- Staring upon a bedouin's horse-hair roof
- From doored and windowed cliff, or half upturned
- Among the coarse grass and the camel dung.
- He set his chisel to the hardest stone.
- Being mocked by Guido for his lecherous life,
- Derided and deriding, driven out
- To climb that stair and eat that bitter bread,
- He found the unpersuadable justice, he found
- The most exalted lady loved by a man.
- HIC
- Yet surely there are men who have made their art
- Out of no tragic war, lovers of life,
- Impulsive men that look for happiness
- And sing when they have found it.
- ILLE
- No, not sing,
- For those that love the world serve it in action,
- Grow rich, popular and full of influence,
- And should they paint or write still it is action:
- The struggle of the fly in marmalade.
- The rhetorician would deceive his neighbours,
- The sentimentalist himself; while art
- Is but a vision of reality.
- What portion in the world can the artist have
- Who has awakened from the common dream
- But dissipation and despair?
- HIC
- And yet
- No one denies to Keats love of the world;
- Remember his deliberate happiness.
- ILLE
- His art is happy but who knows his mind?
- I see a schoolboy when I think of him,
- With face and nose pressed to a sweet-shop window,
- For certainly he sank into his grave
- His senses and his heart unsatisfied,
- And made--being poor, ailing and ignorant,
- Shut out from all the luxury of the world,
- The coarse-bred son of a livery stable-keeper--
- Luxuriant song.
- HIC
- Why should you leave the lamp
- Burning alone beside an open book,
- And trace these characters upon the sands;
- A style is found by sedentary toil
- And by the imitation of great masters.
- ILLE
- Because I seek an image, not a book.
- Those men that in their writings are most wise
- Own nothing but their blind, stupefied hearts.
- I call to the mysterious one who yet
- Shall walk the wet sands by the edge of the stream
- And look most like me, being indeed my double,
- And prove of all imaginable things
- The most unlike, being my anti-self,
- And standing by these characters disclose
- All that I seek; and whisper it as though
- He were afraid the birds, who cry aloud
- Their momentary cries before it is dawn,
- Would carry it away to blasphemous men.
- A PRAYER ON GOING INTO MY HOUSE
- God grant a blessing on this tower and cottage
- And on my heirs, if all remain unspoiled,
- No table, or chair or stool not simple enough
- For shepherd lads in Galilee; and grant
- That I myself for portions of the year
- May handle nothing and set eyes on nothing
- But what the great and passionate have used
- Throughout so many varying centuries.
- We take it for the norm; yet should I dream
- Sinbad the sailor's brought a painted chest,
- Or image, from beyond the Loadstone Mountain
- That dream is a norm; and should some limb of the devil
- Destroy the view by cutting down an ash
- That shades the road, or setting up a cottage
- Planned in a government office, shorten his life,
- Manacle his soul upon the Red Sea bottom.
- THE PHASES OF THE MOON
- _An old man cocked his ear upon a bridge;
- He and his friend, their faces to the South,
- Had trod the uneven road. Their boots were soiled,
- Their Connemara cloth worn out of shape;
- They had kept a steady pace as though their beds,
- Despite a dwindling and late risen moon,
- Were distant. An old man cocked his ear._
- AHERNE
- What made that sound?
- ROBARTES
- A rat or water-hen
- Splashed, or an otter slid into the stream.
- We are on the bridge; that shadow is the tower,
- And the light proves that he is reading still.
- He has found, after the manner of his kind,
- Mere images; chosen this place to live in
- Because, it may be, of the candle light
- From the far tower where Milton's platonist
- Sat late, or Shelley's visionary prince:
- The lonely light that Samuel Palmer engraved,
- An image of mysterious wisdom won by toil;
- And now he seeks in book or manuscript
- What he shall never find.
- AHERNE
- Why should not you
- Who know it all ring at his door, and speak
- Just truth enough to show that his whole life
- Will scarcely find for him a broken crust
- Of all those truths that are your daily bread;
- And when you have spoken take the roads again?
- ROBARTES
- He wrote of me in that extravagant style
- He had learnt from Pater, and to round his tale
- Said I was dead; and dead I chose to be.
- AHERNE
- Sing me the changes of the moon once more;
- True song, though speech: 'mine author sung it me.'
- ROBARTES
- Twenty-and-eight the phases of the moon,
- The full and the moon's dark and all the crescents,
- Twenty-and-eight, and yet but six-and-twenty
- The cradles that a man must needs be rocked in:
- For there's no human life at the full or the dark.
- From the first crescent to the half, the dream
- But summons to adventure and the man
- Is always happy like a bird or a beast;
- But while the moon is rounding towards the full
- He follows whatever whim's most difficult
- Among whims not impossible, and though scarred
- As with the cat-o'-nine-tails of the mind,
- His body moulded from within his body
- Grows comelier. Eleven pass, and then
- Athenae takes Achilles by the hair,
- Hector is in the dust, Nietzsche is born,
- Because the heroes' crescent is the twelfth.
- And yet, twice born, twice buried, grow he must,
- Before the full moon, helpless as a worm.
- The thirteenth moon but sets the soul at war
- In its own being, and when that war's begun
- There is no muscle in the arm; and after
- Under the frenzy of the fourteenth moon
- The soul begins to tremble into stillness,
- To die into the labyrinth of itself!
- AHERNE
- Sing out the song; sing to the end, and sing
- The strange reward of all that discipline.
- ROBARTES
- All thought becomes an image and the soul
- Becomes a body: that body and that soul
- Too perfect at the full to lie in a cradle,
- Too lonely for the traffic of the world:
- Body and soul cast out and cast away
- Beyond the visible world.
- AHERNE
- All dreams of the soul
- End in a beautiful man's or woman's body.
- ROBARTES
- Have you not always known it?
- AHERNE
- The song will have it
- That those that we have loved got their long fingers
- From death, and wounds, or on Sinai's top,
- Or from some bloody whip in their own hands.
- They ran from cradle to cradle till at last
- Their beauty dropped out of the loneliness
- Of body and soul.
- ROBARTES
- The lovers' heart knows that.
- AHERNE
- It must be that the terror in their eyes
- Is memory or foreknowledge of the hour
- When all is fed with light and heaven is bare.
- ROBARTES
- When the moon's full those creatures of the full
- Are met on the waste hills by country men
- Who shudder and hurry by: body and soul
- Estranged amid the strangeness of themselves,
- Caught up in contemplation, the mind's eye
- Fixed upon images that once were thought,
- For separate, perfect, and immovable
- Images can break the solitude
- Of lovely, satisfied, indifferent eyes.
- _And thereupon with aged, high-pitched voice
- Aherne laughed, thinking of the man within,
- His sleepless candle and laborious pen._
- ROBARTES
- And after that the crumbling of the moon.
- The soul remembering its loneliness
- Shudders in many cradles; all is changed,
- It would be the World's servant, and as it serves,
- Choosing whatever task's most difficult
- Among tasks not impossible, it takes
- Upon the body and upon the soul
- The coarseness of the drudge.
- AHERNE
- Before the full
- It sought itself and afterwards the world.
- ROBARTES
- Because you are forgotten, half out of life,
- And never wrote a book your thought is clear.
- Reformer, merchant, statesman, learned man,
- Dutiful husband, honest wife by turn,
- Cradle upon cradle, and all in flight and all
- Deformed because there is no deformity
- But saves us from a dream.
- AHERNE
- And what of those
- That the last servile crescent has set free?
- ROBARTES
- Because all dark, like those that are all light,
- They are cast beyond the verge, and in a cloud,
- Crying to one another like the bats;
- And having no desire they cannot tell
- What's good or bad, or what it is to triumph
- At the perfection of one's own obedience;
- And yet they speak what's blown into the mind;
- Deformed beyond deformity, unformed,
- Insipid as the dough before it is baked,
- They change their bodies at a word.
- AHERNE
- And then?
- ROBARTES
- When all the dough has been so kneaded up
- That it can take what form cook Nature fancy
- The first thin crescent is wheeled round once more.
- AHERNE
- But the escape; the song's not finished yet.
- ROBARTES
- Hunchback and saint and fool are the last crescents.
- The burning bow that once could shoot an arrow
- Out of the up and down, the wagon wheel
- Of beauty's cruelty and wisdom's chatter,
- Out of that raving tide is drawn betwixt
- Deformity of body and of mind.
- AHERNE
- Were not our beds far off I'd ring the bell,
- Stand under the rough roof-timbers of the hall
- Beside the castle door, where all is stark
- Austerity, a place set out for wisdom
- That he will never find; I'd play a part;
- He would never know me after all these years
- But take me for some drunken country man;
- I'd stand and mutter there until he caught
- 'Hunchback and saint and fool,' and that they came
- Under the three last crescents of the moon,
- And then I'd stagger out. He'd crack his wits
- Day after day, yet never find the meaning.
- _And then he laughed to think that what seemed hard
- Should be so simple--a bat rose from the hazels
- And circled round him with its squeaky cry,
- The light in the tower window was put out._
- THE CAT AND THE MOON
- The cat went here and there
- And the moon spun round like a top,
- And the nearest kin of the moon
- The creeping cat looked up.
- Black Minnaloushe stared at the moon,
- For wander and wail as he would
- The pure cold light in the sky
- Troubled his animal blood.
- Minnaloushe runs in the grass,
- Lifting his delicate feet.
- Do you dance, Minnaloushe, do you dance?
- When two close kindred meet
- What better than call a dance,
- Maybe the moon may learn,
- Tired of that courtly fashion,
- A new dance turn.
- Minnaloushe creeps through the grass
- From moonlit place to place,
- The sacred moon overhead
- Has taken a new phase.
- Does Minnaloushe know that his pupils
- Will pass from change to change,
- And that from round to crescent,
- From crescent to round they range?
- Minnaloushe creeps through the grass
- Alone, important and wise,
- And lifts to the changing moon
- His changing eyes.
- THE SAINT AND THE HUNCHBACK
- HUNCHBACK
- Stand up and lift your hand and bless
- A man that finds great bitterness
- In thinking of his lost renown.
- A Roman Caesar is held down
- Under this hump.
- SAINT
- God tries each man
- According to a different plan.
- I shall not cease to bless because
- I lay about me with the taws
- That night and morning I may thrash
- Greek Alexander from my flesh,
- Augustus Caesar, and after these
- That great rogue Alcibiades.
- HUNCHBACK
- To all that in your flesh have stood
- And blessed, I give my gratitude,
- Honoured by all in their degrees,
- But most to Alcibiades.
- TWO SONGS OF A FOOL
- I
- A speckled cat and a tame hare
- Eat at my hearthstone
- And sleep there;
- And both look up to me alone
- For learning and defence
- As I look up to Providence.
- I start out of my sleep to think
- Some day I may forget
- Their food and drink;
- Or, the house door left unshut,
- The hare may run till it's found
- The horn's sweet note and the tooth of the hound.
- I bear a burden that might well try
- Men that do all by rule,
- And what can I
- That am a wandering witted fool
- But pray to God that He ease
- My great responsibilities.
- II
- I slept on my three-legged stool by the fire,
- The speckled cat slept on my knee;
- We never thought to enquire
- Where the brown hare might be,
- And whether the door were shut.
- Who knows how she drank the wind
- Stretched up on two legs from the mat,
- Before she had settled her mind
- To drum with her heel and to leap:
- Had I but awakened from sleep
- And called her name she had heard,
- It may be, and had not stirred,
- That now, it may be, has found
- The horn's sweet note and the tooth of the hound.
- ANOTHER SONG OF A FOOL
- This great purple butterfly,
- In the prison of my hands,
- Has a learning in his eye
- Not a poor fool understands.
- Once he lived a schoolmaster
- With a stark, denying look,
- A string of scholars went in fear
- Of his great birch and his great book.
- Like the clangour of a bell,
- Sweet and harsh, harsh and sweet,
- That is how he learnt so well
- To take the roses for his meat.
- THE DOUBLE VISION OF MICHAEL ROBARTES
- I
- On the grey rock of Cashel the mind's eye
- Has called up the cold spirits that are born
- When the old moon is vanished from the sky
- And the new still hides her horn.
- Under blank eyes and fingers never still
- The particular is pounded till it is man,
- When had I my own will?
- Oh, not since life began.
- Constrained, arraigned, baffled, bent and unbent
- By these wire-jointed jaws and limbs of wood,
- Themselves obedient,
- Knowing not evil and good;
- Obedient to some hidden magical breath.
- They do not even feel, so abstract are they,
- So dead beyond our death,
- Triumph that we obey.
- II
- On the grey rock of Cashel I suddenly saw
- A Sphinx with woman breast and lion paw,
- A Buddha, hand at rest,
- Hand lifted up that blest;
- And right between these two a girl at play
- That it may be had danced her life away,
- For now being dead it seemed
- That she of dancing dreamed.
- Although I saw it all in the mind's eye
- There can be nothing solider till I die;
- I saw by the moon's light
- Now at its fifteenth night.
- One lashed her tail; her eyes lit by the moon
- Gazed upon all things known, all things unknown,
- In triumph of intellect
- With motionless head erect.
- That other's moonlit eyeballs never moved,
- Being fixed on all things loved, all things unloved,
- Yet little peace he had
- For those that love are sad.
- Oh, little did they care who danced between,
- And little she by whom her dance was seen
- So that she danced. No thought,
- Body perfection brought,
- For what but eye and ear silence the mind
- With the minute particulars of mankind?
- Mind moved yet seemed to stop
- As 'twere a spinning-top.
- In contemplation had those three so wrought
- Upon a moment, and so stretched it out
- That they, time overthrown,
- Were dead yet flesh and bone.
- III
- I knew that I had seen, had seen at last
- That girl my unremembering nights hold fast
- Or else my dreams that fly,
- If I should rub an eye,
- And yet in flying fling into my meat
- A crazy juice that makes the pulses beat
- As though I had been undone
- By Homer's Paragon
- Who never gave the burning town a thought;
- To such a pitch of folly I am brought,
- Being caught between the pull
- Of the dark moon and the full,
- The commonness of thought and images
- That have the frenzy of our Western seas.
- Thereon I made my moan,
- And after kissed a stone,
- And after that arranged it in a song
- Seeing that I, ignorant for so long,
- Had been rewarded thus
- In Cormac's ruined house.
- NOTE
- "_Unpack the loaded pern_," p. 36.
- When I was a child at Sligo I could see above my grandfather's trees a
- little column of smoke from "the pern mill," and was told that "pern"
- was another name for the spool, as I was accustomed to call it, on which
- thread was wound. One could not see the chimney for the trees, and the
- smoke looked as if it came from the mountain, and one day a foreign
- sea-captain asked me if that was a burning mountain.
- W. B. Y.
- Printed in the United States of America.
- +--------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Transcriber's Note |
- | |
- | Page 64: "lecturn" _sic_--alternative spelling confirmed. |
- +--------------------------------------------------------------+
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