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Delphi Complete Poetry and Plays of W. B. Yeats (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series)

Page 19

by W. B. Yeats


  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 pain
t 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 soli
tude

  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;

 

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