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

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Delphi Complete Poetry and Plays of W. B. Yeats (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series) Page 26

by W. B. Yeats


  Dear shadows, now you know it all,

  All the folly of a fight

  With a common wrong or right.

  The innocent and the beautiful.

  Have no enemy but time;

  Arise and bid me strike a match

  And strike another till time catch;

  Should the conflagration climb,

  Run till all the sages know.

  We the great gazebo built,

  They convicted us of guilt;

  Bid me strike a match and blow.

  DEATH

  NOR dread nor hope attend

  A dying animal;

  A man awaits his end

  Dreading and hoping all;

  Many times he died,

  Many times rose again.

  A great man in his pride

  Confronting murderous men

  Casts derision upon

  Supersession of breath;

  He knows death to the bone —

  Man has created death.

  A DIALOGUE OF SELF AND SOUL

  My Soul I summon to the winding ancient stair;

  Set all your mind upon the steep ascent,

  Upon the broken, crumbling battlement,

  Upon the breathless starlit air,

  ‘Upon the star that marks the hidden pole;

  Fix every wandering thought upon

  That quarter where all thought is done:

  Who can distinguish darkness from the soul

  My Self. The consecretes blade upon my knees

  Is Sato’s ancient blade, still as it was,

  Still razor-keen, still like a looking-glass

  Unspotted by the centuries;

  That flowering, silken, old embroidery, torn

  From some court-lady’s dress and round

  The wodden scabbard bound and wound

  Can, tattered, still protect, faded adorn

  My Soul. Why should the imagination of a man

  Long past his prime remember things that are

  Emblematical of love and war?

  Think of ancestral night that can,

  If but imagination scorn the earth

  And interllect is wandering

  To this and that and t’other thing,

  Deliver from the crime of death and birth.

  My self. Montashigi, third of his family, fashioned it

  Five hundred years ago, about it lie

  Flowers from I know not what embroidery —

  Heart’s purple — and all these I set

  For emblems of the day against the tower

  Emblematical of the night,

  And claim as by a soldier’s right

  A charter to commit the crime once more.

  My Soul. Such fullness in that quarter overflows

  And falls into the basin of the mind

  That man is stricken deaf and dumb and blind,

  For intellect no longer knows

  Is from the Ought, or knower from the Known —

  That is to say, ascends to Heaven;

  Only the dead can be forgiven;

  But when I think of that my tongue’s a stone.

  My Self. A living man is blind and drinks his drop.

  What matter if the ditches are impure?

  What matter if I live it all once more?

  Endure that toil of growing up;

  The ignominy of boyhood; the distress

  Of boyhood changing into man;

  The unfinished man and his pain

  Brought face to face with his own clumsiness;

  The finished man among his enemies? —

  How in the name of Heaven can he escape

  That defiling and disfigured shape

  The mirror of malicious eyes

  Casts upon his eyes until at last

  He thinks that shape must be his shape?

  And what’s the good of an escape

  If honour find him in the wintry blast?

  I am content to live it all again

  And yet again, if it be life to pitch

  Into the frog-spawn of a blind man’s ditch,

  A blind man battering blind men;

  Or into that most fecund ditch of all,

  The folly that man does

  Or must suffer, if he woos

  A proud woman not kindred of his soul.

  I am content to follow to its source

  Every event in action or in thought;

  Measure the lot; forgive myself the lot!

  When such as I cast out remorse

  So great a sweetness flows into the breast

  We must laugh and we must sing,

  We are blest by everything,

  Everything we look upon is blest.

  BLOOD AND THE MOON

  BLESSED be this place,

  More blessed still this tower;

  A bloody, arrogant power

  Rose out of the race

  Uttering, mastering it,

  Rose like these walls from these

  Storm-beaten cottages —

  In mockery I have set

  A powerful emblem up,

  And sing it rhyme upon rhyme

  In mockery of a time

  HaIf dead at the top.

  Alexandria’s was a beacon tower, and Babylon’s

  An image of the moving heavens, a log-book of the

  sun’s journey and the moon’s;

  And Shelley had his towers, thought’s crowned powers

  he called them once.

  I declare this tower is my symbol; I declare

  This winding, gyring, spiring treadmill of a stair is my

  ancestral stair;

  That Goldsmith and the Dean, Berkeley and Burke

  have travelled there.

  Swift beating on his breast in sibylline frenzy blind

  Because the heart in his blood-sodden breast had

  dragged him down into mankind,

  Goldsmith deliberately sipping at the honey-pot of his

  mind,

  And haughtier-headed Burke that proved the State a

  tree,

  That this unconquerable labyrinth of the birds, cen-

  tury after century,

  Cast but dead leaves to mathematical equality;

  And God-appointed Berkeley that proved all things a

  dream,

  That this pragmatical, preposterous pig of a world, its

  farrow that so solid seem,

  Must vanish on the instant if the mind but change its

  theme;

  Saeva Indignatio and the labourer’s hire,

  The strength that gives our blood and state magnani-

  mity of its own desire;

  Everything that is not God consumed with intellectual

  fire.

  III

  The purity of the unclouded moon

  Has flung its atrowy shaft upon the floor.

  Seven centuries have passed and it is pure,

  The blood of innocence has left no stain.

  There, on blood-saturated ground, have stood

  Soldier, assassin, executioner.

  Whether for daily pittance or in blind fear

  Or out of abstract hatred, and shed blood,

  But could not cast a single jet thereon.

  Odour of blood on the ancestral stair!

  And we that have shed none must gather there

  And clamour in drunken frenzy for the moon.

  IV

  Upon the dusty, glittering windows cling,

  And seem to cling upon the moonlit skies,

  Tortoiseshell butterflies, peacock butterflies,

  A couple of night-moths are on the wing.

  Is every modern nation like the tower,

  Half dead at the top? No matter what I said,

  For wisdom is the property of the dead,

  A something incompatible with life; and power,

  Like everything that has the stain of blood,

  A property of the living; but no stain
r />   Can come upon the visage of the moon

  When it has looked in glory from a cloud.

  OIL AND BLOOD

  IN tombs of gold and lapis lazuli

  Bodies of holy men and women exude

  Miraculous oil, odour of violet.

  But under heavy loads of trampled clay

  Lie bodies of the vampires full of blood;

  Their shrouds are bloody and their lips are wet.

  VERONICA’S NAPKIN

  THE Heavenly Circuit; Berenice’s Hair;

  Tent-pole of Eden; the tent’s drapery;

  Symbolical glory of thc earth and air!

  The Father and His angelic hierarchy

  That made the magnitude and glory there

  Stood in the circuit of a needle’s eye.

  Some found a different pole, and where it stood

  A pattern on a napkin dipped in blood.

  SYMBOLS

  A STORM BEATEN old watch-tower,

  A blind hermit rings the hour.

  All-destroying sword-blade still

  Carried by the wandering fool.

  Gold-sewn silk on the sword-blade,

  Beauty and fool together laid.

  SPILT MILK

  WE that have done and thought,

  That have thought and done,

  Must ramble, and thin out

  Like milk spilt on a stone.

  THE NINETEENTH CENTURY AND AFTER

  THOUGH the great song return no more

  There’s keen delight in what we have:

  The rattle of pebbles on the shore

  Under the receding wave.

  STATISTICS

  ‘THOSE Platonists are a curse,’ he said,

  ‘God’s fire upon the wane,

  A diagram hung there instead,

  More women born than men.’

  THREE MOVEMENTS

  SHAKESPEAREAN fish swam the sea, far away from land;

  Romantic fish swam in nets coming to the hand;

  What are all those fish that lie gasping on the strand?

  THE SEVEN SAGES

  The First. My great-grandfather spoke to Edmund Burke

  In Grattan’s house.

  The Second. My great-grandfather shared

  A pot-house bench with Oliver Goldsmith once.

  The Third. My great-grandfather’s father talked of music,

  Drank tar-water with the Bishop of Cloyne.

  The Fourth. But mine saw Stella once.

  The Fifth. Whence came our thought?

  The Sixth. From four great minds that hated Whiggery.

  The Fifth. Burke was a Whig.

  The Sixth. Whether they knew or not,

  Goldsmith and Burke, Swift and the Bishop of Cloyne

  All hated Whiggery; but what is Whiggery?

  A levelling, rancorous, rational sort of mind

  That never looked out of the eye of a saint

  Or out of drunkard’s eye.

  The Seventh. All’s Whiggery now,

  But we old men are massed against the world.

  The First. American colonies, Ireland, France and India

  Harried, and Burke’s great melody against it.

  The Second. Oliver Goldsmith sang what he had seen,

  Roads full of beggars, cattle in the fields,

  But never saw the trefoil stained with blood,

  The avenging leaf those fields raised up against it.

  The Fourth. The tomb of Swift wears it away.

  The Third. A voice

  Soft as the rustle of a reed from Cloyne

  That gathers volume; now a thunder-clap.

  The Sixtb. What schooling had these four?

  The Seventh. They walked the roads

  Mimicking what they heard, as children mimic;

  They understood that wisdom comes of beggary.

  THE CRAZED MOON

  CRAZED through much child-bearing

  The moon is staggering in the sky;

  Moon-struck by the despairing

  Glances of her wandering eye

  We grope, and grope in vain,

  For children born of her pain.

  Children dazed or dead!

  When she in all her virginal pride

  First trod on the mountain’s head

  What stir ran through the countryside

  Where every foot obeyed her glance!

  What manhood led the dance!

  Fly-catchers of the moon,

  Our hands are blenched, our fingers seem

  But slender needles of bone;

  Blenched by that malicious dream

  They are spread wide that each

  May rend what comes in reach.

  COOLE PARK, 1929

  I meditate upon a swallow’s flight,

  Upon a aged woman and her house,

  A sycamore and lime-tree lost in night

  Although that western cloud is luminous,

  Great works constructed there in nature’s spite

  For scholars and for poets after us,

  Thoughts long knitted into a single thought,

  A dance-like glory that those walls begot.

  There Hyde before he had beaten into prose

  That noble blade the Muses buckled on,

  There one that ruffled in a manly pose

  For all his timid heart, there that slow man,

  That meditative man, John Synge, and those

  Impetuous men, Shawe-Taylor and Hugh Lane,

  Found pride established in humility,

  A scene well Set and excellent company.

  They came like swallows and like swallows went,

  And yet a woman’s powerful character

  Could keep a Swallow to its first intent;

  And half a dozen in formation there,

  That seemed to whirl upon a compass-point,

  Found certainty upon the dreaming air,

  The intellectual sweetness of those lines

  That cut through time or cross it withershins.

  Here, traveller, scholar, poet, take your stand

  When all those rooms and passages are gone,

  When nettles wave upon a shapeless mound

  And saplings root among the broken stone,

  And dedicate - eyes bent upon the ground,

  Back turned upon the brightness of the sun

  And all the sensuality of the shade -

  A moment’s memory to that laurelled head.

  COOLE AND BALLYLEE, 1931

  Under my window-ledge the waters race,

  Otters below and moor-hens on the top,

  Run for a mile undimmed in Heaven’s face

  Then darkening through ‘dark’ Raftery’s ‘cellar’ drop,

  Run underground, rise in a rocky place

  In Coole demesne, and there to finish up

  Spread to a lake and drop into a hole.

  What’s water but the generated soul?

  Upon the border of that lake’s a wood

  Now all dry sticks under a wintry sun,

  And in a copse of beeches there I stood,

  For Nature’s pulled her tragic buskin on

  And all the rant’s a mirror of my mood:

  At sudden thunder of the mounting swan

  I turned about and looked where branches break

  The glittering reaches of the flooded lake.

  Another emblem there! That stormy white

  But seems a concentration of the sky;

  And, like the soul, it sails into the sight

  And in the morning’s gone, no man knows why;

  And is so lovely that it sets to right

  What knowledge or its lack had set awry,

  So atrogantly pure, a child might think

  It can be murdered with a spot of ink.

  Sound of a stick upon the floor, a sound

  From somebody that toils from chair to chair;

  Beloved books that famous hands have bound,

  Old marble heads, old pictures e
verywhere;

  Great rooms where travelled men and children found

  Content or joy; a last inheritor

  Where none has reigned that lacked a name and fame

  Or out of folly into folly came.

  A spot whereon the founders lived and died

  Seemed once more dear than life; ancestral trees,

  Or gardens rich in memory glorified

  Marriages, alliances and families,

  And every bride’s ambition satisfied.

  Where fashion or mere fantasy decrees

  We shift about - all that great glory spent -

  Like some poor Arab tribesman and his tent.

  We were the last romantics - chose for theme

  Traditional sanctity and loveliness;

  Whatever’s written in what poets name

  The book of the people; whatever most can bless

  The mind of man or elevate a rhyme;

  But all is changed, that high horse riderless,

  Though mounted in that saddle Homer rode

  Where the swan drifts upon a darkening flood.

  FOR ANNE GREGORY

  ‘NEVER shall a young man,

  Thrown into despair

  By those great honey-coloured

  Ramparts at your ear,

  Love you for yourself alone

  And not your yellow hair.’

  ‘But I can get a hair-dye

  And set such colour there,

  Brown, or black, or carrot,

  That young men in despair

  May love me for myself alone

  And not my yellow hair.’

  ‘I heard an old religious man

  But yesternight declare

  That he had found a text to prove

  That only God, my dear,

  Could love you for yourself alone

  And not your yellow hair.’

  SWIFT’S EPITAPH

  SWIFT has sailed into his rest;

  Savage indignation there

  Cannot lacerate his breast.

  Imitate him if you dare,

  World-besotted traveller; he

  Served human liberty.

  AT ALGECIRAS - A MEDITATON UPON DEATH

  The heron-billed pale cattle-birds

 

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