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 30

by W. B. Yeats


  THE LOVER’S SONG

  THE CHAMBERMAID’S FIRST SONG

  THE CHAMBERMAID’S SECOND SONG

  AN ACRE OF GRASS

  WHAT THEN?

  BEAUTIFUL LOFTY THINGS

  A CRAZED GIRL

  TO DOROTHY WELLESLEY

  THE CURSE OF CROMWELL

  ROGER CASEMENT

  THE GHOST OF ROGER CASEMENT

  THE O’RAHILLY

  COME GATHER ROUND ME, PARNELLITES

  THE WILD OLD WICKED MAN

  THE GREAT DAY

  PARNELL

  WHAT WAS LOST

  THE SPUR

  A DRUNKEN MAN’S PRAISE OF SOBRIETY

  THE PILGRIM

  COLONEL MARTIN

  A MODEL FOR THE LAUREATE

  THE OLD STONE CROSS

  THE SPIRIT MEDIUM

  THOSE IMAGES

  THE MUNICIPAL GALLERY REVISITED

  ARE YOU CONTENT?

  THE GYRES

  THE GYRES! the gyres! Old Rocky Face, look forth;

  Things thought too long can be no longer thought,

  For beauty dies of beauty, worth of worth,

  And ancient lineaments are blotted out.

  Irrational streams of blood are staining earth;

  Empedocles has thrown all things about;

  Hector is dead and there’s a light in Troy;

  We that look on but laugh in tragic joy.

  What matter though numb nightmare ride on top,

  And blood and mire the sensitive body stain?

  What matter? Heave no sigh, let no tear drop,

  A-greater, a more gracious time has gone;

  For painted forms or boxes of make-up

  In ancient tombs I sighed, but not again;

  What matter? Out of cavern comes a voice,

  And all it knows is that one word ‘Rejoice!’

  Conduct and work grow coarse, and coarse the soul,

  What matter? Those that Rocky Face holds dear,

  Lovers of horses and of women, shall,

  From marble of a broken sepulchre,

  Or dark betwixt the polecat and the owl,

  Or any rich, dark nothing disinter

  The workman, noble and saint, and all things run

  On that unfashionable gyre again.

  LAPIS LAZULI

  (For Harry Clifton)

  I HAVE heard that hysterical women say

  They are sick of the palette and fiddle-bow.

  Of poets that are always gay,

  For everybody knows or else should know

  That if nothing drastic is done

  Aeroplane and Zeppelin will come out.

  Pitch like King Billy bomb-balls in

  Until the town lie beaten flat.

  All perform their tragic play,

  There struts Hamlet, there is Lear,

  That’s Ophelia, that Cordelia;

  Yet they, should the last scene be there,

  The great stage curtain about to drop,

  If worthy their prominent part in the play,

  Do not break up their lines to weep.

  They know that Hamlet and Lear are gay;

  Gaiety transfiguring all that dread.

  All men have aimed at, found and lost;

  Black out; Heaven blazing into the head:

  Tragedy wrought to its uttermost.

  Though Hamlet rambles and Lear rages,

  And all the drop-scenes drop at once

  Upon a hundred thousand stages,

  It cannot grow by an inch or an ounce.

  On their own feet they came, or On shipboard,’

  Camel-back; horse-back, ass-back, mule-back,

  Old civilisations put to the sword.

  Then they and their wisdom went to rack:

  No handiwork of Callimachus,

  Who handled marble as if it were bronze,

  Made draperies that seemed to rise

  When sea-wind swept the corner, stands;

  His long lamp-chimney shaped like the stem

  Of a slender palm, stood but a day;

  All things fall and are built again,

  And those that build them again are gay.

  Two Chinamen, behind them a third,

  Are carved in lapis lazuli,

  Over them flies a long-legged bird,

  A symbol of longevity;

  The third, doubtless a serving-man,

  Carries a musical instmment.

  Every discoloration of the stone,

  Every accidental crack or dent,

  Seems a water-course or an avalanche,

  Or lofty slope where it still snows

  Though doubtless plum or cherry-branch

  Sweetens the little half-way house

  Those Chinamen climb towards, and I

  Delight to imagine them seated there;

  There, on the mountain and the sky,

  On all the tragic scene they stare.

  One asks for mournful melodies;

  Accomplished fingers begin to play.

  Their eyes mid many wrinkles, their eyes,

  Their ancient, glittering eyes, are gay.

  IMITATED FROM THE JAPANESE

  A MOST astonishing thing —

  Seventy years have I lived;

  (Hurrah for the flowers of Spring,

  For Spring is here again.)

  Seventy years have I lived

  No ragged beggar-man,

  Seventy years have I lived,

  Seventy years man and boy,

  And never have I danced for joy.

  SWEET DANCER

  THE girl goes dancing there

  On the leaf-sown, new-mown, smooth

  Grass plot of the garden;

  Escaped from bitter youth,

  Escaped out of her crowd,

  Or out of her black cloud.

  Ah, dancer, ah, sweet dancer.!

  If strange men come from the house

  To lead her away, do not say

  That she is happy being crazy;

  Lead them gently astray;

  Let her finish her dance,

  Let her finish her dance.

  Ah, dancer, ah, sweet dancer.!

  THE THREE BUSHES

  SAID lady once to lover,

  ‘None can rely upon

  A love that lacks its proper food;

  And if your love were gone

  How could you sing those songs of love?

  I should be blamed, young man.

  O my dear, O my dear.

  Have no lit candles in your room,’

  That lovely lady said,

  ‘That I at midnight by the clock

  May creep into your bed,

  For if I saw myself creep in

  I think I should drop dead.’

  O my dear, O my dear.

  ‘I love a man in secret,

  Dear chambermaid,’ said she.

  ‘I know that I must drop down dead

  If he stop loving me,

  Yet what could I but drop down dead

  If I lost my chastity?

  O my dear, O my dear.

  ‘So you must lie beside him

  And let him think me there.

  And maybe we are all the same

  Where no candles are,

  And maybe we are all the same

  That stip the body bare.’

  O my dear, O my dear.

  But no dogs barked, and midnights chimed,

  And through the chime she’d say,

  ‘That was a lucky thought of mine,

  My lover. looked so gay’;

  But heaved a sigh if the chambermaid

  Looked half asleep all day.

  O my dear, O my dear.

  ‘No, not another song,’ siid he,

  ‘Because my lady came

  A year ago for the first time

  At midnight to my room,

  And I must lie between the sheets

  When the clock begins to chime.’

  O my dear,
O my d-ear.

  ‘A laughing, crying, sacred song,

  A leching song,’ they said.

  Did ever men hear such a song?

  No, but that day they did.

  Did ever man ride such a race?

  No, not until he rode.

  O my dear, O my dear.

  But when his horse had put its hoof

  Into a rabbit-hole

  He dropped upon his head and died.

  His lady saw it all

  And dropped and died thereon, for she

  Loved him with her soul.

  O my dear, O my dear.

  The chambermaid lived long, and took

  Their graves into her charge,

  And there two bushes planted

  That when they had grown large

  Seemed sprung from but a single root

  So did their roses merge.

  O my dear, O my dear.

  When she was old and dying,

  The priest came where she was;

  She made a full confession.

  Long looked he in her face,

  And O he was a good man

  And understood her case.

  O my dear, O my dear.

  He bade them take and bury her

  Beside her lady’s man,

  And set a rose-tree on her grave,

  And now none living can,

  When they have plucked a rose there,

  Know where its roots began.

  O my dear, O my dear.

  THE LADY’S FIRST SONG

  I TURN round

  Like a dumb beast in a show.

  Neither know what I am

  Nor where I go,

  My language beaten

  Into one name;

  I am in love

  And that is my shame.

  What hurts the soul

  My soul adores,

  No better than a beast

  Upon all fours.

  THE LADY’S SECOND SONG

  WHAT sort of man is coming

  To lie between your feet?

  What matter, we are but women.

  Wash; make your body sweet;

  I have cupboards of dried fragrance.

  I can strew the sheet.

  The Lord have mercy upon us.

  He shall love my soul as though

  Body were not at all,

  He shall love your body

  Untroubled by the soul,

  Love cram love’s two divisions

  Yet keep his substance whole.

  The Lord have mercy upon us.

  Soul must learn a love that is

  proper to my breast,

  Limbs a Love in common

  With every noble beast.

  If soul may look and body touch,

  Which is the more blest?

  The Lord have mercy upon us.

  THE LADY’S THIRD SONG

  WHEN you and my true lover meet

  And he plays tunes between your feet.

  Speak no evil of the soul,

  Nor think that body is the whole,

  For I that am his daylight lady

  Know worse evil of the body;

  But in honour split his love

  Till either neither have enough,

  That I may hear if we should kiss

  A contrapuntal serpent hiss,

  You, should hand explore a thigh,

  All the labouring heavens sigh.

  THE LOVER’S SONG

  BIRD sighs for the air,

  Thought for I know not where,

  For the womb the seed sighs.

  Now sinks the same rest

  On mind, on nest,

  On straining thighs.

  THE CHAMBERMAID’S FIRST SONG

  HOW came this ranger

  Now sunk in rest,

  Stranger with strangcr.

  On my cold breast?

  What’s left to Sigh for?

  Strange night has come;

  God’s love has hidden him

  Out of all harm,

  Pleasure has made him

  Weak as a worm.

  THE CHAMBERMAID’S SECOND SONG

  From pleasure of the bed,

  Dull as a worm,

  His rod and its butting head

  Limp as a worm,

  His spirit that has fled

  Blind as a worm.

  AN ACRE OF GRASS

  PICTURE and book remain,

  An acre of green grass

  For air and exercise,

  Now strength of body goes;

  Midnight, an old house

  Where nothing stirs but a mouse.

  My temptation is quiet.

  Here at life’s end

  Neither loose imagination,

  Nor the mill of the mind

  Consuming its rag and bonc,

  Can make the truth known.

  Grant me an old man’s frenzy,

  Myself must I remake

  Till I am Timon and Lear

  Or that William Blake

  Who beat upon the wall

  Till Truth obeyed his call;

  A mind Michael Angelo knew

  That can pierce the clouds,

  Or inspired by frenzy

  Shake the dead in their shrouds;

  Forgotten else by mankind,

  An old man’s eagle mind.

  WHAT THEN?

  His chosen comrades thought at school

  He must grow a famous man;

  He thought the same and lived by rule,

  All his twenties crammed with toil;

  ‘What then?’ sang Plato’s ghost. ‘What then?’

  Everything he wrote was read,

  After certain years he won

  Sufficient money for his need,

  Friends that have been friends indeed;

  ‘What then?’ sang Plato’s ghost. ‘ What then?’

  All his happier dreams came true -

  A small old house, wife, daughter, son,

  Grounds where plum and cabbage grew,

  poets and Wits about him drew;

  ‘What then.?’ sang Plato’s ghost. ‘What then?’

  The work is done,’ grown old he thought,

  ‘According to my boyish plan;

  Let the fools rage, I swerved in naught,

  Something to perfection brought’;

  But louder sang that ghost, ‘What then?’

  BEAUTIFUL LOFTY THINGS

  BEAUTIFUL lofty things: O’Leary’s noble head;

  My father upon the Abbey stage, before him a raging crowd:

  ‘This Land of Saints,’ and then as the applause died out,

  ‘Of plaster Saints’; his beautiful mischievous head thrown back.

  Standish O’Grady supporting himself between the tables

  Speaking to a drunken audience high nonsensical words;

  Augusta Gregory seated at her great ormolu table,

  Her eightieth winter approaching: ‘Yesterday he threatened my life.

  I told him that nightly from six to seven I sat at this table,

  The blinds drawn up’; Maud Gonne at Howth station waiting a train,

  Pallas Athene in that straight back and arrogant head:

  All the Olympians; a thing never known again.

  A CRAZED GIRL

  THAT crazed girl improvising her music.

  Her poetry, dancing upon the shore,

  Her soul in division from itself

  Climbing, falling She knew not where,

  Hiding amid the cargo of a steamship,

  Her knee-cap broken, that girl I declare

  A beautiful lofty thing, or a thing

  Heroically lost, heroically found.

  No matter what disaster occurred

  She stood in desperate music wound,

  Wound, wound, and she made in her triumph

  Where the bales and the baskets lay

  No common intelligible sound

  But sang, ‘O sea-starved, hungry sea.’

 
TO DOROTHY WELLESLEY

  STRETCH towards the moonless midnight of the trees,

  As though that hand could reach to where they stand,

  And they but famous old upholsteries

  Delightful to the touch; tighten that hand

  As though to draw them closer yet.

  Rammed full

  Of that most sensuous silence of the night

  (For since the horizon’s bought strange dogs are still)

  Climb to your chamber full of books and wait,

  No books upon the knee, and no one there

  But a Great Dane that cannot bay the moon

  And now lies sunk in sleep.

  What climbs the stair?

  Nothing that common women ponder on

  If you are worrh my hope! Neither Content

  Nor satisfied Conscience, but that great family

  Some ancient famous authors mistepresent,

  The proud Furies each with her torch on high.

  THE CURSE OF CROMWELL

  YOU ask what — I have found, and far and wide I go:

  Nothing but Cromwell’s house and Cromwell’s murderous crew,

  The lovers and the dancers are beaten into the clay,

  And the tall men and the swordsmen and the horsemen, where are they?

  And there is an old beggar wandering in his pride — -

  His fathers served their fathers before Christ was crucified.

  O what of that, O what of that,

  ‘What is there left to say?

  All neighbourly content and easy talk are gone,

  But there’s no good complaining, for money’s rant is on.

  He that’s mounting up must on his neighbour mount,

  And we and all the Muses are things of no account.

  They have schooling of their own, but I pass their schooling by,

  What can they know that we know that know the time to die?

  O what of that, O what of that,

  What is there left to say?

  But there’s another knowledge that my heart destroys,

 

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