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+Project Gutenberg's The Nuts of Knowledge, by George William Russell
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Nuts of Knowledge
+ Lyrical Poems New and Old
+
+Author: George William Russell
+
+Release Date: August 29, 2005 [EBook #16616]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NUTS OF KNOWLEDGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Starner, Sankar Viswanathan, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE NUTS OF KNOWLEDGE, LYRICAL
+ POEMS OLD AND NEW BY A.E.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+ Prologue
+ The Nuts of Knowledge
+ Immortality
+ The Hermit
+ The Great Breath
+ The Divine Vision
+ The Burning Glass
+ A Vision of Beauty
+ Rest
+ The Earth Breath
+ Divine Visitation
+ The Master Singer
+ Aphrodite
+ Illusion
+ Babylon
+ Alter Ego
+ Krishna
+ Symbolism
+ Sung on a By-Way
+ The Hunter
+ The Vision of Love
+ A Call of the Sidhe
+ Janus
+ The Grey Eros
+ The Memory of Earth
+ By the Margin of the Great Deep
+ Three Counsellors,
+ Desire
+ The Place of Rest
+ Sacrifice
+ Reconciliation
+ Epilogue
+
+
+
+
+The Manager of the Dun Emer Press has to thank Mr. John Lane for
+permission to reprint ten poems from Homeward Songs By The Way, and
+ten from The Earth Breath.
+
+
+
+
+FOR BRIAN WHEN HE IS GROWN UP THIS HANDFUL OF THE NUTS OF KNOWLEDGE I
+HAVE GATHERED ON THE SECRET STREAMS.
+
+
+
+
+ I thought, beloved, to have brought to you
+ A gift of quietness and ease and peace,
+ Cooling your brow as with the mystic dew
+ Dropping from twilight trees.
+
+ Homeward I go not yet; the darkness grows;
+ Not mine the voice to still with peace divine:
+ From the first fount the stream of quiet flows
+ Through other hearts than mine.
+
+ Yet of my night I give to you the stars,
+ And of my sorrow here the sweetest gains,
+ And out of hell, beyond its iron bars,
+ My scorn of all its pains.
+
+
+
+
+THE NUTS OF KNOWLEDGE
+
+
+ A cabin on the mountain side hid in a grassy nook
+ Where door and windows open wide that friendly stars may look.
+ The rabbit shy can patter in, the winds may enter free,
+ Who throng around the mountain throne in living ecstasy.
+
+ And when the sun sets dimmed in eve and purple fills the air,
+ I think the sacred Hazel Tree is dropping berries there
+ From starry fruitage waved aloft where Connla's Well o'erflows;
+ For sure the enchanted waters pour through every wind that blows.
+
+ I think when night towers up aloft and shakes the trembling dew
+ How every high and lonely thought that thrills my being through
+ Is but a ruddy berry dropped down through the purple air,
+ And from the magic tree of life the fruit falls everywhere.
+
+
+
+
+IMMORTALITY
+
+
+ We must pass like smoke or live within the spirit's fire;
+ For we can no more than smoke unto the flame return
+ If our thought has changed to dream, our will unto desire,
+ As smoke we vanish though the fire may burn.
+
+ Lights of infinite pity star the grey dusk of our days:
+ Surely here is soul: with it we have eternal breath:
+ In the fire of love we live, or pass by many ways,
+ By unnumbered ways of dream to death.
+
+
+
+
+THE HERMIT
+
+
+ Now the quietude of earth
+ Nestles deep my heart within;
+ Friendships new and strange have birth
+ Since I left the city's din.
+
+ Here the tempest stays its guile,
+ Like a big kind brother plays,
+ Romps and pauses here awhile
+ From its immemorial ways.
+
+ Now the silver light of dawn
+ Slipping through the leaves that fleck
+ My one window, hurries on,
+ Throws its arms around my neck.
+
+ Darkness to my doorway hies,
+ Lays her chin upon the roof,
+ And her burning seraph eyes
+ Now no longer keep aloof.
+
+ Here the ancient mystery
+ Holds its hands out day by day,
+ Takes a chair and croons with me
+ By my cabin built of clay.
+
+ When the dusky shadow flits,
+ By the chimney nook I see
+ Where the old enchanter sits,
+ Smiles, and waves, and beckons me.
+
+
+
+
+THE GREAT BREATH
+
+
+ Its edges foamed with amethyst and rose,
+ Withers once more the old blue flower of day:
+ There where the ether like a diamond glows
+ Its petals fade away.
+
+ A shadowy tumult stirs the dusky air;
+ Sparkle the delicate dews, the distant snows;
+ The great deep thrills for through it everywhere
+ The breath of beauty blows.
+
+ I saw how all the trembling ages past,
+ Moulded to her by deep and deeper breath,
+ Neared to the hour when Beauty breathes her last
+ And knows herself in death.
+
+
+
+
+THE DIVINE VISION
+
+
+ This mood hath known all beauty for it sees
+ O'erwhelmed majesties
+ In these pale forms, and kingly crowns of gold
+ On brows no longer bold,
+ And through the shadowy terrors of their hell
+ The love for which they fell,
+ And how desire which cast them in the deep
+ Called God too from his sleep.
+ O, pity, only seer, who looking through
+ A heart melted like dew,
+ Seest the long perished in the present thus,
+ For ever dwell in us.
+ Whatever time thy golden eyelids ope
+ They travel to a hope;
+ Not only backward from these low degrees
+ To starry dynasties,
+ But, looking far where now the silence owns
+ And rules from empty thrones,
+ Thou seest the enchanted halls of heaven burn
+ For joy at our return.
+ Thy tender kiss hath memory we are kings
+ For all our wanderings.
+ Thy shining eyes already see the after
+ In hidden light and laughter.
+
+
+
+
+THE BURNING GLASS
+
+
+ A shaft of fire that falls like dew,
+ And melts and maddens all my blood,
+ From out thy spirit flashes through
+ The burning glass of womanhood.
+
+ Only so far; here must I stay:
+ Nearer I miss the light, the fire:
+ I must endure the torturing ray,
+ And, with all beauty, all desire.
+
+ Ah, time-long must the effort be,
+ And far the way that I must go
+ To bring my spirit unto thee,
+ Behind the glass, within the glow.
+
+
+
+
+A VISION OF BEAUTY
+
+
+ Where we sat at dawn together, while the star-rich heavens shifted,
+ We were weaving dreams in silence, suddenly the veil was lifted.
+ By a hand of fire awakened, in a moment caught and led
+ Upward to the wondrous vision: through the star-mists overhead
+ Flare and flaunt the monstrous highlands; on the sapphire coast of night
+ Fall the ghostly froth and fringes of the ocean of the light.
+ Many coloured shine the vapours: to the moon-eye far away
+ 'Tis the fairy ring of twilight mid the spheres of night and day,
+ Girdling with a rainbow cincture round the planet where we go,
+ We and it together fleeting, poised upon the pearl glow;
+ We and it and all together flashing through the starry spaces
+ In a tempest dream of beauty lighting up the place of places.
+ Half our eyes behold the glory: half within the spirit's glow
+ Echoes of the noiseless revels and the will of beauty go.
+ By a hand of fire uplifted--to her star-strewn palace brought,
+ To the mystic heart of beauty and the secret of her thought:
+ Here of yore the ancient mother in the fire mists sank to rest,
+ And she built her dreams about her, rayed from out her burning breast:
+ Here the wild will woke within her lighting up her flying dreams,
+ Round and round the planets whirling break in woods and flowers and streams,
+ And the winds are shaken from them as the leaves from off the rose,
+ And the feet of earth go dancing in the way that beauty goes,
+ And the souls of earth are kindled by the incense of her breath
+ As her light alternate lures them through the gates of birth and death.
+ O'er the fields of space together following her flying traces,
+ In a radiant tumult thronging, suns and stars and myriad races
+ Mount the spirit spires of beauty, reaching onward to the day
+ When the Shepherd of the Ages draws his misty hordes away
+ Through the glimmering deeps to silence, and within the awful fold
+ Life and joy and love forever vanish as a tale is told,
+ Lost within the mother's being. So the vision flamed and fled,
+ And before the glory fallen every other dream lay dead.
+
+
+
+
+REST
+
+
+ On me to rest, my bird, my bird:
+ The swaying branches of my heart
+ Are blown by every wind toward
+ The home whereto their wings depart.
+
+ Build not your nest, my bird, on me:
+ I know no peace but ever sway:
+ O, lovely bird, be free, be free,
+ On the wild music of the day.
+
+ But sometimes when your wings would rest,
+ And winds are laid on quiet eves:
+ Come, I will bear you breast to breast,
+ And lap you close with loving leaves.
+
+
+
+
+THE EARTH BREATH
+
+
+ From the cool and dark-lipped furrow breathes a dim delight
+ Through the woodland's purple plumage to the diamond night.
+ Aureoles of joy encircle every blade of grass
+ Where the dew-fed creatures silent and enraptured pass.
+ And the restless ploughman pauses, turns, and wondering,
+ Deep beneath his rustic habit finds himself a king;
+ For a fiery moment looking with the eyes of God
+ Over fields a slave at morning bowed him to the sod.
+ Blind and dense with revelation every moment flies.
+ And unto the mighty mother, gay, eternal, rise
+ All the hopes we hold, the gladness, dreams of things to be.
+ One of all thy generations, mother, hails to thee.
+ Hail, and hail, and hail for ever, though I turn again
+ From thy joy unto the human vestiture of pain.
+ I, thy child who went forth radiant in the golden prime,
+ Find thee still the mother-hearted through my night in time:
+ Find in thee the old enchantment there behind the veil
+ Where the gods, my brothers, linger. Hail, for ever hail!
+
+
+
+
+DIVINE VISITATION
+
+
+ The heavens lay hold on us: the starry rays
+ Fondle with flickering fingers brow and eyes:
+ A new enchantment lights the ancient skies.
+ What is it looks between us gaze on gaze?
+ Does the wild spirit of the endless days
+ Chase through my heart some lure that ever flies?
+ Only I know the vast within me cries
+ Finding in thee the ending of all ways.
+ Ah, but they vanish; the immortal train
+ From thee, from me, depart, yet take from thee
+ Memorial grace: laden with adoration
+ Forth from this heart they flow that all in vain
+ Would stay the proud eternal powers that flee
+ After the chase in burning exultation.
+
+
+
+
+THE MASTER SINGER
+
+
+ A laughter in the diamond air, a music in the trembling grass;
+ And one by one the words of light as joydrops through my being pass.
+ I am the sunlight in the heart, the silver moonglow in the mind;
+ My laughter runs and ripples through the wavy tresses of the wind.
+ I am the fire upon the hills, the dancing flame that leads afar
+ Each burning-hearted wanderer, and I the dear and homeward star.
+ A myriad lovers died for me, and in their latest yielded breath
+ I woke in glory giving them immortal life though touched by death.
+ They knew me from the dawn of time: if Hermes beats his rainbow wings,
+ If Angus shakes his locks of light, or golden-haired Apollo sings,
+ It matters not the name, the land; my joy in all the gods abides:
+ Even in the cricket in the grass some dimness of me smiles and hides.
+ For joy of me the day star glows, and in delight and wild desire
+ The peacock twilight rays aloft its plumes and blooms of shadowy fire,
+ Where in the vastness too I burn through summer nights and ages long,
+ And with the fiery footed Watchers shake in myriad dance and song.
+
+
+
+
+APHRODITE
+
+
+ Not unremembering we pass our exile from the starry ways:
+ One timeless hour in time we caught from the long night of endless days.
+ With solemn gaiety the stars danced far withdrawn on elfin heights:
+ The lilac breathed amid the shade of green and blue and citron lights.
+ But yet the close enfolding night seemed on the phantom verge of things,
+ For our adoring hearts had turned within from all their wanderings:
+ For beauty called to beauty and there thronged at the enchanter's will
+ The vanished hours of love that burn within the Ever-living still.
+ And sweet eternal faces put the shadows of the earth to rout,
+ And faint and fragile as a moth your white hand fluttered and went out.
+ Oh, who am I who tower beside this goddess of the twilight air?
+ The burning doves fly from my heart and melt within her bosom there.
+ I know the sacrifice of old they offered to the mighty queen,
+ And this adoring love has brought us back the beauty that has been.
+ As to her worshippers she came descending from her glowing skies
+ So Aphrodite I have seen with shining eyes look through your eyes:
+ One gleam of the ancestral face which lighted up the dawn for me:
+ One fiery visitation of the love the gods desire in thee!
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSION
+
+
+ What is the love of shadowy lips
+ That know not what they seek or press,
+ From whom the lure for ever slips
+ And fails their phantom tenderness?
+
+ The mystery and light of eyes
+ That near to mine grow dim and cold;
+ They move afar in ancient skies
+ Mid flame and mystic darkness rolled.
+
+ O, beauty, as thy heart o'erflows
+ In tender yielding unto me,
+ A vast desire awakes and grows
+ Unto forgetfulness of thee.
+
+
+
+
+BABYLON
+
+
+ The blue dusk ran between the streets; my love was winged within my mind;
+ It left to-day and yesterday and thrice a thousand years behind.
+ To-day was past and dead for me for from to-day my feet had run
+ Through thrice a thousand years to walk the ways of ancient Babylon.
+ On temple top and palace roof the burnished gold flung back the rays
+ Of a red sunset that was dead and lost beyond a million days.
+ The tower of heaven turns darker blue; a starry sparkle now begins;
+ The mystery and magnificence, the myriad beauty and the sins
+ Come back to me. I walk beneath the shadowy multitude of towers;
+ Within the gloom the fountain jets its pallid mist in lily flowers.
+ The waters lull me, and the scent of many gardens, and I hear
+ Familiar voices, and the voice I love is whispering in my ear.
+ Oh real as in dream all this; and then a hand on mine is laid:
+ The wave of phantom time withdraws; and that young Babylonian maid,
+ One drop of beauty left behind from all the flowing of that tide,
+ Is looking with the self-same eyes, and here in Ireland by my side.
+ Oh, light our life in Babylon, but Babylon has taken wings,
+ While we are in the calm and proud procession of eternal things.
+
+
+
+
+ALTER EGO
+
+
+ All the morn a spirit gay
+ Breathes within my heart a rhyme,
+ 'Tis but hide and seek we play
+ In and out the courts of Time.
+
+ Fairy lover, when my feet
+ Through the tangled woodland go,
+ 'Tis thy sunny fingers fleet
+ Fleck the fire dews to and fro.
+
+ In the moonlight grows a smile
+ Mid its rays of dusty pearl--
+ 'Tis but hide and seek the while,
+ As some frolic boy and girl.
+
+ When I fade into the deep
+ Some mysterious radiance showers
+ From the jewel-heart of sleep
+ Through the veil of darkened hours.
+
+ Where the ring of twilight gleams
+ Round the sanctuary wrought,
+ Whispers haunt me--in my dreams
+ We are one yet know it not.
+
+ Some for beauty follow long
+ Flying traces; some there be
+ Seek thee only for a song:
+ I to lose myself in thee.
+
+
+
+
+KRISHNA
+
+ 'I am Beauty itself among beautiful things.'
+ Bhagavad-Gita
+
+
+ The East was crowned with snow-cold bloom
+ And hung with veils of pearly fleece:
+ They died away into the gloom,
+ Vistas of peace--and deeper peace.
+
+ And earth and air and wave and fire
+ In awe and breathless silence stood;
+ For One who passed into their choir
+ Linked them in mystic brotherhood.
+
+ Twilight of amethyst, amid
+ Thy few strange stars that lit the heights,
+ Where was the secret spirit hid?
+ Where was Thy place, O Light of Lights?
+
+ The flame of Beauty far in space--
+ Where rose the fire: in thee? in me?
+ Which bowed the elemental race
+ To adoration silently?
+
+
+
+
+SYMBOLISM
+
+
+ Now when the spirit in us wakes and broods,
+ Filled with home yearnings, drowsily it flings
+ From its deep heart high dreams and mystic moods,
+ Mixed with the memory of the loved earth things;
+ Clothing the vast with a familiar face;
+ Reaching its right hand forth to greet the starry race.
+
+ Wondrously near and clear the great warm fires
+ Stare from the blue; so shows the cottage light
+ To the field labourer whose heart desires
+ The old folk by the nook, the welcome bright
+ From the house-wife long parted from at dawn--
+ So the star villages in God's great depths withdrawn.
+
+ Nearer to Thee, not by delusion led,
+ Though there no house fires burn nor bright eyes gaze,
+ We rise, but by the symbol charioted,
+ Through loved things rising up to Love's own ways
+ By these the soul unto the vast has wings
+ And sets the seal celestial on all mortal things.
+
+
+
+
+SUNG ON A BY-WAY
+
+
+ What of all the will to do?
+ It has vanished long ago,
+ For a dream-shaft pierced it through
+ From the Unknown Archer's bow.
+
+ What of all the soul to think?
+ Some one offered it a cup
+ Filled with a diviner drink,
+ And the flame has burned it up.
+
+ What of all the hope to climb?
+ Only in the self we grope
+ To the misty end of time:
+ Truth has put an end to hope.
+
+ What of all the heart to love?
+ Sadder than for will or soul,
+ No light lured it on above;
+ Love has found itself the whole.
+
+
+
+
+THE HUNTER
+
+
+ Twilight, a timid fawn, went glimmering by,
+ And night, the dark blue hunter, followed fast:
+ Ceaseless pursuit and flight were in the sky,
+ But the long chase had ceased for us at last.
+
+ We watched together while the driven fawn
+ Hid in the golden thicket of the day:
+ We from whose hearts pursuit and flight were gone
+ Knew on the hunter's breast her refuge lay.
+
+
+
+
+THE VISION OF LOVE
+
+
+ The twilight fleeted away in pearl on the stream,
+ And night, like a diamond dome, stood still in our dream.
+ Your eyes like burnished stones or as stars were bright
+ With the sudden vision that made us one with the night.
+
+ We loved in infinite spaces, forgetting here
+ The breasts that were lit with life and the lips so near;
+ Till the wizard willows waved in the wind and drew
+ Me away from the fulness of love and down to you.
+
+ Our love was so vast that it filled the heavens up:
+ But the soft white form I held was an empty cup,
+ When the willows called me back to earth with their sigh,
+ And we moved as shades through the deep that was you and I.
+
+
+
+
+A CALL OF THE SIDHE
+
+
+ Tarry thou yet, late lingerer in the twilight's glory:
+ Gay are the hills with song: earth's faery children leave
+ More dim abodes to roam the primrose-hearted eve,
+ Opening their glimmering lips to breathe some wondrous story.
+ Hush, not a whisper! Let your heart alone go dreaming.
+ Dream unto dream may pass: deep in the heart alone
+ Murmurs the Mighty One his solemn undertone.
+ Canst thou not see adown the silver cloudland streaming
+ Rivers of faery light, dewdrop on dewdrop falling,
+ Starfire of silver flames, lighting the dark beneath?
+ And what enraptured hosts burn on the dusky heath!
+ Come thou away with them, for Heaven to Earth is calling.
+ These are Earth's voice--her answer--spirits thronging.
+ Come to the Land of Youth: the trees grown heavy there
+ Drop on the purple wave the starry fruit they bear.
+ Drink: the immortal waters quench the spirit's longing.
+ Art thou not now, bright one, all sorrow past, in elation,
+ Made young with joy, grown brother-hearted with the vast,
+ Whither thy spirit wending flits the dim stars past
+ Unto the Light of Lights in burning adoration.
+
+
+
+
+JANUS
+
+
+ Image of beauty, when I gaze on thee,
+ Trembling I waken to a mystery,
+ How through one door we go to life or death
+ By spirit kindled or the sensual breath.
+
+ Image of beauty, when my way I go;
+ No single joy or sorrow do I know:
+ Elate for freedom leaps the starry power,
+ The life which passes mourns its wasted hour.
+
+ And, ah, to think how thin the veil that lies
+ Between the pain of hell and paradise!
+ Where the cool grass my aching head embowers
+ God sings the lovely carol of the flowers.
+
+
+
+
+THE GREY EROS
+
+
+ We are desert leagues apart;
+ Time is misty ages now
+ Since the warmth of heart to heart
+ Chased the shadows from my brow.
+
+ Oh, I am so old, meseems
+ I am next of kin to Time,
+ The historian of her dreams
+ From the long forgotten prime.
+
+ You have come a path of flowers.
+ What a way was mine to roam!
+ Many a fallen empire's towers,
+ Many a ruined heart my home.
+
+ No, there is no comfort, none;
+ All the dewy tender breath
+ Idly falls when life is done
+ On the starless brow of death.
+
+ Though the dream of love may tire,
+ In the ages long agone
+ There were ruby hearts of fire--
+ Ah, the daughters of the dawn!
+
+ Though I am so feeble now,
+ I remember when our pride
+ Could not to the Mighty bow;
+ We would sweep His stars aside.
+
+ Mix thy youth with thoughts like those--
+ It were but to wither thee,
+ But to graft the youthful rose
+ On the old and flowerless tree.
+
+ Age is no more near than youth
+ To the sceptre and the crown.
+ Vain the wisdom, vain the truth;
+ Do not lay thy rapture down.
+
+
+
+
+THE MEMORY OF EARTH
+
+
+ In the wet dusk silver-sweet,
+ Down the violet scented ways,
+ As I moved with quiet feet
+ I was met by mighty days.
+
+ On the hedge the hanging dew
+ Glassed the eve and stars and skies;
+ While I gazed a madness grew
+ Into thundered battle cries.
+
+ Where the hawthorn glimmered white,
+ Flashed the spear and fell the stroke--
+ Ah, what faces pale and bright
+ Where the dazzling battle broke!
+
+ There a hero-hearted queen
+ With young beauty lit the van.
+ Gone! the darkness flowed between
+ All the ancient wars of man.
+
+ While I paced the valley's gloom
+ Where the rabbits pattered near,
+ Shone a temple and a tomb
+ With the legend carven clear:
+
+ 'Time put by a myriad fates
+ That her day might dawn in glory.
+ Death made wide a million gates
+ So to close her tragic story.'
+
+
+
+
+BY THE MARGIN OF THE GREAT DEEP
+
+
+ When the breath of twilight blows to flame the misty skies,
+ All its vaporous sapphire, violet glow, and silver gleam,
+ With their magic flood me through the gateway of the eyes;
+ I am one with the twilight's dream.
+
+ When the trees and skies and fields are one in dusky mood,
+ Every heart of man is wrapt within the mother's breast:
+ Full of peace and sleep and dreams in the vasty quietude,
+ I am one with their hearts at rest.
+
+ From our immemorial joys of hearth and home and love
+ Strayed away along the margin of the unknown tide,
+ All its reach of soundless calm can thrill me far above
+ Word or touch from the lips beside.
+
+ Aye, and deep and deep and deeper let me drink and draw,
+ From the olden fountain more than light or peace or dream,
+ Such primeval being as o'erfills the heart with awe,
+ Growing one with its silent stream.
+
+
+
+
+THREE COUNSELLORS
+
+
+ It was the fairy of the place,
+ Moving within a little light,
+ Who touched with dim and shadowy grace
+ The conflict at its fever height.
+
+ It seemed to whisper 'Quietness,'
+ Then quietly itself was gone:
+ Yet echoes of its mute caress
+ Were with me as the years went on.
+
+ It was the warrior within
+ Who called 'Awake, prepare for fight:
+ Yet lose not memory in the din:
+ Make of thy gentleness thy might:
+
+ 'Make of thy silence words to shake
+ The long-enthroned kings of earth:
+ Make of thy will the force to break
+ Their towers of wantonness and mirth.'
+
+ It was the wise all-seeing soul
+ Who counselled neither war nor peace:
+ 'Only be thou thyself that goal
+ In which the wars of time shall cease.'
+
+
+
+
+DESIRE
+
+
+ With thee a moment! Then what dreams have play!
+ Traditions of eternal toil arise,
+ Search for the high austere and lonely way
+ The Spirit moves in through eternities.
+ Ah, in the soul what memories arise!
+ And with what yearning inexpressible,
+ Rising from long forgetfulness I turn
+ To Thee, invisible, unrumoured, still:
+ White for Thy whiteness all desires burn.
+ Ah, with what longing once again I turn!
+
+
+
+
+THE PLACE OF REST
+
+ 'The soul is its own witness and its own refuge'
+
+
+ Unto the deep the deep heart goes,
+ It lays its sadness nigh the breast:
+ Only the Mighty Mother knows
+ The wounds that quiver unconfessed.
+
+ It seeks a deeper silence still;
+ It folds itself around with peace,
+ Where thoughts alike of good or ill
+ In quietness unfostered cease.
+
+ It feels in the unwounding vast
+ For comfort for its hopes and fears:
+ The Mighty Mother bows at last;
+ She listens to her children's tears.
+
+ Where the last anguish deepens--there
+ The fire of beauty smites through pain:
+ A glory moves amid despair,
+ The Mother takes her child again.
+
+
+
+
+SACRIFICE
+
+
+ Those delicate wanderers,
+ The wind, the star, the cloud,
+ Ever before mine eyes,
+ As to an altar bowed,
+ Light and dew-laden airs
+ Offer in sacrifice.
+
+ The offerings arise:
+ Hazes of rainbow light,
+ Pure crystal, blue, and gold,
+ Through dreamland take their flight;
+ And 'mid the sacrifice
+ God moveth as of old.
+
+ In miracles of fire
+ He symbols forth his days;
+ In gleams of crystal light
+ Reveals what pure pathways
+ Lead to the soul's desire,
+ The silence of the height.
+
+
+
+
+RECONCILIATION
+
+
+ I begin through the grass once again to be bound to the Lord;
+ I can see, through a face that has faded, the face full of rest
+ Of the Earth, of the Mother, my heart with her heart in accord:
+ As I lie mid the cool green tresses that mantle her breast
+ I begin with the grass once again to be bound to the Lord.
+
+ By the hand of a child I am led to the throne of the King,
+ For a touch that now fevers me not is forgotten and far,
+ And His infinite sceptred hands that sway us can bring
+ Me in dreams from the laugh of a child to the song of a star.
+ On the laugh of a child I am borne to the joy of the King.
+
+ Well, when all is said and done
+ Best within my narrow way,
+ May some angel of the sun
+ Muse memorial o'er my clay:
+
+ 'Here was beauty all betrayed
+ From the freedom of her state;
+ From her human uses stayed
+ On an idle rhyme to wait.
+
+ Ah, what deep despair might move
+ If the beauty lit a smile,
+ Or the heart was warm with love
+ That was pondering the while.
+
+ He has built his monument
+ With the winds of time at strife,
+ Who could have before he went
+ Written in the book of life.
+
+ To the stars from which he came
+ Empty handed he goes home;
+ He who might have wrought in flame
+ Only traced upon the foam.'
+
+
+
+
+THE NUTS OF KNOWLEDGE
+
+
+ 'Sinend daughter of Lodan Lucharglan, son of Lir, out of the
+ Land of Promise went to Connlas' Well which is under the
+ sea, to behold it. That is a well at which are the hazels of
+ wisdom and inspiration that is, the hazels of the science of
+ poetry; and in the same hour their fruit and their blossom &
+ their foliage break forth, and then fall upon the well in
+ the same shower, which raises upon the water a royal surge
+ of purple.'
+
+
+
+
+ HERE ENDS THE NUTS OF KNOWLEDGE, WRITTEN BY A.E., PRINTED,
+ UPON PAPER MADE IN IRELAND, AND PUBLISHED BY ELIZABETH
+ CORBET YEATS AT THE DUN EMER PRESS, IN THE HOUSE OF EVELYN
+ GLEESON AT DUNDRUM IN THE COUNTY OF DUBLIN, IRELAND,
+ FINISHED ON THE TENTH DAY OF OCTOBER, IN THE YEAR NINETEEN
+ HUNDRED & THREE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Nuts of Knowledge, by George William Russell
+
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