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+Project Gutenberg's Etain the Beloved and Other Poems, by James Henry Cousins
+
+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: Etain the Beloved and Other Poems
+
+Author: James Henry Cousins
+
+Release Date: November 25, 2011 [EBook #38135]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ETAIN THE BELOVED AND OTHER POEMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ETAIN THE BELOVED
+ AND OTHER POEMS
+
+
+
+
+_BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
+
+
+ The Quest
+ The Bell-Branch
+ The Awakening
+ The Wisdom of the West
+ Ben Madighan (out of Print)
+ Sung by Six "
+ The Legend of the Blemished King (out of Print)
+ The Voice of One "
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: JAMES H. COUSINS
+ _From a pencil sketch by Florence Gillespie_]
+
+
+
+
+ ETAIN THE BELOVED
+
+ AND OTHER POEMS
+
+ BY JAMES H. COUSINS
+
+ MAUNSEL & COMPANY, LIMITED,
+ 96 MIDDLE ABBEY STREET, DUBLIN
+ 1912
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ ETAIN THE BELOVED 1
+
+ POEMS AND LYRICS
+
+ DEATH AND LIFE 49
+
+ A SCHOOLBOY PLAYS CUCHULAIN 54
+
+ HOW THE MOUNTAINS CAME TO BE 56
+
+ LOVE IN ABSENCE 58
+
+ TREES IN WINTER 60
+
+ A SPRING CAPRICE 62
+
+ A SPRING RONDEL 63
+
+ THE FAIRY RING 64
+
+ LABORARE EST ORARE 65
+
+ PARAPHRASES AND INTERPRETATIONS
+
+ DAEDALUS AND ICARUS 69
+
+ A PARAPHRASE 71
+
+ HOSPITALITY 72
+
+ THE STUDENT 73
+
+ AT A HOLY WELL 74
+
+ THE PRIEST'S LAKE 75
+
+ SONNETS
+
+ A PAPER-SELLER 79
+
+ TO ONE IN PRISON 80
+
+ A HOME-COMING 81
+
+ LOVE, THE DESTROYER 82
+
+ ENVOY
+
+ THE LOVING CUP 84
+
+ NOTES 87
+
+
+
+
+ETAIN THE BELOVED
+
+
+
+
+_TO PENROSE MORRIS_
+
+
+
+
+ETAIN THE BELOVED
+
+
+ I
+
+ Strong in the strength that finds in gentleness
+ A way to peace, King Eochaidh on the throne
+ Of Erin sits. Around his footstool press
+ Clansmen and chiefs. Some wind of thought has blown
+ Their eyes to flame. Some purpose, in the stress
+ Of travailing tongues, to birth finds not a way:
+ What all would utter, none has wit to say.
+
+ Into their midst one came, an agéd bard
+ Upon whose flowing hair Wisdom had laid
+ Her gift of silver. On those faces, scarred
+ From old forgotten fights, he looked, and weighed
+ The meaning in their eyes, though sorely marred;
+ And from the tangled fibre of their thought
+ Into the web of speech their purpose wrought.
+
+ "Thy word, O King, has passed by hill and dale
+ Throughout all Erin, bidding to the Feast
+ Of Tara all thy people, with the tale
+ Of tribute due from greatest and from least.
+ Nor should this word than others less prevail,
+ But that the herald-spear thy will hath sent,
+ Against the shield of custom has been bent.
+
+ "Thou knowest, O King, that from most ancient years
+ No chieftain wifeless rules for thee the land,
+ Nor mateless at a festival appears;
+ But fixed in all experience doth stand:
+ And thus, made master of all human fears,
+ Fears not, but strongly round the camp-fires goes,
+ Full sharer of thy people's joys and woes.
+
+ "Equal in yoke and honour, as the day
+ And night, that are but breathings of the soul,
+ They on life's crooked journey take their way
+ Diverse in gift, in essence one and whole.
+ This is the custom, King! Yet custom may,
+ If but of man, be as a smith who twists
+ An iron chain to bind upon his wrists.
+
+ "But custom may, if fashioned to the Law
+ That made the world, be as the straitened string
+ From which the Master of the Feast may draw
+ Majestic speech, a living, wondrous thing
+ To rid the brow of pale contention's flaw,
+ And passing like the honey-cup along,
+ Gather their wandering lips to one great song.
+
+ "And such the custom that thy people plead:
+ For when of old the deathless Lord of Life
+ Dagda came forth, and knew the immortal need
+ That burned within his heart, he took to wife
+ Dana the Mother of all human seed.
+ In her his breath found music and a name.
+ In her his fire has blossomed into flame.
+
+ "Throughout the world that fire and music run
+ One sings within the maiden's wondering heart:
+ One stirs the veins of manhood, as the sun
+ Sets the spring's fingers thrilling with the smart
+ Of keen, ecstatic life that's but begun.
+ In every seed that breaks and wind that blows,
+ Each in the other seeks and finds repose.
+
+ "Wherefore, O King, since thou art yet unwed,
+ And thus in kingship standest incomplete,
+ Unfurnished in thy heart, from whence are fed
+ The streams of power and wisdom, it is not meet
+ That unto thee thy people bow the head,
+ And here thy sovereignty with tribute own
+ Till thou hast set a Queen upon thy throne."
+
+ He ceased, and all the faces of the crowd
+ Shone with the light that kindles when the boon
+ Of speech has eased the heart; as when a cloud
+ Falls from the labouring shoulder of the moon,
+ And all the world stands smiling silver-browed.
+ King Eochaidh for a moment bent his head
+ In thought; then smiling he arose and said:
+
+ "I am not careless of the ancient need
+ That moves your minds. Within my own it moves
+ Like a long-hidden, unforgotten seed
+ The spring has touched uneasily: like hooves
+ Long captive, when the trumpet has decreed
+ A royal pilgrimage, and in the liss
+ They dance to taste the highway's ringing bliss.
+
+ "So have I watched for that sure sign that fills
+ The horn of fate, that bending this our realm
+ Unto the Will that works behind our wills,
+ It may remain; as when storms overwhelm,
+ And leafy spray whirls over the roaring hills,
+ The swaying pine bends as the storm wars by,
+ And lives to shake proud arms against the sky.
+
+ "But now the horn is full, the hour is here.
+ Our wills as one move onward to their end.
+ Here now I lift on high the royal spear,
+ And thus through Erin proclamation send:
+ 'Search for the promised maiden far and near
+ Whom the high Gods have destined at my side
+ To reign.' Go forth. The King awaits his bride.
+
+ "She shall be found in some most quiet place
+ Where Beauty sits all day beside her knee
+ And looks with happy envy on her face;
+ Where Virtue blushes, her own guilt to see,
+ And Grace learns new, sweet meanings from her grace;
+ Where all that ever was or will be wise
+ Pales at the burning wisdom of her eyes.
+
+ "When you at last, far off like worshippers
+ Within some holy circle, bow your heads,
+ You shall await till on that face of her's
+ A smile like spring's first morning slowly spreads;
+ And when her lip with wondrous music stirs,
+ Bear hither like the wind her deathless name,
+ That I may light my heart at its white flame."
+
+ Scarce had he ceased when from the royal tent
+ Broke the full tide of their loud ecstacy,
+ And through the woods like summer thunder went,
+ Full of great rumour of mighty things to be
+ That died far off like twilight breezes spent.
+ Then sang the bard in hidden wisdom skilled:
+ "Thus is the purpose of the Gods fulfilled.
+
+ "_Lift now the hands that may not bless
+ A wifeless feast, a queenless throne,
+ A court or council womanless,
+ Or life one-limbed and sideways grown,
+ That holds the hands that may not bless._
+
+ "_The starry Virgin of the east
+ Steps up the sky to lead the sign
+ Where most has kissed and mixed with least,
+ And one-in-twain life's torches shine
+ Behind the Virgin of the east._
+
+ "_Then lift the hands that gladly bless
+ Full life, to life's great fulness grown,
+ A power to stand through shock and stress,
+ And rear an everlasting throne
+ Held high on hands that gladly bless._"
+
+ Then on a night when on his hearth the gleam
+ Of crackling faggots flung a wavering glow
+ Along his red-yew roof from beam to beam
+ Like glancing eyes, King Eochaidh to and fro
+ Turned on his couch, dreaming a happy dream
+ Of snapping stems, and crisp leaves crushed by feet
+ With high desire made musical and fleet.
+
+ Out of the fire a swift and slender shaft
+ Of yellow flame pierced through the King's dropped lids,
+ And woke a murmur of bees whose eager craft
+ Rifled the treasures of blossomy pyramids;
+ Whereat the King, raising his hand, low laughed,
+ Then passed like some worn swimmer on the sweep
+ Of strong waves toward the unfathomed gulf of sleep.
+
+ At length in that white hour when dewy wings
+ Stir with new day's delight, there came a sound
+ As though a passion of voices and smitten strings
+ Mingled and swelled and flew along the ground,
+ Till at the utmost of its triumphings,
+ Through the King's sleep and on his door the dawn
+ Broke, and a mighty shout: "Etain! Etain!"
+
+
+ II
+
+ Thereafter, on a morning rich with spring,
+ When round his feet new-opened flowers looked up
+ Wide-eyed and wet at some most wondrous thing,
+ And crystal draughts from many an odorous cup
+ Were spilled by winds in playful rioting,
+ King Eochaidh stood beside a quiet shore,
+ Dumb with a joy he never knew before.
+
+ From league to league alone his path had lain
+ On windy hills, through forests dark, or deep
+ In dank, sonorous glens. Through every vein
+ A burning joy had drunk the mists of sleep,
+ And sung "Etain, Etain," till the refrain
+ Irked, and he slept, and when he sprang awake
+ Saw that which made his heart with rapture shake.
+
+ There by the sea, Etain his destined bride
+ Sat unabashed, unwitting of the sight
+ Of him who gazed upon her gleaming side,
+ Fair as the snowfall of a single night;
+ Her arms like foam upon the flowing tide;
+ Her curd-white limbs in all their beauty bare,
+ Straight as the rule of Dagda's carpenter.
+
+ Her cheeks were like the foxglove when it glows
+ At noon: her eyes blue as the hyacinth.
+ Like moonlight struck to marble, nobly rose
+ Her neck upon her shoulder's polished plinth;
+ And like the light that swiftly comes and goes
+ Through breaking waves, among her hair her hands
+ Broke into wavy gold its plaited strands.
+
+ Then came her maidens, bright and blossoming
+ With beauty, and before her beauty bowed,
+ And stood around her in a laughing ring
+ To robe her starry splendour like a cloud.
+ And as her hair they twined, the hidden king
+ Scarce knew if on her lips, that knew no wrong,
+ Or in his own hushed heart he heard this song.
+
+ _The king comes riding from the north,
+ From battles won, with marching men.
+ Ah, whose white eager arms go forth
+ To bid him welcome home again
+ When he comes riding from the north?_
+
+ _The king comes riding from the south,
+ And halts beside the royal liss.
+ Ah, whose the happy smiling mouth
+ That gives and takes a long warm kiss
+ When he comes riding from the south?_
+
+ _The king comes riding from the east.
+ O night how dark! O way how long!
+ Ah, whose dear eyes shall light the feast?
+ Ah, who shall lift his heart with song
+ When he comes riding from the east?_
+
+ _The king comes riding from the west,
+ And smiles unto himself, and sighs.
+ Ah, whose the white and easeful breast
+ Where he shall close his kingly eyes
+ When he comes riding from the west?_
+
+ Small wonder now that Eochaidh's leaping heart
+ Strained like a hound in leash: yet through his bliss
+ There passed a thin cold blade with sudden smart
+ Of doubt that he but dreamed, of dread that this
+ Was but a vision that would soon depart:
+ But when the song had ceased, there stood the maid
+ Flushed with keen joy, and like a queen arrayed.
+
+ A mantle of bright purple, waving, wound
+ Her form, and from her shoulders white as milk
+ Fell in reluctant folds and touched the ground.
+ Upon her breast the flash of emerald silk--
+ As though the glory of earth had wrapped her round--
+ Mixed with the glow of red embroidered gold
+ That seemed with light her body to enfold.
+
+ A sudden breeze came singing from the sea
+ And broke with sunlight through the leafy shade.
+ Then came King Eochaidh forth, and on his knee
+ Bent low before the silent, trembling maid.
+ "The king," he said, "has come, and kneels to thee,
+ Foredoomed to share the burden of his throne,
+ And glorify its glory with thine own."
+
+ Then through her frame a gentle tremor went
+ And lit her face with exquisite swift fire
+ That woke forgotten dreams, whose shaken scent
+ Sweetened the quiet winds of her desire
+ With some divine, unuttered ravishment,
+ Some earnest of great doom that filled her heart
+ With sorrow, joy's majestic counterpart.
+
+ Upon his head she gently laid her hand,
+ And said, "Arise! To thee my heart has bowed
+ When minstrel after minstrel, tired and tanned,
+ Has supped beside our hearth, and sung the proud
+ High song that bears thy greatness through the land.
+ For thee from life's clear dawn my love remained
+ Fixed, and at length to thee I have attained."
+
+
+ III
+
+ Across the woods of Meath the bird of day
+ Fell from the boughs of noon with bleeding wing,
+ While dark-browed Balor strode the eastern way,
+ And scattered darkness from his cloudy sling,
+ Till at his feet the hosts of Erin lay
+ Smitten with sleep; then round their dreams he cast
+ The chains wherewith he binds his prisoners fast.
+
+ From dawn till dark, in many a hero-game
+ Glad eyes had flashed, or bent in pride august
+ To hear the chant of some undying name
+ Whose deeds were strong as wine. Anon the dust
+ Of festive feet stormed in a wild acclaim
+ Around the royal place where, side by side,
+ Sat Eochaidh and Etain his new-made bride.
+
+ Now ancient Sleep, with Silence for his queen,
+ Reigns o'er those palaces of stately fir
+ That drowse in curtained moonlight's misty sheen.
+ Within, the arras hardly seems to stir
+ Its languorous folds of purple, blue and green,
+ Whose colours part or mix, as rise and fall
+ The pine fire's odorous gleams on roof and wall.
+
+ No sound, no life, save where with soft salute
+ The wide-eyed sentinels a moment wait
+ And listen sidelong to the passing bruit
+ Of ghostly winds, that murmur at their state
+ And pass, with peevish cry and soundless foot,
+ Where the dead fly upon the waveless moat
+ Makes of the dead dropped leaf a funeral boat.
+
+ Yet in the midst of silence so profound,
+ One stirred his rushy couch as though in pain,
+ For through his dreams a torrent of swift sound
+ Stumbled in foam about his echoing brain,
+ And all his thought in loud confusion drowned
+ And bore him toward a dim and perilous steep
+ That flung its shadow on a writhing deep.
+
+ Then like the sun obscured by valley smoke,
+ With some vague trouble glooming in his eye,
+ Ailill the brother of the king awoke
+ And scanned the portents of the morning sky,
+ Till on his mind a mellowing radiance broke,
+ And in his heart there dawned a wondrous face
+ That lit his world with Love's exalted grace.
+
+ Often in dreams a shadow by his side
+ Had sung of one who came in some great hour
+ With Love--and woe. Now came his brother's bride;
+ And when he bent before her in her bower,
+ Within his heart the shadow rose and cried,
+ And passed away, while all his being shook,
+ Stricken with joy and sorrow in a look.
+
+ Among the clamours of the festal time
+ His love for ease he hid, again pursued,
+ Finding a solace in the chanted rhyme
+ Of agéd bards, or youths in merry mood
+ Where angry words were counted as a crime;
+ And fireside friendship staunched his hungry sighs
+ When she no more was banquet for his eyes.
+
+ But when the marriage festival was past,
+ And restless day gave place to torturing night,
+ His captive passion burst its chains, and cast
+ Its ardours from his brain in living light;
+ Then like the thin voice of a spell-raised blast,
+ A dissonant note from hidden harp-strings drawn
+ Troubled the dreams of Eochaidh and Etain.
+
+ By day the dream had faded to a mist
+ In some far-folded valley of the mind;
+ But when, heart-charmed in evening's amethyst,
+ The labouring world grew wonderfully kind,
+ And upturned lips by brooding love were kissed;
+ Like silent rain in summer twilight spilled,
+ A wandering thought King Eochaidh touched and chilled.
+
+ Meanwhile with steps that would and would not shun
+ Bliss craved and spurned; with tongue that might not speak
+ The pain that some strange sweetness now had won,
+ Ailill moved to and fro; and soon his cheek
+ Paled like the austere Servants of the Sun;
+ And day by day his passion's famished flame
+ Nourished itself upon his wasting frame.
+
+ In vain the king's diviners daily strove
+ To find the spring of Ailill's gathering ill;
+ In vain Etain by stream and murmuring grove
+ Sought for the shadowy hand that held his will;
+ And when dark Balor cracked his whip, and drove
+ His winter herd across the bounds of day,
+ Ailill upon his couch in weakness lay.
+
+ So when a year had passed, and through the land
+ The king went forth on royal pilgrimage,
+ Unto Etain he gave his last command
+ That she, his brother's sickness to assuage,
+ Withhold no gift, but give with regal hand;
+ And should chill death blow out his flickering blaze,
+ His funeral-stone with honour she should raise.
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ From day to day Etain with eager thought
+ Outran sick Ailill's fleetest-footed needs;
+ From sun and wind a subtle medicine caught,
+ And charmed swift healing from the fresh-strewn reeds
+ Upon his floor, which her own hands had brought
+ From ferny hollows, where cool waters laughed
+ That Ailill from her cup with gladness quaffed.
+
+ Yet with each dawn that came with growing power
+ There grew a cloudy thought in Ailill's mind
+ That gloomed the joy of health's returning hour,
+ And put a sigh in evening's gentle wind,
+ And touched with ill-timed frost life's opening flower,
+ And turned to poverty the proffered wealth
+ In hands that wrought his sickness and his health.
+
+ And she, in service, found a hidden way
+ To strange new meanings in the eyes of life;
+ And reached a joy beyond the shrill affray
+ Of horns and harps loud with the songs of strife
+ Or little triumphs of a passing day;
+ And grasped, in giving, life's most perfect gift--
+ Love that is raised by that which it doth lift.
+
+ So moved the twain through sunshine barred with gloom,
+ Finding in each twin solace and despair:
+ He, like a frail and gently tended bloom,
+ Grudged each day's health that took him past her care;
+ And she, o'ershadowed by approaching doom,
+ Watching his need of her grow less and less,
+ Sickened with grief her lips dare not express.
+
+ Tossed thus on hidden billows of the soul,
+ And swept by winds that warred against the will,
+ They drained the little draught in life's poor bowl,
+ And all unwitting wrought each other ill;
+ Until at last, stung past the heart's control,
+ Marking Etain's white brow and pensive eye,
+ Thus Ailill broke the silence with a cry.
+
+ "O bitter joy! O sorrow passing sweet!
+ O blossoming life that leads to love's pale death!
+ O gain that speeds to loss on laggard feet!
+ O living voice that kills the word it saith!
+ O cooling touch that kindles quenchless heat!
+ How shall I all my heart's dear burden speak,
+ Or how keep silence at thy paling cheek?
+
+ "I love thee, Queen Etain, but in such wise
+ As never man loved woman heretofore:
+ Not with the love that lives upon her eyes,
+ And counts her breast the summit and the shore
+ Of all desire, and with tempestuous sighs
+ Flings to the winds the spoils of reason's thrift
+ In barter for her body's utmost gift.
+
+ "My love, O queen, is that serener kind
+ Whose word outruns the lumbering wain of speech,
+ And springs in light from mind to answering mind;
+ And takes its bliss beyond the body's reach,
+ Thought mixed with thought, as sunlight with sweet wind;
+ And crowds the ways, where human sorrow pleads,
+ With generations of exalted deeds.
+
+ "Ah, then take back the life that thou hast spent
+ In vain, since thou dost slay and heal my heart;
+ And let quick death beat down my failing tent,
+ And its lone habitant be blown apart
+ Through the wide wastes of night's black firmament,
+ Where move the Powers in whose dread hands may be
+ The source and end of dreams and destiny.
+
+ "There past the chain of hours my faithful ghost
+ May through thy dreams move silently and dim;
+ And needing then the least, may serve thee most;
+ Or crying seaward from life's misty rim,
+ Call forth thy heart beyond its mortal coast:
+ Happy if in thy spirit's wakening sigh
+ My name one murmured moment live and die."
+
+ Thus Ailill spoke; and like a summer shower
+ His eager words, tingling on heart and brain,
+ Stirred many a leaf to life, and many a flower;
+ And sank beneath her spirit's thirsty plain,
+ Till hidden springs, touched with a strange new power,
+ Welled in her eyes with flash of sudden streams
+ From hills that crowned some far-off world of dreams.
+
+ Clear-visioned in her meditative eye
+ Rolled the great world, and lo! a silent moth
+ Shredded its mighty frame, till down the sky
+ It fluttered like a poor discarded cloth
+ From some dead face flung out by hands that die;
+ And thinned like vapours round the lips of day,
+ And like a breath passed utterly away.
+
+ And as it passed she knew that nevermore
+ Life would be life again; yet in her mind
+ Lurked the dim fear of one who leaves the shore,
+ And on the sightless hazard of the wind
+ Moves into doubt and darkness. O'er and o'er
+ She turned her thought, till softly on her ear
+ There broke a song a bard was chanting near.
+
+ _Because the strong are fallen low,
+ Who deems that Strength himself is slain?
+ Through depth and height his arm shall go,
+ And he shall rear his house again,
+ Although the strong are fallen low._
+
+ _Because the living all are dead,
+ Who deems that Life has found a grave?
+ Among the stars she lifts her head,
+ She dances lightly on the wave,
+ Although the living all are dead._
+
+ _Because the beautiful has passed,
+ Was Beauty but a passing word?
+ Behold, the dust through chaos cast
+ With lovelier loveliness is stirred,
+ Although the beautiful has passed._
+
+ _And if earth's lovers love amiss,
+ Who deems that Love has perished quite?
+ Lo, cloudy lips the mountains kiss,
+ And day is bosomed on the night,
+ Although earth's lovers love amiss._
+
+ Swiftly and silently her thought's faint wing
+ Sought between wind and wind a certain way;
+ For one was keen with glad awakening
+ In perfumed morn of some ecstatic day;
+ And one was loud with song, and quivering string,
+ And all life's pageantry and noisy breath
+ Wherewith men strive to drown the voice of death.
+
+ Then said Etain: "King Eochaidh in his might
+ Drew me to bonds of happiness; but thou
+ Art as a voice that calls across the night
+ To where some dawn blows freshly on the brow,
+ And love with love moves freely as the light,
+ Mingling in happy dreams their shadowy wings
+ Beyond these perishing substantial things.
+
+ "Ah, me, the pain in joy, the joy in grief!
+ Who tells the end when once has moved the foot?
+ Thy hand is on my life's new-opened leaf:
+ Who knows the hand may pluck its ripened fruit?
+ To thee--and past, the journey may be brief.
+ Yet I the king's behest shall all fulfil--
+ 'Nothing withhold to heal my brother's ill.'
+
+ "So in the gaze of dawn and wondering flowers
+ We shall keep tryst by stream and whispering tree;
+ Perchance to win from life's controlling powers
+ The healing of thy heart's infirmity;
+ Perchance--" "Oh! speed the hazard of those hours,"
+ He cried, "that blind the flame of low desire
+ In the white light of Love's transmuting fire."
+
+
+ V
+
+ Hard by the swift-winged star, the moth-like moon
+ Sheds golden dust on waves of day that ebb
+ Into the deep beyond life's wan lagoon.
+ The spider Night now spins his monstrous web,
+ And spots the dark with many a pale cocoon
+ Hung in his vaporous cave, whose phantoms creep
+ In visions round the heavy brain of sleep.
+
+ Yet one, among the sleepers, never turns
+ To ease his shoulder of the weight of night;
+ But with the shield of sweet oblivion spurns
+ Those wandering shafts that tease with sound and sight;
+ Till in a quiet, deep as kingly urns
+ In buried places, Ailill deadly lies,
+ Blind to the spreading signal of the skies.
+
+ Now the thick dark, that pressed Etain's calm face
+ Like softest wool, thins out, and moves, and lifts;
+ And like a memory's vague recovered trace
+ The silent world, looming through cloudy rifts,
+ Floats greyly on the grey abyss of space,
+ Then slowly forms, and stands at last in light
+ Built on the crumbled ruins of the night.
+
+ Soon on a cloud o'erhung with heliotrope
+ Day's harp is lifted, wire on golden wire;
+ And now great Dagda's burning fingers grope
+ From string to string, then reaching high and higher
+ Unto the utterance of some eager hope,
+ Break through the vibrant silences, and spring
+ Into one living voice of leaf and wing.
+
+ Somewhere the snipe now taps his tiny drum;
+ The moth goes fluttering upward from the heath;
+ And where no lightest foot unmarked may come,
+ The rabbit, tiptoe, plies his shiny teeth
+ On luscious herbage; and with strident hum
+ The yellow bees, blustering from flower to flower,
+ Scatter from dew-filled cups a sparkling shower.
+
+ The meadowsweet shakes out its feathery mass;
+ And rumorous winds, that stir the silent eaves,
+ Bearing abroad faint perfumes as they pass,
+ Thrill with some wondrous tale the fluttering leaves,
+ And whisper secretly along the grass
+ Where gossamers, for day's triumphal march,
+ Hang out from blade to blade their diamond arch.
+
+ Forth came Etain, and with a little cry
+ Scattered the councils of the feathery brood;
+ And faced unblenched the red sun's winkless eye
+ That hawk-like hung above the quivering wood;
+ And passed with stately step and head on high
+ Toward a secluded place--where one doth wait
+ Silent and imperturbable as fate.
+
+ Sweetly the wizard palms of morning sleek
+ Her brow with spells; and when a butterfly
+ Brushes with soft familiar wing her cheek,
+ Through the deep woods she hears a ghostly sigh,
+ As if a hidden god were fain to speak
+ An ancient ageless love that, fold by fold,
+ Wraps her with joy in throbbing arms of old.
+
+ Now is her sandalled foot upon the edge
+ Of a loud-leaping stream, that flings its damp
+ To cool the sorrel shaking on its ledge
+ Under the squirrel's pine, and in a swamp
+ Goes dumb among the heron-haunted sedge,
+ Where the swift kingfisher, a moment seen,
+ Flashes and fades, a flame of sudden green.
+
+ At length she stands within the appointed place,
+ Where leafy boughs in odorous dusk are blent.
+ But wherefore now across her trancéd face
+ Pass the quick fingers of bewilderment,
+ And doubt on doubt like shadows shadows chase?
+ Faintly she speaks, "Ailill I came to see.
+ Who art thou--for thou art yet art not he?"
+
+ From her soft eye no loosened glances tell
+ Desire or dread, to him whose cloudless gaze
+ Knows from what heights of old her footsteps fell
+ Out of clear light, into this web of days
+ And nights and mystery inscrutable,
+ And marks how in the calm of inner power
+ She moves unmoved to meet her destined hour.
+
+ "Etain," he whispered, and again, "Etain."
+ Such utter love went throbbing through her name
+ That nigh beyond her doubt her foot had gone;
+ Yet stood she wavering like a lonely flame
+ Outburning night, that feels the shake of dawn;
+ Then said, "Thy name, that doubt aside he cast?"
+ "Mider," he answered, "come for thee at last."
+
+ "Mider?" she echoed, "Mider?" and the sound
+ Smote upon hidden doors, and roused from sleep
+ Faint eyes that dreamed, vague hands that groped around
+ The thought behind her thought, and from the deep
+ Beneath her thought climbed upward, to the bound
+ Whose shadowy marge like midnight gloom is cast
+ Between the passing moment and the past.
+
+ Then Mider said, "For no poor worm's desire,
+ Nor aught of earth, thou comest, O beloved!
+ But for another's good thy thoughts conspire;
+ And far from self thy feet have hither moved
+ To the high purpose of the sacred fire
+ That burns thine upward path through joy and pain,
+ Through birth, through life, through death, to me again."
+
+ Then asked she all bewildered: "Who art thou
+ Whose eyes have read my soul?" And answered he,
+ "Thine am I by the immemorial vow
+ That made thee mine, beloved! eternally,
+ When for a bride-price, on thy peerless brow
+ I set a diadem beyond the worth
+ Of all the crowns of all the queens of earth."
+
+ Swiftly her thought divining, "Where, and when,
+ And wherefore parted, thou, beloved! shalt know.
+ That land which gleams in the rapt poet's ken,
+ Set in a sea that has no ebb or flow,
+ Beyond the spear-cast of the dreams of men,
+ Is mine, and from all changings far withdrawn
+ There spreads the realm of Mider--and Etain.
+
+ "And there we loved, till that Almighty Power
+ Who set the heavens wheeling with a nod,
+ Blew thee, a butterfly, from flower to flower,
+ Until beyond our realm, a splendid God
+ Knew thee and cherished in a blossomy bower,
+ And nightly thy fair form in purple laid,
+ And at thy side his couch of slumber made.
+
+ "But thee again the breath of tempest found,
+ And swept thee forth, and whirled from field to field,
+ And dashed thee where a roar of festal sound
+ Shook brazenly doffed helm and resting shield,
+ And flung thee in a cup that passed around
+ To one who drank it deep in bridal mirth--
+ And thou wert born a daughter of the earth.
+
+ "From year to year life's pleasures round thee played,
+ And fell behind the question of thine eyes
+ That searched the mysteries of leafy shade,
+ And the blue heron sailing in the skies
+ Cutting the silence with the rusty blade
+ His voice, and sought to spy the subtile might
+ That killed your gathered iris in a night.
+
+ "Ah, soon I saw sweet longing on thy face,
+ And love's compelling poppy on thy mouth,
+ And watched thee robe thy maiden blossoming grace
+ And dream a king came riding from the south;
+ Yet in thy sigh in Eochaidh's royal place,
+ Unseen I saw the waft of hidden wings
+ Set past these perishing substantial things.
+
+ "For thou wert born for love whose windless sail
+ Moves on great deeps beyond life's shallow range.
+ Love linked in flesh with failing flesh shall fail:
+ Love knit in thought with changing thought shall change,
+ Nor all desire against slow Time prevail;
+ For that old worm all dreams shall gnaw and rend,
+ And love that finds an end--itself shall end.
+
+ "Oh! not for thee the little irking chain
+ That frets the bark on life's expanding bole;
+ Nor love that maketh free, though it contain
+ All earth's white loves and thee supreme and sole
+ Beloved beneath all heaven; for who shall gain,
+ Since between love and love most subtly mixed
+ Untrodden silence stands forever fixed?
+
+ "My love would brood upon the holy thing
+ Within thine inmost being folded far,
+ Till it at length come forth on perfect wing
+ To brush with sweet eclipse the morning star,
+ And in high heaven its utter rapture sing,
+ Filling the universe with golden sound
+ Of love immortal, measureless, unbound!
+
+ "How shall immortal love find mortal bliss,
+ Or measureless be bound in narrow speech,
+ Or free and forge the bondage of a kiss?
+ Nay, but its end is ever out of reach,
+ Its life, of fairer life the chrysalis;
+ And all its days, desirable and fleet,
+ But prints of unseen Beauty's passing feet.
+
+ "Ah! Love is thine whose all-transfusing sun
+ Burns out the mystery of life and death;
+ And all thine hours but blossom unto one
+ That us in utter bondage compasseth.
+ Now to that timeless hour Time's footsteps run
+ To rear our throne, whose foot shall never know
+ The chafe of life's eternal ebb and flow.
+
+ "And he whose heart long time was scarred and swept
+ By hungering winds that robbed him of repose,
+ Wrapt in deep joy, beyond his joy has slept
+ Into a passionless calm, that wakes and knows
+ Love's highest bliss in honour stainless kept.
+ Farewell, and when a little while has flown
+ I come again." He ceased. She stood alone.
+
+ Far through the morn the horn of Eochaidh blew,
+ Outspeeding runners hot with glad return.
+ From post to post goes welcoming halloo:
+ Far off the shouldered spear-heads dance and burn
+ Through smother of wheels, and marching men that strew
+ Their wake with dust and song, and storm at last
+ Round dun and liss, their prosperous journey past.
+
+ And all that day go question and reply,
+ Twin bodkins looping up the stuff of life:
+ And all that dusk, warm cheek and glancing eye
+ Blow up love's ruddy peat in man and wife:
+ And all that night, harps throb and warpipes cry
+ Around the king, enthroned in joy complete,
+ Etain beside him, Ailill at his feet.
+
+ But through the songs of praise that round him swell,
+ One voice to him has music sweeter far.
+ Close to his heart she now the tale doth tell
+ Of duty done, and love escaped a scar;--
+ But not of that deep hour, unspeakable
+ With visitation from beyond the world,
+ Shut in her heart, a blossom closely curled.
+
+ On Eochaidh's royal brow sits glad content
+ That she, fate's minister to Ailill's pain,
+ Who dared in faith the perilous descent,
+ Now stands more white against averted stain.
+ And Ailill, all his heart in service spent,
+ Fills their glad hours with tender friendship's light
+ Sweet as the beam that silvers quiet night.
+
+
+ VI
+
+ Now at life's wheel Etain the day-long sings;
+ Not loud, but low as one who musing waits
+ An hour, whose promise in her deep eye springs
+ In keen transfiguring light that contemplates
+ The mystery of small, familiar things
+ Made great with gleams from past the verge of sight,
+ And strange with rumours of the infinite.
+
+ In that bright realm glimpsed through the shade of this
+ She sees great peace resolve earth's little strife;
+ And deepening vision sounds a deeper bliss,
+ Till joy rolls round the fretted shores of life;
+ And in swift stroke of hate, and love's long kiss,
+ She marks one law work out one hidden Will,
+ And life and death one happy doom fulfil.
+
+ So pass her days in labour sped with peace.
+ And now the king, heart-eased in her repose,
+ Gathers warm love about him like a fleece;
+ And through the land his joy wide-circling goes,
+ Stirring swift hands that bid the earth increase
+ Her gift of good, till wealth and fatness throng
+ Their duns with praise, and fill their mouths with song.
+
+ Life's labour widely shared the lightlier lies
+ Along the days; and when its tumults cease,
+ Free brain and limb are swift in rivalries
+ Upon the bloodless battlefields of peace
+ In thought's affray, or deed of strength whose prize
+ Scarce more adorneth him whose power prevails,
+ Than him who strongly dares and greatly fails.
+
+ And in long nights, when age and childhood sleep,
+ Bright eyes that flicker round the rushlit board
+ Mark how the chess-players, in silence deep,
+ Meet skill with skill, until delight is roared
+ At cunning scheme, or swift unreckoned leap:
+ But, cute as fox or quick as tern awing,
+ No hand is found to mate King Eochaidh's king.
+
+ Loudly his fame rolls through the echoing land;
+ But in his dreams, in some high tourney met,
+ He feels a strong inexorable hand
+ Counter his craft with calm unwavering threat
+ By an unseen far-seeing player planned,
+ That haunts his thoughts with hint of some deep strife
+ Waged vastly on the board of death and life.
+
+ Then from his couch, with apprehensive eye,
+ Forth goes the king for solace. Mile on mile
+ His happy realms in dawn's pale radiance lie
+ Secure in his great strength; so with a smile
+ He tramples out the night's thin troubling cry,
+ Then toward his palace turns, lo! at its door
+ There stands a chieftain never seen before.
+
+ Straightly he stands, nor from his pride's full height
+ Bends he from neck to knee one purple fold;
+ Nor dips his spear, nor casts his shield whose light
+ Glinting from snowy boss and bead of gold,
+ Strikes from the king some memory of the night,
+ So that his quickened eye is swift to trace
+ A touch of challenge in the stranger's face.
+
+ "Welcome, O stranger! and doubly were thy name
+ To me revealed." "Mider: to thee unknown.
+ No far-sung dun is mine, lineage or fame;
+ Yet in my realm I keep a steadfast throne,
+ And for my pleasure play a subtle game
+ With pawn and puissant knight and watching queen.
+ Fame trumpets far thy skill: now be it seen."
+
+ On swift-set piece and jewelled chessboard break
+ Slant arrows from the scarcely risen sun.
+ Rank faces rank. "Play, king!"... "Not without stake
+ I play; nor bate the forfeit quickly won,--
+ Thine?" "Fifty steeds whose hooves shall Erin shake."
+ Then Eochaidh, lightly at light-seeming task,
+ "And mine," he smiled, "whatever thou shalt ask!"
+
+ Matchless in skill, King Eochaidh moves elate ...
+ One moment ... then ... straight lip and slow-drawn breath
+ Yield sullenly to sure on-coming fate.
+ Behind his eyes vast shapes of Life and Death
+ Move hand to hand.... Soon ends the struggle--"Mate!"
+ The stranger calls.... King Eochaidh's boast is gone!
+ "The stake?" he vaguely asks.... "Thy wife, Etain."
+
+ Now like a spider wrapped in his own snare,
+ The king turned to and fro to rend the spell
+ Of ghastly loss. Pride stricken to despair
+ Tugged at life's roof-tree. Round him ruining fell
+ Puffed hopes and brittle joys that broke in air;
+ And high desires, reined short in sight of goal,
+ Stumbled to earth and snapped life's chariot-pole.
+
+ Then in that other's eye some glance revealed
+ Faint pity.... "Nay, not this!" King Eochaidh cried.
+ "Take thou the treasures won on hard-fought field,
+ Spoils of the furrow, tribute of the tide:
+ These for thy forfeit here I freely yield;
+ Not her whose smile makes festive life's poor crust,
+ But lost would turn its glories into dust!"
+
+ The stranger calmly answered, "King, the bird
+ Poised on a little trick within the brain,
+ Soars sunward. Kings on honour's lightest word
+ Unshaken, rear a realm that shall remain.
+ Snaps a small string: lo! all the song that stirred
+ With beauty and joy, sinks like storm-swallowed ships,
+ And bards unborn harp a high-king's eclipse.
+
+ "But fear not thou. Thy fame shall feel no wind
+ Of cold rebuke; for when these shadows lift,
+ Thou in life's loss the Spirit's gain shalt find:
+ Thou to thyself shalt give thine utmost gift;
+ And know thou only hast what is resigned.
+ I go--but come on one clear-omened day,
+ And thou shalt pay thy debt." He went away.
+
+ In that same hour the hungry nestling's cheep
+ Floods Etain's drowsing ear with gentle woe.
+ Sleep stirred by waking, waking soothed by sleep,
+ Around her heart in linking eddies flow;
+ Till at some passing wind that shakes the deep
+ Of dream, she wakes with eyes that strain to see
+ A haunting face behind life's mystery.
+
+ And in lone hours of many a moonless night,
+ Through jetting poplars and the shooting snags
+ Of wrinkled oaks, the king doth seek a light
+ From his heart's questionings, whose purpose flags
+ Before her face, lest in her eye's clear sight
+ One thought of faithlessness a moment read
+ Should bring to birth the thing he most doth dread.
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Strong in the strength that finds in gentleness
+ A way to peace, King Eochaidh on the throne
+ Of Erin sits. Around his footstool press
+ High cares of sovereignty, that crowd his own
+ Like gossips out of doors, and ease the stress
+ Of storming thought which, held from question clear,
+ Fears its mute doubt, yet vaguely doubts its fear.
+
+ In silent step, hushed pulse, and listening gaze,
+ He marks expectancy behind her smile,
+ Like some faint gleam from half-remembered days
+ Ere the high Gods had blown them to this isle
+ Among inscrutable divided ways,
+ Some hidden destiny to mar or make
+ In hands as strong to give as quick to take.
+
+ Now to the king the hollow moments haste
+ Across his heart to some heart-emptied hour:
+ And now he frets to leap with sinews braced
+ Through lagging days and meet the threatening power.
+ Yet from his conflict, inner lips now taste
+ The mingled wine of sweet and bitter fate--
+ Strength to withstand, Endurance to await.
+
+ These not as gifts the shadowy troublers bear,
+ But on his table spread what is his own.
+ So mused the king: "Not all from spade and share
+ The harvest comes: seed to its fruit has grown,
+ Self-shaped, though stirred by smart of sun and air;
+ And in life's myriad hands beaten and pressed,
+ Man is not made, but man made manifest."
+
+ So finding gain in threatened loss, his mind
+ Self-poised, through sorrow and joy makes even way,
+ Content if, toiling past, his fingers find
+ Her fingers, and in trembling silence say,
+ "Here in unstable circumstance entwined
+ We two have kissed, and whither we may tend,
+ Once mixed, must find each other at the end."
+
+ And she within her heart's most secret place
+ Has nursed a thought that grew from day to day,
+ Like wind-borne seed that on a rocky face
+ Finds root and strength to shatter ancient sway,
+ A thought of Love that chafes at time and space,
+ And moves from Love that was through Love to be
+ To some exalted end no eye can see.
+
+ Yet nought of this was uttered each to each;
+ But when, like forest monarchs strong and proud,
+ A silver birch beside a sinewy beech,
+ They stood at feast to hail the gathering crowd,
+ Swift winds of joy came full of happy speech,
+ And through the host light raptures laughed and played,
+ Witless of yellowing leaf or sodden shade.
+
+ Then came a day when on the bare flag-stone
+ The slow snail crawled; the chestnut's candles turned
+ Downward as dead; the wolf-hound with a groan
+ Gazed in King Eochaidh's eyes through eyes that burned
+ Great threat; the spear-grass hither and thither blown
+ Bent on the sand and traced its rings awry,
+ And sun and moon slid sideways down the sky.
+
+ Swiftly to Eochaidh the dread omens tell
+ The day of forfeiture; yet to Etain
+ No word he speaks. Her eyes so softly well
+ With wondrous beauty, all his heart is drawn
+ In love to hold her from the coming spell.
+ Pushed past its hour, the unspoken doom may break,
+ And love and honour stand without a shake.
+
+ On windy gap and boggy mountain path
+ He sets his watchers. Knee-deep where the fists
+ Of bracken fronds are clenched in tiny wrath,
+ Stern guards now stand, and where in sculptured cists
+ Old kings are harvested in Death's long swathe.
+ Closed from alarm the shingled roofs now rise
+ Ringed through the dark with flaming searching eyes.
+
+ The word has passed, "The king shall have his whim:
+ No stranger looks upon the queen to-night."
+ Around the feasting board men great of limb
+ Shut fast each door, and blind the hope of sight
+ With shining shields that turn the torches dim.
+ Throned firm in strength defying power or guile,
+ He joys, and hopes--yet fears Etain's faint smile.
+
+ Now harp and song have touched their utmost height,
+ And fall in sudden silence at a sound
+ Deeper than sound, and pale before a light
+ Clearer than light. Above, beneath, around,
+ All heaven and earth are shaken with a might
+ Past might, swift chariots clash, and mixed with these,
+ Far thunderings and the roar of distant seas!
+
+ And in their midst is Mider, a shining God
+ From whose majestic presence swiftly spreads
+ Peace not of earth. Before his face, unflawed
+ By shadow of taint, brave warriors bow their heads.
+ And now the king, snapping his silver rod
+ Of power, with sudden eyes made clear, with cheeks
+ Flamed by swift vision, through the silence speaks.
+
+ "Now have I seen the shining hand of Him
+ Who sifts the world for His divine desire;
+ And gathers, and within His quern's wide rim
+ Grinds all things meet for His transforming fire,
+ And kneads them to a purpose far and dim;
+ Who fashions all things to His growing plan,
+ And breaks ... and moulds ... and breaks the heart of man.
+
+ "Take Thou Thy will--so it be her's?..." A hope
+ Shoots a faint arrow instantly--no more.
+ A blinding fire falls from night's glimmering slope.
+ Flame-like the twain meet on the rushy floor--
+ And vanish. King and clansmen blindly grope
+ Into cool air. Across the sky two swans
+ Fly slowly toward the day that palely dawns.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS AND LYRICS
+
+
+
+
+DEATH AND LIFE
+
+_To the memory of Eveleen Nicolls_
+
+
+ I
+
+ The long, dark slope is topped with mist,
+ But here the sun is on the grass:
+ Beneath, the sea-waves break, and twist
+ Backward like snakes of molten glass.
+
+ Across an ancient sand-heaped wall
+ The foot thro' graves forgotten goes,
+ And stops where old, old voices call
+ Thro' generations of repose.
+
+ But where a sorrow of to-day
+ Has set a freshly-fashioned mound,
+ A bird slides down his airy way
+ And makes the silence ring with sound.
+
+
+ II
+
+ What gloom might now our spirits balk
+ Fades out before that high reproof;
+ And thro' the fabric of your talk
+ Go light and shadow, warp and woof,
+
+ With something deeper than the word,--
+ Some stately certitude of faith
+ Whose eye at Life had never blurred,
+ Nor quivered at the eye of Death,
+
+ But saw, in that swift, woman's way,
+ Thro' changings to the changeless Whole,
+ And Life and Death as waves that sway
+ Across the ocean of the Soul.
+
+
+ III
+
+ Then when the hill was lost in mist,
+ And in the sea the sky was glassed,
+ We wandered home in amethyst;
+ And you upon the morrow passed
+
+ On that last journey to the West
+ Whose end was in the Atlantic wave,
+ Where, on your youth's triumphant crest,
+ One stroke, another's life to save,
+
+ With glory crowned your life complete,
+ Proud as the horsed and pluméd seas
+ That laid your body at my feet--
+ A wonder past Praxiteles.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Oh! bear her by the weeping crest,
+ And past the fields of fallen ears,
+ On her last journey from the West,
+ This holy Lady Day of tears.
+
+ But yet, tho' heads are bared and bowed,
+ And down the road the keeners keen,
+ Some spirit-music, deep and proud,
+ Slips out their thin, shrill cries between
+
+ And, like the bird that other day,
+ That made the silence ring with sound,
+ It floats along the sun-set way,
+ A joy above our sorrow's mound.
+
+
+ V
+
+ What grief might now our spirits balk
+ Fades out before that high reproof;
+ And thro' the hushed and wavering talk
+ That fills the streets from roof to roof,
+
+ A fire from your high altar shines,
+ And kindles thro' our dusk of strife
+ A faith whose inner eye divines
+ That Death is minister to Life,
+
+ And all our years a moment's dream
+ In one great Mind that grasps the whole,
+ And Life and Death but waves that gleam
+ Along the ocean of the Soul.
+
+
+
+
+A SCHOOLBOY PLAYS CUCHULAIN
+
+
+ 'Way there! for one who hastens forth
+ To guard the Marches of the North,
+ Where Connacht's hosts with flame and brand
+ Hurl menace toward his native land,
+ And Macha's Curse on arm and will
+ Hangs dreadfully from hill to hill.
+
+ 'Way there! Four valorous feet of height,
+ Twelve long, long years of age and fight,
+ He fronts without a thought of fear
+ Ten thousand with his wooden spear.
+ Soon shall he fling the charging field
+ Back on his puissant pasteboard shield,
+ And soon shall haughty Maeve bend down
+ A vassal to his tinsel crown.
+
+ 'Way there! Who laughs has hardly heard
+ A hidden trumpet's secret word,
+ Or glimpsed through those poor arms he bears
+ The weapons that the spirit wears.
+ In that wild breast a thousand years
+ Rise up from ineffectual tears,
+ And kindle once again the flame
+ Of Freedom at a burning name.
+
+ What if for him no flag unfurled
+ Should shake red battle on the world;
+ On other fields, in other mood,
+ The ancient conflict is renewed,
+ And Michael and his warring clan
+ Tramp onward through the heart of man.
+ At Life's loud fires he shall anneal
+ A subtler blade than transient steel,
+ When Love, invincible in Faith,
+ Shall smile upon the face of Death,
+ And Will and Heart, as one, conspire
+ To dare the utmost of desire.
+ Then shall be, with his spirit's lance,
+ Unhorse cold Pride and Circumstance,
+ Shake Wrong's old strongholds to the ground,
+ And Right's victorious trumpet sound,
+ And light Earth's ramparts with the gleam
+ Of Ireland's unextinguished Dream
+ That burned in him who hastened forth
+ To guard the Marches of the North,
+ When Macha's Curse on arm and will
+ Hung dreadfully from hill to hill.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE MOUNTAINS CAME TO BE
+
+
+ A bird once came and said to me,
+ "Hear how the mountains came to be.
+ An angel from his crystal sphere
+ Fell to the earth. A chilly fear
+ Shot thro' his wings from tip to tip,
+ For there was neither boat nor ship,
+ Mountain nor stream, nor maid nor man,
+ Far as the angel's eye could scan;
+ Dead flatness far as he could see
+ Before the mountains came to be.
+ He stretched his wings to fly away,
+ But round his feet the oozy clay
+ Gripped fast, and held him to the ground.
+ He stretched and strove until a sound
+ Went thro' him from he knew not where
+ And said, 'The only way is prayer.'
+ He dropped his wings and raised his eyes,
+ And sent his soul into the skies.
+ He prayed and prayed, and as he prayed
+ A wind among his plumage played
+ And bore him upward toward his sphere.
+ Around his feet from far and near
+ There came a sound that seemed to say,
+ 'Pray on! pray on! we too would pray.
+ Thy prayer has touched the sleeping Powers:
+ Pray on, thy prayer shall yet be ours;
+ We too have wings that pine for flight,
+ We too have eyes that long for light.'
+ Upward he moved, and still his eyes
+ Were fastened on the distant skies,
+ And as he rose toward heaven dim
+ He drew the earth up after him.
+ About his feet the oozy clay
+ Gripped fast, but could not stop or stay
+ His course, till on his skyey stair
+ He paused beyond the need for prayer,
+ While from the air beneath, around,
+ There rose a tumult of glad sound.
+ The angel turned the sound to seek,
+ And lo! his foot was on a peak
+ That fell away to where the world
+ Lay like a painted flag unfurled
+ And shaken out from sea to sea,--
+ And thus the mountains came to be."
+ So said the bird, and what the masque
+ Of meaning hid, I meant to ask;
+ But off he flew before I knew--
+ And yet I think the tale is true
+ If one could only hear aright,
+ And see with something more than sight.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE IN ABSENCE
+
+
+ Hills crowned with age,
+ And solemn seas,
+ Are full of sage
+ Philosophies.
+ Yet, lacking thee,
+ I am not wise:
+ I need thine eyes
+ That I may see!
+
+ Insect and bird
+ Chant prose and verse,
+ God's passion-stirred
+ Interpreters.
+ Howe'er I seek,
+ Their meaning slips:
+ I need thy lips
+ That they may speak!
+
+ Long days that shine,
+ Or richly weep;
+ The dreamful mine
+ Of happy sleep,
+ Without thee, give
+ A slender part:
+ I need thy heart
+ That life may live!
+
+ Hear then my cry,
+ And hasten, sweet!
+ The world and I
+ Are incomplete;
+ Poor with all pelf;
+ Bound most when freed:
+ Thy Self I need,
+ To be my Self!
+
+
+
+
+TREES IN WINTER
+
+
+ Gaunt and spare,
+ The silly trees
+ Strip them bare
+ To winter's breeze;
+
+ Yet when July
+ Sweltered red,
+ Dressed unduly
+ Heel to head!
+
+ Who will whisper
+ Unto me,
+ Why is this
+ Perversity?
+
+ Bent his head
+ A stately beech:
+ Slowly said
+ In gentle speech:
+
+ "Why, O man! not
+ Find a moral
+ (Though you cannot
+ In the laurel,)
+
+ "In our vigour
+ And our pelf,
+ Type and figure
+ Of yourself?
+
+ "Sun-kissed amity
+ Conceals
+ What calamity
+ Reveals:
+
+ "Summer glozes
+ Stain and scar;
+ Winter shows us
+ As we are.
+
+ "Well if thou,
+ In trying hour,
+ Stand, or bow,
+ In naked power,
+
+ "Like the spare
+ But sinewy trees
+ Standing bare
+ To winter's breeze!"
+
+
+
+
+A SPRING CAPRICE BY A ROBIN
+
+_Rubato_
+
+
+ Who, on such a day of spring,
+ Would be careful how he sing?
+ Let the overflowing heart
+ Get a start,
+ Who shall care if no one knows
+ How to find a perfect close
+ To his strain,
+ When the brain--
+ Drunk with sun and hyacinth,
+ Primroses and bursting oak,
+ And the sower's puffs of smoke
+ Over fields of brown--
+ Stumbling down
+ A melodious labyrinth,
+ Somehow, nohow, finds a way out,
+ Has his say out--
+ And begins it all again,
+ Caring nothing how he sing
+ When the brain,
+ Wild with Spring,
+ Gives a start
+ To his mad, melodious, overflowing heart?
+
+ _Kilcarberry, Wexford._
+
+
+
+
+A SPRING RONDEL BY A STARLING
+
+
+ I clink my castanet,
+ And beat my little drum;
+ For spring at last has come,
+ And on my parapet
+ Of chestnut, gummy-wet,
+ Where bees begin to hum,
+ I clink my castanet,
+ And beat my little drum.
+
+ "Spring goes," you say, "suns set."
+ So be it! Why be glum?
+ Enough, the spring has come;
+ And without fear or fret
+ I clink my castanet,
+ And beat my little drum.
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIRY RING
+
+
+ Enfolded in the Fairy Ring
+ My loved one sleeping lies,
+ To simple souls a dreadful thing,
+ For half a hundred eyes
+ Peep out from where among the grass
+ Floats up a magic lay
+ To call the souls of all who pass,
+ To fairyland away.
+
+ But I who know her heart's desire,
+ Fear neither spell nor frown;
+ For not till fire shall stifle fire,
+ Or water water drown,
+ Or love hate love, can any harm
+ In kindred hearts abide.
+ Oh! she can combat charm with charm,
+ My elfin-hearted bride!
+
+ And ye, whose minds are set to win
+ Fame's leaf or fortune's prize!
+ Beware the spell that lurks within
+ The circle of her eyes;
+ For she has power to blow like straws
+ Earth's baubles from the hand,
+ And call the souls of all who pause,
+ Away to fairyland.
+
+
+
+
+"LABORARE EST ORARE,"
+
+A RONDEAU OF FIELD-LABOURERS
+
+
+ "To labour is to pray." We heave
+ The heavy clay; we dig and cleave;
+ And knees and hands deep in the sod,
+ Search out and shape the Will of God
+ Creation's purpose to achieve.
+
+ Slant showers may wound, sharp winds bereave--
+ We lift no soiled and suppliant sleeve:
+ (Sure God and Mary bless the rod:)
+ To labour is to pray.
+
+ And so we are content to leave
+ Prayers for long-headed folk to weave.
+ We work His Will in ear and pod;
+ And when His harvest-eyes applaud,
+ We know--what others but believe--
+ To labour is to pray.
+
+ _Ballymore, Donegal._
+
+
+
+
+PARAPHRASES AND
+INTERPRETATIONS
+
+
+
+
+DAEDALUS AND ICARUS
+
+_The Builder of the Cretan Labyrinth and his Son_
+
+
+ Quote Daedalus to Icarus:
+ "With rule and plumbline,--thus, and--thus,
+ We space and build our labyrinth,
+ And build, besides, a graven plinth
+ To bear the future fame of Us,"
+ Quote Daedalus to Icarus.
+
+ Quoth Icarus to Daedalus:
+ "Before these Cretans make a fuss,
+ And set our names up with a shout,
+ Perhaps we'd better first get out,
+ And show the master-mind of Us,"
+ Quoth Icarus to Daedalus.
+
+ Then round and round went Daedalus,
+ And out and in went Icarus.
+ They parted for an hour's whole space....
+ They met upon the selfsame place!
+ "I think we're stuck," quoth Icarus,
+ "I think we are," quoth Daedalus.
+
+ In short, to be perspicuous,
+ Like this old tale of Daedalus;
+ 'Spite of our mouths with freedom filled,
+ From life's poor trivial things we build
+ A maze about the feet of us
+ That shuts us in like Daedalus.
+
+ But Daedalus and Icarus
+ Made wings, and set them--thus, and--thus;
+ And that blind maze that hemmed them in
+ They sloughed, as drops the snake its skin:
+ And so at last shall all of us,
+ Like Daedalus and Icarus.
+
+
+
+
+A PARAPHRASE
+
+_From the Prose of Jeremy Taylor_
+
+
+ As the silk-worm, shut from sight,
+ Cuts a pathway into light;
+ Makes on mottled leaves repast
+ Till its wormy coat is cast;
+ Winds itself in silken weed;
+ Sheds the future's pearly seed;
+ Leaves behind its dower of silk,
+ And with wings as white as milk
+ Spread for flight, completes its span;
+ So evolves the soul of man.
+
+
+
+
+HOSPITALITY
+
+_From the Irish, Seventh to Tenth Century_
+
+
+ O king of stars that watch the night!
+ Whether my house be dark or bright,
+ Its door to none shall barréd be,
+ Lest Christ should close his house to me.
+
+ And if thy house shall hold a guest,
+ And aught from him thou hast suppressed,
+ Not all to him the wrong is done:
+ Thou hast concealed from Mary's Son.
+
+
+
+
+THE STUDENT
+
+_From the Irish, Seventh to Tenth Century_
+
+
+ High on my hedge of bush and tree
+ A blackbird sings his song to me,
+ And far above my linéd book
+ I hear the voice of wren and rook.
+
+ From the bush-top, in garb of grey,
+ The cuckoo calls the hours of day.
+ Right well do I--God send me good!--
+ Set down my thoughts within the wood.
+
+
+
+
+AT A HOLY WELL
+
+
+ He dragged his knees from flag to flag,
+ And prayed for health with awe-struck brow,
+ Then hung his ill's discarded rag
+ On the o'erhanging hawthorn bough.
+
+ And in the adoring hush that fell,
+ I, from the form set inly free,
+ Knelt at my heart's most holy well
+ And worshipped mine own mystery.
+
+ _Templemanaghan, Kerry._
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIEST'S LAKE
+
+
+ Beneath the bridge, with noisy rout,
+ The Atlantic fills the quiet lake ...
+ A pause ... a turn ... then with a shout
+ Seaward the brimming waters break.
+
+ "Open thy gates," the Spirit saith,
+ "O Soul! My wave thy shore shall sweep,
+ Then back across the pause of death
+ Draw thee with shoutings to the deep!"
+
+ _Ardbear, Connemara._
+
+
+
+
+SONNETS
+
+
+
+
+A PAPER-SELLER
+
+
+ Clearly, and iterant as a swinging bell,
+ I heard across the surges of the Strand
+ A woman's voice, and saw a woman's hand
+ With "Votes for Women." A sudden vision fell
+ Across my path, and made my pulses swell
+ With agony of joy: I seemed to stand
+ At some far hill, from whence was faintly fanned
+ A whisper, "He descended into Hell."
+
+ Sister! with foot in gutter, foot on kerb,
+ Tasting humiliations's bitter herb
+ In thy great calm of self laid wholly down!
+ Thine are the thorns of Christly souls who bend
+ To lift the world; and thou too shalt ascend
+ To thine own Heaven and everlasting crown!
+
+ _Strand, London._
+
+
+
+
+TO ONE IN PRISON
+
+
+ Dear! on Love's altar thou hast laid thee down,
+ Priestess and Victim of such Sacrifice
+ As might melt praise from very hearts of ice,
+ But wins the scoff of sycophant and clown.
+ Yet in that band, whose glory is the frown
+ Of sceptred tyranny and stained device,
+ Thou hast a place; and thee it shall suffice
+ To tread with them the path to high renown.
+
+ And I--even I, unworthy though I be--
+ For these my wounds of utter loneliness,
+ Tired head and sleepless eyes, some part would claim
+ In the deep rubric of thy mystery;
+ So may I, in proud years that rise to bless,
+ Stand in the shadow of thine honoured name.
+
+ _Nov. 23--Dec. 23, 1910._
+
+
+
+
+A HOME-COMING
+
+
+ What flags are these?... what trumpets?... Oh! what drums?
+ What pride august?... what solemn minstrelsy?
+ Hush! drums, ecstatic drums: say who is she
+ That in the midst majestically comes.
+ Is she some queen whose haughty eye benumbs
+ Proud potentates; whose word can lift the sea
+ Of shattering war, and fling red misery
+ Across the world?... Speak, drums! Oh! aching drums!
+
+ Hush! hush! wild drums, drums in my happy heart!
+ Not thus she comes, my life's exalted queen,
+ But in sweet silence far outlauding praise.
+ Her's not the flaming sword that puts apart,
+ But Right's resistless blade, whose stroke unseen
+ Wounds but to heal, and crown with Freedom's bays!
+
+
+
+
+LOVE, THE DESTROYER
+
+
+ Come from behind those eyes, that I may see
+ Thyself, beloved! not lip, or hand, or brain.
+ These are not thou. These are the servile train
+ That crowd me from thine inmost mystery.
+ Show me thy naked soul!... or it may be
+ That, lacking this, I shall, in Love's mad strain,
+ Shatter the form, and sift it grain by grain
+ To find thine utter Self--thee--very Thee!...
+
+ Ah! Love, forgive!... Be this my penitence
+ That in my passion I have glimpsed the goal
+ Of all calamity, and surely scanned
+ In flood and flame, earthquake and pestilence,
+ Love raging forth, to find Love's inmost soul,
+ With bridal gifts in Ruin's awful hand!
+
+
+
+
+ENVOY
+
+
+
+
+_THE LOVING CUP_
+
+
+ _I_
+
+ _I raise to you, O Queen, this Loving Cup, this Mether,
+ Filled with Mead
+ Made from honey of the heather,
+ Brought by many a humming wing,
+ And with water from the spring;
+ Mixed by cunning hands together
+ In a foamy ferment
+ Thou would lead
+ Sullen tongues to song,
+ If along
+ Harpstrings now a rousing air went._
+
+
+ _II_
+
+ _But in this our souls' espousal
+ Axe nor skeen
+ Throb and bleed
+ For the spear-clash of carousal,
+ Spoils of slaughter
+ Ravening:
+ No, for peace has mixed our mether,
+ With its Mead,
+ O my Queen,
+ Made from honey of the heather,
+ And with water
+ From the spring._
+
+
+ _III_
+
+ _Ah! but what avail
+ Song and ale,
+ If beneath our quaffing
+ Moves not something deeper than our laughing?_
+
+
+ _IV_
+
+ _So to you, O Queen,
+ Here with hands unseen
+ I raise my Heart's deep Mether,
+ Where together,
+ Sweetness brought on Fancy's wing
+ From the flowers
+ Of happy hours,
+ And a draught from Thought's cool spring,
+ Blend in song's melodious ferment,
+ With an undertone
+ Caught in deeper hours alone,
+ When along Life's solemn harp the Spirit's air went._
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+
+_Etain the Beloved_:--This poem is founded on an ancient Irish myth. It
+is not a translation from the Gaelic; but rather is an attempt at
+transfiguration, by seeking to "unfold into light" the spiritual vision
+that was the inspiration, and is the secret of the persistence and
+resilience, of the Celt. Such modifications as I have made in the story
+have neither archćological nor philological significance: they arise
+entirely from whatever measure of insight into artistic necessity, on
+the side of pure literature, has been granted to me; and also from
+obedience to a view of the universe which is embodied in the ancient
+Irish mythology, and whose operations the personages of the story body
+forth as Psyche bodied forth the soul of humanity to the Greek.
+
+The names of the personages may be pronounced thus: Etain--Etawn',
+Eochaidh--Yo'hee, Ailill--Al'yil, Mider--Mid'yir.
+
+Dagda is the Irish God of Day, Balor the Irish God of Night.
+
+A dun is a fortified dwelling, a liss is a place for domestic animals.
+
+_Death and Life_:--On Friday, August 13, 1909, the author went by
+currach from Dunquin to the Great Blasket Island, Kerry, to visit Miss
+Eveleen Nicolls, M.A., who was spending a holiday on the island. Instead
+of joining her, as was intended, in music and conversation amongst the
+islanders, he had to participate in an endeavour, alas! unsuccessful, to
+restore her to life. She had been bathing with a fisher-girl. The latter
+got into difficulties in the strong Atlantic current, and an effort by
+Miss Nicolls to save the girl ended in the heroic sacrifice of her own
+life.
+
+_A Schoolboy plays Cuchulain_:--Cuchulain, the supreme hero of Celtic
+romance, who, single-handed, defended his province against the army of
+Queen Maeve. Maeve had chosen for a foray the time when the Ulster
+chiefs lay in weakness under a curse by the warrior Goddess, Macha.
+
+_Hospitality_: _The Student_:--Put into verse from the literal
+translations of Kuno Meyer in "Ancient Irish Poetry."
+
+_To One in Prison_: _A Home-coming_:--Occasioned by the imprisonment of
+the author's wife for taking part in the active movement for the
+political enfranchisement of women.
+
+
+
+
+_BOOKS BY JAMES H. COUSINS_
+
+
+ THE QUEST. Cr. 8vo. Cloth, 2s. 6d. net; paper-cover, 1s. net.
+
+ "Rarely is it the fortune of the reviewer to meet with verse of such
+ distinction."--_New Ireland Review._
+
+ "An imagination filled with haunting and refreshing images."--_Black
+ and White._
+
+ "His extraordinary imaginative powers, his skill in painting
+ word-pictures, and the glamour which he throws over all, are
+ marvellous."--_Irish Independent._
+
+
+ THE AWAKENING. Royal 16mo. Cloth, gilt, 1s. net; paper, 6d. net. With
+ decorative borders and cover designed by T. SCOTT.
+
+ "Unique mastery of the sonnet."--_Irish News._
+
+ "Ripe thought fitly expressed. A new pleasure on each
+ page."--_Glasgow Herald._
+
+
+ THE BELL-BRANCH. Foolscap 8vo. Boards, Irish linen back, 1s. net.
+
+ "Artistically Mr. Cousins can only be put below the two leaders of
+ his movement; he has the calm intensity, the subtle strangeness of
+ simplicity, which seem to be as easy as breathing to an Irish
+ poet."--_The Nation._
+
+ "Mr. Cousins has gradually perfected a method of self-expression,
+ and his verse, exquisitely fashioned, delights with its individual
+ note."--_Northern Whig._
+
+ "Many an English poet would willingly sacrifice a page or two of his
+ consummate verse if he might but catch the charm of such a lullaby
+ as this."--_The Times._
+
+
+MAUNSEL AND COMPANY, LIMITED, 96 MIDDLE ABBEY STREET, DUBLIN.
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
+
+
+ Text in italics is surrounded with underscores: _italics_.
+
+ Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Etain the Beloved and Other Poems, by
+James Henry Cousins
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ETAIN THE BELOVED AND OTHER POEMS ***
+
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Etain the Beloved and Other Poems, by James H. Cousins.
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+
+Project Gutenberg's Etain the Beloved and Other Poems, by James Henry Cousins
+
+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: Etain the Beloved and Other Poems
+
+Author: James Henry Cousins
+
+Release Date: November 25, 2011 [EBook #38135]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ETAIN THE BELOVED AND OTHER POEMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="giant">ETAIN THE BELOVED<br/>
+AND OTHER POEMS</span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><i>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</i></span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+The Quest<br />
+The Bell-Branch<br />
+The Awakening<br />
+The Wisdom of the West<br />
+Ben Madighan (out of Print)<br />
+Sung by Six &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "<br />
+The Legend of the Blemished King (out of Print)<br />
+The Voice of One &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "</td></tr></table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/frontispiece.png" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">JAMES H. COUSINS<br/>
+
+<i>From a pencil sketch by Florence Gillespie</i></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ETAIN THE BELOVED<br />
+
+AND OTHER POEMS</span><br />
+
+<span class="big">BY JAMES H. COUSINS</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">MAUNSEL &amp; COMPANY, LIMITED,<br />
+96 MIDDLE ABBEY STREET, DUBLIN<br />
+1912</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">CONTENTS</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+
+<tr><td><span class="big">ETAIN THE BELOVED</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="big">POEMS AND LYRICS</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">DEATH AND LIFE</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">A SCHOOLBOY PLAYS CUCHULAIN</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_54"> 54</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">HOW THE MOUNTAINS CAME TO BE</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">LOVE IN ABSENCE</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_58"> 58</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">TREES IN WINTER</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">A SPRING CAPRICE</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">A SPRING RONDEL</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">THE FAIRY RING</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">LABORARE EST ORARE</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="big">PARAPHRASES AND INTERPRETATIONS &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; </span></td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">DAEDALUS AND ICARUS</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">A PARAPHRASE</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">HOSPITALITY</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">THE STUDENT</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_73">73</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">AT A HOLY WELL</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">THE PRIEST'S LAKE</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="big">SONNETS</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">A PAPER-SELLER</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">TO ONE IN PRISON</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">A HOME-COMING</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_81"> 81</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">LOVE, THE DESTROYER</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="big">ENVOY</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">THE LOVING CUP</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;">NOTES</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ETAIN THE BELOVED</span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><i>TO PENROSE MORRIS</i></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ETAIN THE BELOVED</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td align="center">I</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td>
+Strong in the strength that finds in gentleness<br />
+A way to peace, King Eochaidh on the throne<br />
+Of Erin sits. Around his footstool press<br />
+Clansmen and chiefs. Some wind of thought has blown<br />
+Their eyes to flame. Some purpose, in the stress<br />
+Of travailing tongues, to birth finds not a way:<br />
+What all would utter, none has wit to say.<br />
+<br />
+Into their midst one came, an agéd bard<br />
+Upon whose flowing hair Wisdom had laid<br />
+Her gift of silver. On those faces, scarred<br />
+From old forgotten fights, he looked, and weighed<br />
+The meaning in their eyes, though sorely marred;<br />
+And from the tangled fibre of their thought<br />
+Into the web of speech their purpose wrought.<br />
+<br />
+"Thy word, O King, has passed by hill and dale<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span><br />
+Throughout all Erin, bidding to the Feast<br />
+Of Tara all thy people, with the tale<br />
+Of tribute due from greatest and from least.<br />
+Nor should this word than others less prevail,<br />
+But that the herald-spear thy will hath sent,<br />
+Against the shield of custom has been bent.<br />
+<br />
+"Thou knowest, O King, that from most ancient years<br />
+No chieftain wifeless rules for thee the land,<br />
+Nor mateless at a festival appears;<br />
+But fixed in all experience doth stand:<br />
+And thus, made master of all human fears,<br />
+Fears not, but strongly round the camp-fires goes,<br />
+Full sharer of thy people's joys and woes.<br />
+<br />
+"Equal in yoke and honour, as the day<br />
+And night, that are but breathings of the soul,<br />
+They on life's crooked journey take their way<br />
+Diverse in gift, in essence one and whole.<br />
+This is the custom, King! Yet custom may,<br />
+If but of man, be as a smith who twists<br />
+An iron chain to bind upon his wrists.<br />
+<br />
+"But custom may, if fashioned to the Law<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span><br />
+That made the world, be as the straitened string<br />
+From which the Master of the Feast may draw<br />
+Majestic speech, a living, wondrous thing<br />
+To rid the brow of pale contention's flaw,<br />
+And passing like the honey-cup along,<br />
+Gather their wandering lips to one great song.<br />
+<br />
+"And such the custom that thy people plead:<br />
+For when of old the deathless Lord of Life<br />
+Dagda came forth, and knew the immortal need<br />
+That burned within his heart, he took to wife<br />
+Dana the Mother of all human seed.<br />
+In her his breath found music and a name.<br />
+In her his fire has blossomed into flame.<br />
+<br />
+"Throughout the world that fire and music run<br />
+One sings within the maiden's wondering heart:<br />
+One stirs the veins of manhood, as the sun<br />
+Sets the spring's fingers thrilling with the smart<br />
+Of keen, ecstatic life that's but begun.<br />
+In every seed that breaks and wind that blows,<br />
+Each in the other seeks and finds repose.<br />
+<br />
+"Wherefore, O King, since thou art yet unwed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span><br />
+And thus in kingship standest incomplete,<br />
+Unfurnished in thy heart, from whence are fed<br />
+The streams of power and wisdom, it is not meet<br />
+That unto thee thy people bow the head,<br />
+And here thy sovereignty with tribute own<br />
+Till thou hast set a Queen upon thy throne."<br />
+<br />
+He ceased, and all the faces of the crowd<br />
+Shone with the light that kindles when the boon<br />
+Of speech has eased the heart; as when a cloud<br />
+Falls from the labouring shoulder of the moon,<br />
+And all the world stands smiling silver-browed.<br />
+King Eochaidh for a moment bent his head<br />
+In thought; then smiling he arose and said:<br />
+<br />
+"I am not careless of the ancient need<br />
+That moves your minds. Within my own it moves<br />
+Like a long-hidden, unforgotten seed<br />
+The spring has touched uneasily: like hooves<br />
+Long captive, when the trumpet has decreed<br />
+A royal pilgrimage, and in the liss<br />
+They dance to taste the highway's ringing bliss.<br />
+<br />
+"So have I watched for that sure sign that fills<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span><br />
+The horn of fate, that bending this our realm<br />
+Unto the Will that works behind our wills,<br />
+It may remain; as when storms overwhelm,<br />
+And leafy spray whirls over the roaring hills,<br />
+The swaying pine bends as the storm wars by,<br />
+And lives to shake proud arms against the sky.<br />
+<br />
+"But now the horn is full, the hour is here.<br />
+Our wills as one move onward to their end.<br />
+Here now I lift on high the royal spear,<br />
+And thus through Erin proclamation send:<br />
+'Search for the promised maiden far and near<br />
+Whom the high Gods have destined at my side<br />
+To reign.' Go forth. The King awaits his bride.<br />
+<br />
+"She shall be found in some most quiet place<br />
+Where Beauty sits all day beside her knee<br />
+And looks with happy envy on her face;<br />
+Where Virtue blushes, her own guilt to see,<br />
+And Grace learns new, sweet meanings from her grace;<br />
+Where all that ever was or will be wise<br />
+Pales at the burning wisdom of her eyes.<br />
+<br />
+"When you at last, far off like worshippers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span><br />
+Within some holy circle, bow your heads,<br />
+You shall await till on that face of her's<br />
+A smile like spring's first morning slowly spreads;<br />
+And when her lip with wondrous music stirs,<br />
+Bear hither like the wind her deathless name,<br />
+That I may light my heart at its white flame."<br />
+<br />
+Scarce had he ceased when from the royal tent<br />
+Broke the full tide of their loud ecstacy,<br />
+And through the woods like summer thunder went,<br />
+Full of great rumour of mighty things to be<br />
+That died far off like twilight breezes spent.<br />
+Then sang the bard in hidden wisdom skilled:<br />
+"Thus is the purpose of the Gods fulfilled.<br />
+<br />
+"<i>Lift now the hands that may not bless</i><br />
+<i>A wifeless feast, a queenless throne,</i><br />
+<i>A court or council womanless,</i><br />
+<i>Or life one-limbed and sideways grown,</i><br />
+<i>That holds the hands that may not bless.</i><br />
+<br />
+"<i>The starry Virgin of the east</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span><br />
+<i>Steps up the sky to lead the sign</i><br />
+<i>Where most has kissed and mixed with least,</i><br />
+<i>And one-in-twain life's torches shine</i><br />
+<i>Behind the Virgin of the east.</i><br />
+<br />
+"<i>Then lift the hands that gladly bless</i><br />
+<i>Full life, to life's great fulness grown,</i><br />
+<i>A power to stand through shock and stress,</i><br />
+<i>And rear an everlasting throne</i><br />
+<i>Held high on hands that gladly bless.</i>"<br />
+<br />
+Then on a night when on his hearth the gleam<br />
+Of crackling faggots flung a wavering glow<br />
+Along his red-yew roof from beam to beam<br />
+Like glancing eyes, King Eochaidh to and fro<br />
+Turned on his couch, dreaming a happy dream<br />
+Of snapping stems, and crisp leaves crushed by feet<br />
+With high desire made musical and fleet.<br />
+<br />
+Out of the fire a swift and slender shaft<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span><br />
+Of yellow flame pierced through the King's dropped lids,<br />
+And woke a murmur of bees whose eager craft<br />
+Rifled the treasures of blossomy pyramids;<br />
+Whereat the King, raising his hand, low laughed,<br />
+Then passed like some worn swimmer on the sweep<br />
+Of strong waves toward the unfathomed gulf of sleep.<br />
+<br />
+At length in that white hour when dewy wings<br />
+Stir with new day's delight, there came a sound<br />
+As though a passion of voices and smitten strings<br />
+Mingled and swelled and flew along the ground,<br />
+Till at the utmost of its triumphings,<br />
+Through the King's sleep and on his door the dawn<br />
+Broke, and a mighty shout: "Etain! Etain!"</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">II<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+Thereafter, on a morning rich with spring,<br />
+When round his feet new-opened flowers looked up<br />
+Wide-eyed and wet at some most wondrous thing,<br />
+And crystal draughts from many an odorous cup<br />
+Were spilled by winds in playful rioting,<br />
+King Eochaidh stood beside a quiet shore,<br />
+Dumb with a joy he never knew before.<br />
+<br />
+From league to league alone his path had lain<br />
+On windy hills, through forests dark, or deep<br />
+In dank, sonorous glens. Through every vein<br />
+A burning joy had drunk the mists of sleep,<br />
+And sung "Etain, Etain," till the refrain<br />
+Irked, and he slept, and when he sprang awake<br />
+Saw that which made his heart with rapture shake.<br />
+<br />
+There by the sea, Etain his destined bride<br />
+Sat unabashed, unwitting of the sight<br />
+Of him who gazed upon her gleaming side,<br />
+Fair as the snowfall of a single night;<br />
+Her arms like foam upon the flowing tide;<br />
+Her curd-white limbs in all their beauty bare,<br />
+Straight as the rule of Dagda's carpenter.<br />
+<br />
+Her cheeks were like the foxglove when it glows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span><br />
+At noon: her eyes blue as the hyacinth.<br />
+Like moonlight struck to marble, nobly rose<br />
+Her neck upon her shoulder's polished plinth;<br />
+And like the light that swiftly comes and goes<br />
+Through breaking waves, among her hair her hands<br />
+Broke into wavy gold its plaited strands.<br />
+<br />
+Then came her maidens, bright and blossoming<br />
+With beauty, and before her beauty bowed,<br />
+And stood around her in a laughing ring<br />
+To robe her starry splendour like a cloud.<br />
+And as her hair they twined, the hidden king<br />
+Scarce knew if on her lips, that knew no wrong,<br />
+Or in his own hushed heart he heard this song.<br />
+<br />
+<i>The king comes riding from the north,<br />
+From battles won, with marching men.<br />
+Ah, whose white eager arms go forth<br />
+To bid him welcome home again<br />
+When he comes riding from the north?</i><br />
+<br />
+<i>The king comes riding from the south,</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span><br />
+<i>And halts beside the royal liss.<br />
+Ah, whose the happy smiling mouth<br />
+That gives and takes a long warm kiss<br />
+When he comes riding from the south?</i><br />
+<br />
+<i>The king comes riding from the east.<br />
+O night how dark! O way how long!<br />
+Ah, whose dear eyes shall light the feast?<br />
+Ah, who shall lift his heart with song<br />
+When he comes riding from the east?</i><br />
+<br />
+<i>The king comes riding from the west,<br />
+And smiles unto himself, and sighs.<br />
+Ah, whose the white and easeful breast<br />
+Where he shall close his kingly eyes<br />
+When he comes riding from the west?</i><br />
+<br />
+Small wonder now that Eochaidh's leaping heart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span><br />
+Strained like a hound in leash: yet through his bliss<br />
+There passed a thin cold blade with sudden smart<br />
+Of doubt that he but dreamed, of dread that this<br />
+Was but a vision that would soon depart:<br />
+But when the song had ceased, there stood the maid<br />
+Flushed with keen joy, and like a queen arrayed.<br />
+<br />
+A mantle of bright purple, waving, wound<br />
+Her form, and from her shoulders white as milk<br />
+Fell in reluctant folds and touched the ground.<br />
+Upon her breast the flash of emerald silk&mdash;<br />
+As though the glory of earth had wrapped her round&mdash;<br />
+Mixed with the glow of red embroidered gold<br />
+That seemed with light her body to enfold.<br />
+<br />
+A sudden breeze came singing from the sea<br />
+And broke with sunlight through the leafy shade.<br />
+Then came King Eochaidh forth, and on his knee<br />
+Bent low before the silent, trembling maid.<br />
+"The king," he said, "has come, and kneels to thee,<br />
+Foredoomed to share the burden of his throne,<br />
+And glorify its glory with thine own."<br />
+<br />
+Then through her frame a gentle tremor went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span><br />
+And lit her face with exquisite swift fire<br />
+That woke forgotten dreams, whose shaken scent<br />
+Sweetened the quiet winds of her desire<br />
+With some divine, unuttered ravishment,<br />
+Some earnest of great doom that filled her heart<br />
+With sorrow, joy's majestic counterpart.<br />
+<br />
+Upon his head she gently laid her hand,<br />
+And said, "Arise! To thee my heart has bowed<br />
+When minstrel after minstrel, tired and tanned,<br />
+Has supped beside our hearth, and sung the proud<br />
+High song that bears thy greatness through the land.<br />
+For thee from life's clear dawn my love remained<br />
+Fixed, and at length to thee I have attained."</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">III<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+Across the woods of Meath the bird of day<br />
+Fell from the boughs of noon with bleeding wing,<br />
+While dark-browed Balor strode the eastern way,<br />
+And scattered darkness from his cloudy sling,<br />
+Till at his feet the hosts of Erin lay<br />
+Smitten with sleep; then round their dreams he cast<br />
+The chains wherewith he binds his prisoners fast.<br />
+<br />
+From dawn till dark, in many a hero-game<br />
+Glad eyes had flashed, or bent in pride august<br />
+To hear the chant of some undying name<br />
+Whose deeds were strong as wine. Anon the dust<br />
+Of festive feet stormed in a wild acclaim<br />
+Around the royal place where, side by side,<br />
+Sat Eochaidh and Etain his new-made bride.<br />
+<br />
+Now ancient Sleep, with Silence for his queen,<br />
+Reigns o'er those palaces of stately fir<br />
+That drowse in curtained moonlight's misty sheen.<br />
+Within, the arras hardly seems to stir<br />
+Its languorous folds of purple, blue and green,<br />
+Whose colours part or mix, as rise and fall<br />
+The pine fire's odorous gleams on roof and wall.<br />
+<br />
+No sound, no life, save where with soft salute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span><br />
+The wide-eyed sentinels a moment wait<br />
+And listen sidelong to the passing bruit<br />
+Of ghostly winds, that murmur at their state<br />
+And pass, with peevish cry and soundless foot,<br />
+Where the dead fly upon the waveless moat<br />
+Makes of the dead dropped leaf a funeral boat.<br />
+<br />
+Yet in the midst of silence so profound,<br />
+One stirred his rushy couch as though in pain,<br />
+For through his dreams a torrent of swift sound<br />
+Stumbled in foam about his echoing brain,<br />
+And all his thought in loud confusion drowned<br />
+And bore him toward a dim and perilous steep<br />
+That flung its shadow on a writhing deep.<br />
+<br />
+Then like the sun obscured by valley smoke,<br />
+With some vague trouble glooming in his eye,<br />
+Ailill the brother of the king awoke<br />
+And scanned the portents of the morning sky,<br />
+Till on his mind a mellowing radiance broke,<br />
+And in his heart there dawned a wondrous face<br />
+That lit his world with Love's exalted grace.<br />
+<br />
+Often in dreams a shadow by his side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span><br />
+Had sung of one who came in some great hour<br />
+With Love&mdash;and woe. Now came his brother's bride;<br />
+And when he bent before her in her bower,<br />
+Within his heart the shadow rose and cried,<br />
+And passed away, while all his being shook,<br />
+Stricken with joy and sorrow in a look.<br />
+<br />
+Among the clamours of the festal time<br />
+His love for ease he hid, again pursued,<br />
+Finding a solace in the chanted rhyme<br />
+Of agéd bards, or youths in merry mood<br />
+Where angry words were counted as a crime;<br />
+And fireside friendship staunched his hungry sighs<br />
+When she no more was banquet for his eyes.<br />
+<br />
+But when the marriage festival was past,<br />
+And restless day gave place to torturing night,<br />
+His captive passion burst its chains, and cast<br />
+Its ardours from his brain in living light;<br />
+Then like the thin voice of a spell-raised blast,<br />
+A dissonant note from hidden harp-strings drawn<br />
+Troubled the dreams of Eochaidh and Etain.<br />
+<br />
+By day the dream had faded to a mist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span><br />
+In some far-folded valley of the mind;<br />
+But when, heart-charmed in evening's amethyst,<br />
+The labouring world grew wonderfully kind,<br />
+And upturned lips by brooding love were kissed;<br />
+Like silent rain in summer twilight spilled,<br />
+A wandering thought King Eochaidh touched and chilled.<br />
+<br />
+Meanwhile with steps that would and would not shun<br />
+Bliss craved and spurned; with tongue that might not speak<br />
+The pain that some strange sweetness now had won,<br />
+Ailill moved to and fro; and soon his cheek<br />
+Paled like the austere Servants of the Sun;<br />
+And day by day his passion's famished flame<br />
+Nourished itself upon his wasting frame.<br />
+<br />
+In vain the king's diviners daily strove<br />
+To find the spring of Ailill's gathering ill;<br />
+In vain Etain by stream and murmuring grove<br />
+Sought for the shadowy hand that held his will;<br />
+And when dark Balor cracked his whip, and drove<br />
+His winter herd across the bounds of day,<br />
+Ailill upon his couch in weakness lay.<br />
+<br />
+So when a year had passed, and through the land<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span><br />
+The king went forth on royal pilgrimage,<br />
+Unto Etain he gave his last command<br />
+That she, his brother's sickness to assuage,<br />
+Withhold no gift, but give with regal hand;<br />
+And should chill death blow out his flickering blaze,<br />
+His funeral-stone with honour she should raise.</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">IV<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+From day to day Etain with eager thought<br />
+Outran sick Ailill's fleetest-footed needs;<br />
+From sun and wind a subtle medicine caught,<br />
+And charmed swift healing from the fresh-strewn reeds<br />
+Upon his floor, which her own hands had brought<br />
+From ferny hollows, where cool waters laughed<br />
+That Ailill from her cup with gladness quaffed.<br />
+<br />
+Yet with each dawn that came with growing power<br />
+There grew a cloudy thought in Ailill's mind<br />
+That gloomed the joy of health's returning hour,<br />
+And put a sigh in evening's gentle wind,<br />
+And touched with ill-timed frost life's opening flower,<br />
+And turned to poverty the proffered wealth<br />
+In hands that wrought his sickness and his health.<br />
+<br />
+And she, in service, found a hidden way<br />
+To strange new meanings in the eyes of life;<br />
+And reached a joy beyond the shrill affray<br />
+Of horns and harps loud with the songs of strife<br />
+Or little triumphs of a passing day;<br />
+And grasped, in giving, life's most perfect gift&mdash;<br />
+Love that is raised by that which it doth lift.<br />
+<br />
+So moved the twain through sunshine barred with gloom,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span><br />
+Finding in each twin solace and despair:<br />
+He, like a frail and gently tended bloom,<br />
+Grudged each day's health that took him past her care;<br />
+And she, o'ershadowed by approaching doom,<br />
+Watching his need of her grow less and less,<br />
+Sickened with grief her lips dare not express.<br />
+<br />
+Tossed thus on hidden billows of the soul,<br />
+And swept by winds that warred against the will,<br />
+They drained the little draught in life's poor bowl,<br />
+And all unwitting wrought each other ill;<br />
+Until at last, stung past the heart's control,<br />
+Marking Etain's white brow and pensive eye,<br />
+Thus Ailill broke the silence with a cry.<br />
+<br />
+"O bitter joy! O sorrow passing sweet!<br />
+O blossoming life that leads to love's pale death!<br />
+O gain that speeds to loss on laggard feet!<br />
+O living voice that kills the word it saith!<br />
+O cooling touch that kindles quenchless heat!<br />
+How shall I all my heart's dear burden speak,<br />
+Or how keep silence at thy paling cheek?<br />
+<br />
+"I love thee, Queen Etain, but in such wise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span><br />
+As never man loved woman heretofore:<br />
+Not with the love that lives upon her eyes,<br />
+And counts her breast the summit and the shore<br />
+Of all desire, and with tempestuous sighs<br />
+Flings to the winds the spoils of reason's thrift<br />
+In barter for her body's utmost gift.<br />
+<br />
+"My love, O queen, is that serener kind<br />
+Whose word outruns the lumbering wain of speech,<br />
+And springs in light from mind to answering mind;<br />
+And takes its bliss beyond the body's reach,<br />
+Thought mixed with thought, as sunlight with sweet wind;<br />
+And crowds the ways, where human sorrow pleads,<br />
+With generations of exalted deeds.<br />
+<br />
+"Ah, then take back the life that thou hast spent<br />
+In vain, since thou dost slay and heal my heart;<br />
+And let quick death beat down my failing tent,<br />
+And its lone habitant be blown apart<br />
+Through the wide wastes of night's black firmament,<br />
+Where move the Powers in whose dread hands may be<br />
+The source and end of dreams and destiny.<br />
+<br />
+"There past the chain of hours my faithful ghost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span><br />
+May through thy dreams move silently and dim;<br />
+And needing then the least, may serve thee most;<br />
+Or crying seaward from life's misty rim,<br />
+Call forth thy heart beyond its mortal coast:<br />
+Happy if in thy spirit's wakening sigh<br />
+My name one murmured moment live and die."<br />
+<br />
+Thus Ailill spoke; and like a summer shower<br />
+His eager words, tingling on heart and brain,<br />
+Stirred many a leaf to life, and many a flower;<br />
+And sank beneath her spirit's thirsty plain,<br />
+Till hidden springs, touched with a strange new power,<br />
+Welled in her eyes with flash of sudden streams<br />
+From hills that crowned some far-off world of dreams.<br />
+<br />
+Clear-visioned in her meditative eye<br />
+Rolled the great world, and lo! a silent moth<br />
+Shredded its mighty frame, till down the sky<br />
+It fluttered like a poor discarded cloth<br />
+From some dead face flung out by hands that die;<br />
+And thinned like vapours round the lips of day,<br />
+And like a breath passed utterly away.<br />
+<br />
+And as it passed she knew that nevermore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span><br />
+Life would be life again; yet in her mind<br />
+Lurked the dim fear of one who leaves the shore,<br />
+And on the sightless hazard of the wind<br />
+Moves into doubt and darkness. O'er and o'er<br />
+She turned her thought, till softly on her ear<br />
+There broke a song a bard was chanting near.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Because the strong are fallen low,<br />
+Who deems that Strength himself is slain?<br />
+Through depth and height his arm shall go,<br />
+And he shall rear his house again,<br />
+Although the strong are fallen low.</i><br />
+<br />
+<i>Because the living all are dead,<br />
+Who deems that Life has found a grave?<br />
+Among the stars she lifts her head,<br />
+She dances lightly on the wave,<br />
+Although the living all are dead.</i><br />
+<br />
+<i>Because the beautiful has passed,</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span><br />
+<i>Was Beauty but a passing word?<br />
+Behold, the dust through chaos cast<br />
+With lovelier loveliness is stirred,<br />
+Although the beautiful has passed.</i><br />
+<br />
+<i>And if earth's lovers love amiss,<br />
+Who deems that Love has perished quite?<br />
+Lo, cloudy lips the mountains kiss,<br />
+And day is bosomed on the night,<br />
+Although earth's lovers love amiss.</i><br />
+<br />
+Swiftly and silently her thought's faint wing<br />
+Sought between wind and wind a certain way;<br />
+For one was keen with glad awakening<br />
+In perfumed morn of some ecstatic day;<br />
+And one was loud with song, and quivering string,<br />
+And all life's pageantry and noisy breath<br />
+Wherewith men strive to drown the voice of death.<br />
+<br />
+Then said Etain: "King Eochaidh in his might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span><br />
+Drew me to bonds of happiness; but thou<br />
+Art as a voice that calls across the night<br />
+To where some dawn blows freshly on the brow,<br />
+And love with love moves freely as the light,<br />
+Mingling in happy dreams their shadowy wings<br />
+Beyond these perishing substantial things.<br />
+<br />
+"Ah, me, the pain in joy, the joy in grief!<br />
+Who tells the end when once has moved the foot?<br />
+Thy hand is on my life's new-opened leaf:<br />
+Who knows the hand may pluck its ripened fruit?<br />
+To thee&mdash;and past, the journey may be brief.<br />
+Yet I the king's behest shall all fulfil&mdash;<br />
+'Nothing withhold to heal my brother's ill.'<br />
+<br />
+"So in the gaze of dawn and wondering flowers<br />
+We shall keep tryst by stream and whispering tree;<br />
+Perchance to win from life's controlling powers<br />
+The healing of thy heart's infirmity;<br />
+Perchance&mdash;" "Oh! speed the hazard of those hours,"<br />
+He cried, "that blind the flame of low desire<br />
+In the white light of Love's transmuting fire."</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">V<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+Hard by the swift-winged star, the moth-like moon<br />
+Sheds golden dust on waves of day that ebb<br />
+Into the deep beyond life's wan lagoon.<br />
+The spider Night now spins his monstrous web,<br />
+And spots the dark with many a pale cocoon<br />
+Hung in his vaporous cave, whose phantoms creep<br />
+In visions round the heavy brain of sleep.<br />
+<br />
+Yet one, among the sleepers, never turns<br />
+To ease his shoulder of the weight of night;<br />
+But with the shield of sweet oblivion spurns<br />
+Those wandering shafts that tease with sound and sight;<br />
+Till in a quiet, deep as kingly urns<br />
+In buried places, Ailill deadly lies,<br />
+Blind to the spreading signal of the skies.<br />
+<br />
+Now the thick dark, that pressed Etain's calm face<br />
+Like softest wool, thins out, and moves, and lifts;<br />
+And like a memory's vague recovered trace<br />
+The silent world, looming through cloudy rifts,<br />
+Floats greyly on the grey abyss of space,<br />
+Then slowly forms, and stands at last in light<br />
+Built on the crumbled ruins of the night.<br />
+<br />
+Soon on a cloud o'erhung with heliotrope<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span><br />
+Day's harp is lifted, wire on golden wire;<br />
+And now great Dagda's burning fingers grope<br />
+From string to string, then reaching high and higher<br />
+Unto the utterance of some eager hope,<br />
+Break through the vibrant silences, and spring<br />
+Into one living voice of leaf and wing.<br />
+<br />
+Somewhere the snipe now taps his tiny drum;<br />
+The moth goes fluttering upward from the heath;<br />
+And where no lightest foot unmarked may come,<br />
+The rabbit, tiptoe, plies his shiny teeth<br />
+On luscious herbage; and with strident hum<br />
+The yellow bees, blustering from flower to flower,<br />
+Scatter from dew-filled cups a sparkling shower.<br />
+<br />
+The meadowsweet shakes out its feathery mass;<br />
+And rumorous winds, that stir the silent eaves,<br />
+Bearing abroad faint perfumes as they pass,<br />
+Thrill with some wondrous tale the fluttering leaves,<br />
+And whisper secretly along the grass<br />
+Where gossamers, for day's triumphal march,<br />
+Hang out from blade to blade their diamond arch.<br />
+<br />
+Forth came Etain, and with a little cry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span><br />
+Scattered the councils of the feathery brood;<br />
+And faced unblenched the red sun's winkless eye<br />
+That hawk-like hung above the quivering wood;<br />
+And passed with stately step and head on high<br />
+Toward a secluded place&mdash;where one doth wait<br />
+Silent and imperturbable as fate.<br />
+<br />
+Sweetly the wizard palms of morning sleek<br />
+Her brow with spells; and when a butterfly<br />
+Brushes with soft familiar wing her cheek,<br />
+Through the deep woods she hears a ghostly sigh,<br />
+As if a hidden god were fain to speak<br />
+An ancient ageless love that, fold by fold,<br />
+Wraps her with joy in throbbing arms of old.<br />
+<br />
+Now is her sandalled foot upon the edge<br />
+Of a loud-leaping stream, that flings its damp<br />
+To cool the sorrel shaking on its ledge<br />
+Under the squirrel's pine, and in a swamp<br />
+Goes dumb among the heron-haunted sedge,<br />
+Where the swift kingfisher, a moment seen,<br />
+Flashes and fades, a flame of sudden green.<br />
+<br />
+At length she stands within the appointed place,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span><br />
+Where leafy boughs in odorous dusk are blent.<br />
+But wherefore now across her trancéd face<br />
+Pass the quick fingers of bewilderment,<br />
+And doubt on doubt like shadows shadows chase?<br />
+Faintly she speaks, "Ailill I came to see.<br />
+Who art thou&mdash;for thou art yet art not he?"<br />
+<br />
+From her soft eye no loosened glances tell<br />
+Desire or dread, to him whose cloudless gaze<br />
+Knows from what heights of old her footsteps fell<br />
+Out of clear light, into this web of days<br />
+And nights and mystery inscrutable,<br />
+And marks how in the calm of inner power<br />
+She moves unmoved to meet her destined hour.<br />
+<br />
+"Etain," he whispered, and again, "Etain."<br />
+Such utter love went throbbing through her name<br />
+That nigh beyond her doubt her foot had gone;<br />
+Yet stood she wavering like a lonely flame<br />
+Outburning night, that feels the shake of dawn;<br />
+Then said, "Thy name, that doubt aside he cast?"<br />
+"Mider," he answered, "come for thee at last."<br />
+<br />
+"Mider?" she echoed, "Mider?" and the sound<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span><br />
+Smote upon hidden doors, and roused from sleep<br />
+Faint eyes that dreamed, vague hands that groped around<br />
+The thought behind her thought, and from the deep<br />
+Beneath her thought climbed upward, to the bound<br />
+Whose shadowy marge like midnight gloom is cast<br />
+Between the passing moment and the past.<br />
+<br />
+Then Mider said, "For no poor worm's desire,<br />
+Nor aught of earth, thou comest, O beloved!<br />
+But for another's good thy thoughts conspire;<br />
+And far from self thy feet have hither moved<br />
+To the high purpose of the sacred fire<br />
+That burns thine upward path through joy and pain,<br />
+Through birth, through life, through death, to me again."<br />
+<br />
+Then asked she all bewildered: "Who art thou<br />
+Whose eyes have read my soul?" And answered he,<br />
+"Thine am I by the immemorial vow<br />
+That made thee mine, beloved! eternally,<br />
+When for a bride-price, on thy peerless brow<br />
+I set a diadem beyond the worth<br />
+Of all the crowns of all the queens of earth."<br />
+<br />
+Swiftly her thought divining, "Where, and when,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span><br />
+And wherefore parted, thou, beloved! shalt know.<br />
+That land which gleams in the rapt poet's ken,<br />
+Set in a sea that has no ebb or flow,<br />
+Beyond the spear-cast of the dreams of men,<br />
+Is mine, and from all changings far withdrawn<br />
+There spreads the realm of Mider&mdash;and Etain.<br />
+<br />
+"And there we loved, till that Almighty Power<br />
+Who set the heavens wheeling with a nod,<br />
+Blew thee, a butterfly, from flower to flower,<br />
+Until beyond our realm, a splendid God<br />
+Knew thee and cherished in a blossomy bower,<br />
+And nightly thy fair form in purple laid,<br />
+And at thy side his couch of slumber made.<br />
+<br />
+"But thee again the breath of tempest found,<br />
+And swept thee forth, and whirled from field to field,<br />
+And dashed thee where a roar of festal sound<br />
+Shook brazenly doffed helm and resting shield,<br />
+And flung thee in a cup that passed around<br />
+To one who drank it deep in bridal mirth&mdash;<br />
+And thou wert born a daughter of the earth.<br />
+<br />
+"From year to year life's pleasures round thee played,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span><br />
+And fell behind the question of thine eyes<br />
+That searched the mysteries of leafy shade,<br />
+And the blue heron sailing in the skies<br />
+Cutting the silence with the rusty blade<br />
+His voice, and sought to spy the subtile might<br />
+That killed your gathered iris in a night.<br />
+<br />
+"Ah, soon I saw sweet longing on thy face,<br />
+And love's compelling poppy on thy mouth,<br />
+And watched thee robe thy maiden blossoming grace<br />
+And dream a king came riding from the south;<br />
+Yet in thy sigh in Eochaidh's royal place,<br />
+Unseen I saw the waft of hidden wings<br />
+Set past these perishing substantial things.<br />
+<br />
+"For thou wert born for love whose windless sail<br />
+Moves on great deeps beyond life's shallow range.<br />
+Love linked in flesh with failing flesh shall fail:<br />
+Love knit in thought with changing thought shall change,<br />
+Nor all desire against slow Time prevail;<br />
+For that old worm all dreams shall gnaw and rend,<br />
+And love that finds an end&mdash;itself shall end.<br />
+<br />
+"Oh! not for thee the little irking chain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span><br />
+That frets the bark on life's expanding bole;<br />
+Nor love that maketh free, though it contain<br />
+All earth's white loves and thee supreme and sole<br />
+Beloved beneath all heaven; for who shall gain,<br />
+Since between love and love most subtly mixed<br />
+Untrodden silence stands forever fixed?<br />
+<br />
+"My love would brood upon the holy thing<br />
+Within thine inmost being folded far,<br />
+Till it at length come forth on perfect wing<br />
+To brush with sweet eclipse the morning star,<br />
+And in high heaven its utter rapture sing,<br />
+Filling the universe with golden sound<br />
+Of love immortal, measureless, unbound!<br />
+<br />
+"How shall immortal love find mortal bliss,<br />
+Or measureless be bound in narrow speech,<br />
+Or free and forge the bondage of a kiss?<br />
+Nay, but its end is ever out of reach,<br />
+Its life, of fairer life the chrysalis;<br />
+And all its days, desirable and fleet,<br />
+But prints of unseen Beauty's passing feet.<br />
+<br />
+"Ah! Love is thine whose all-transfusing sun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span><br />
+Burns out the mystery of life and death;<br />
+And all thine hours but blossom unto one<br />
+That us in utter bondage compasseth.<br />
+Now to that timeless hour Time's footsteps run<br />
+To rear our throne, whose foot shall never know<br />
+The chafe of life's eternal ebb and flow.<br />
+<br />
+"And he whose heart long time was scarred and swept<br />
+By hungering winds that robbed him of repose,<br />
+Wrapt in deep joy, beyond his joy has slept<br />
+Into a passionless calm, that wakes and knows<br />
+Love's highest bliss in honour stainless kept.<br />
+Farewell, and when a little while has flown<br />
+I come again." He ceased. She stood alone.<br />
+<br />
+Far through the morn the horn of Eochaidh blew,<br />
+Outspeeding runners hot with glad return.<br />
+From post to post goes welcoming halloo:<br />
+Far off the shouldered spear-heads dance and burn<br />
+Through smother of wheels, and marching men that strew<br />
+Their wake with dust and song, and storm at last<br />
+Round dun and liss, their prosperous journey past.<br />
+<br />
+And all that day go question and reply,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span><br />
+Twin bodkins looping up the stuff of life:<br />
+And all that dusk, warm cheek and glancing eye<br />
+Blow up love's ruddy peat in man and wife:<br />
+And all that night, harps throb and warpipes cry<br />
+Around the king, enthroned in joy complete,<br />
+Etain beside him, Ailill at his feet.<br />
+<br />
+But through the songs of praise that round him swell,<br />
+One voice to him has music sweeter far.<br />
+Close to his heart she now the tale doth tell<br />
+Of duty done, and love escaped a scar;&mdash;<br />
+But not of that deep hour, unspeakable<br />
+With visitation from beyond the world,<br />
+Shut in her heart, a blossom closely curled.<br />
+<br />
+On Eochaidh's royal brow sits glad content<br />
+That she, fate's minister to Ailill's pain,<br />
+Who dared in faith the perilous descent,<br />
+Now stands more white against averted stain.<br />
+And Ailill, all his heart in service spent,<br />
+Fills their glad hours with tender friendship's light<br />
+Sweet as the beam that silvers quiet night.</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align ="center">VI<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+Now at life's wheel Etain the day-long sings;<br />
+Not loud, but low as one who musing waits<br />
+An hour, whose promise in her deep eye springs<br />
+In keen transfiguring light that contemplates<br />
+The mystery of small, familiar things<br />
+Made great with gleams from past the verge of sight,<br />
+And strange with rumours of the infinite.<br />
+<br />
+In that bright realm glimpsed through the shade of this<br />
+She sees great peace resolve earth's little strife;<br />
+And deepening vision sounds a deeper bliss,<br />
+Till joy rolls round the fretted shores of life;<br />
+And in swift stroke of hate, and love's long kiss,<br />
+She marks one law work out one hidden Will,<br />
+And life and death one happy doom fulfil.<br />
+<br />
+So pass her days in labour sped with peace.<br />
+And now the king, heart-eased in her repose,<br />
+Gathers warm love about him like a fleece;<br />
+And through the land his joy wide-circling goes,<br />
+Stirring swift hands that bid the earth increase<br />
+Her gift of good, till wealth and fatness throng<br />
+Their duns with praise, and fill their mouths with song.<br />
+<br />
+Life's labour widely shared the lightlier lies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span><br />
+Along the days; and when its tumults cease,<br />
+Free brain and limb are swift in rivalries<br />
+Upon the bloodless battlefields of peace<br />
+In thought's affray, or deed of strength whose prize<br />
+Scarce more adorneth him whose power prevails,<br />
+Than him who strongly dares and greatly fails.<br />
+<br />
+And in long nights, when age and childhood sleep,<br />
+Bright eyes that flicker round the rushlit board<br />
+Mark how the chess-players, in silence deep,<br />
+Meet skill with skill, until delight is roared<br />
+At cunning scheme, or swift unreckoned leap:<br />
+But, cute as fox or quick as tern awing,<br />
+No hand is found to mate King Eochaidh's king.<br />
+<br />
+Loudly his fame rolls through the echoing land;<br />
+But in his dreams, in some high tourney met,<br />
+He feels a strong inexorable hand<br />
+Counter his craft with calm unwavering threat<br />
+By an unseen far-seeing player planned,<br />
+That haunts his thoughts with hint of some deep strife<br />
+Waged vastly on the board of death and life.<br />
+<br />
+Then from his couch, with apprehensive eye,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span><br />
+Forth goes the king for solace. Mile on mile<br />
+His happy realms in dawn's pale radiance lie<br />
+Secure in his great strength; so with a smile<br />
+He tramples out the night's thin troubling cry,<br />
+Then toward his palace turns, lo! at its door<br />
+There stands a chieftain never seen before.<br />
+<br />
+Straightly he stands, nor from his pride's full height<br />
+Bends he from neck to knee one purple fold;<br />
+Nor dips his spear, nor casts his shield whose light<br />
+Glinting from snowy boss and bead of gold,<br />
+Strikes from the king some memory of the night,<br />
+So that his quickened eye is swift to trace<br />
+A touch of challenge in the stranger's face.<br />
+<br />
+"Welcome, O stranger! and doubly were thy name<br />
+To me revealed." "Mider: to thee unknown.<br />
+No far-sung dun is mine, lineage or fame;<br />
+Yet in my realm I keep a steadfast throne,<br />
+And for my pleasure play a subtle game<br />
+With pawn and puissant knight and watching queen.<br />
+Fame trumpets far thy skill: now be it seen."<br />
+<br />
+On swift-set piece and jewelled chessboard break<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span><br />
+Slant arrows from the scarcely risen sun.<br />
+Rank faces rank. "Play, king!"... "Not without stake<br />
+I play; nor bate the forfeit quickly won,&mdash;<br />
+Thine?" "Fifty steeds whose hooves shall Erin shake."<br />
+Then Eochaidh, lightly at light-seeming task,<br />
+"And mine," he smiled, "whatever thou shalt ask!"<br />
+<br />
+Matchless in skill, King Eochaidh moves elate ...<br />
+One moment ... then ... straight lip and slow-drawn breath<br />
+Yield sullenly to sure on-coming fate.<br />
+Behind his eyes vast shapes of Life and Death<br />
+Move hand to hand.... Soon ends the struggle&mdash;"Mate!"<br />
+The stranger calls.... King Eochaidh's boast is gone!<br />
+"The stake?" he vaguely asks.... "Thy wife, Etain."<br />
+<br />
+Now like a spider wrapped in his own snare,<br />
+The king turned to and fro to rend the spell<br />
+Of ghastly loss. Pride stricken to despair<br />
+Tugged at life's roof-tree. Round him ruining fell<br />
+Puffed hopes and brittle joys that broke in air;<br />
+And high desires, reined short in sight of goal,<br />
+Stumbled to earth and snapped life's chariot-pole.<br />
+<br />
+Then in that other's eye some glance revealed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span><br />
+Faint pity.... "Nay, not this!" King Eochaidh cried.<br />
+"Take thou the treasures won on hard-fought field,<br />
+Spoils of the furrow, tribute of the tide:<br />
+These for thy forfeit here I freely yield;<br />
+Not her whose smile makes festive life's poor crust,<br />
+But lost would turn its glories into dust!"<br />
+<br />
+The stranger calmly answered, "King, the bird<br />
+Poised on a little trick within the brain,<br />
+Soars sunward. Kings on honour's lightest word<br />
+Unshaken, rear a realm that shall remain.<br />
+Snaps a small string: lo! all the song that stirred<br />
+With beauty and joy, sinks like storm-swallowed ships,<br />
+And bards unborn harp a high-king's eclipse.<br />
+<br />
+"But fear not thou. Thy fame shall feel no wind<br />
+Of cold rebuke; for when these shadows lift,<br />
+Thou in life's loss the Spirit's gain shalt find:<br />
+Thou to thyself shalt give thine utmost gift;<br />
+And know thou only hast what is resigned.<br />
+I go&mdash;but come on one clear-omened day,<br />
+And thou shalt pay thy debt." He went away.<br />
+<br />
+In that same hour the hungry nestling's cheep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span><br />
+Floods Etain's drowsing ear with gentle woe.<br />
+Sleep stirred by waking, waking soothed by sleep,<br />
+Around her heart in linking eddies flow;<br />
+Till at some passing wind that shakes the deep<br />
+Of dream, she wakes with eyes that strain to see<br />
+A haunting face behind life's mystery.<br />
+<br />
+And in lone hours of many a moonless night,<br />
+Through jetting poplars and the shooting snags<br />
+Of wrinkled oaks, the king doth seek a light<br />
+From his heart's questionings, whose purpose flags<br />
+Before her face, lest in her eye's clear sight<br />
+One thought of faithlessness a moment read<br />
+Should bring to birth the thing he most doth dread.</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">VII<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+Strong in the strength that finds in gentleness<br />
+A way to peace, King Eochaidh on the throne<br />
+Of Erin sits. Around his footstool press<br />
+High cares of sovereignty, that crowd his own<br />
+Like gossips out of doors, and ease the stress<br />
+Of storming thought which, held from question clear,<br />
+Fears its mute doubt, yet vaguely doubts its fear.<br />
+<br />
+In silent step, hushed pulse, and listening gaze,<br />
+He marks expectancy behind her smile,<br />
+Like some faint gleam from half-remembered days<br />
+Ere the high Gods had blown them to this isle<br />
+Among inscrutable divided ways,<br />
+Some hidden destiny to mar or make<br />
+In hands as strong to give as quick to take.<br />
+<br />
+Now to the king the hollow moments haste<br />
+Across his heart to some heart-emptied hour:<br />
+And now he frets to leap with sinews braced<br />
+Through lagging days and meet the threatening power.<br />
+Yet from his conflict, inner lips now taste<br />
+The mingled wine of sweet and bitter fate&mdash;<br />
+Strength to withstand, Endurance to await.<br />
+<br />
+These not as gifts the shadowy troublers bear,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span><br />
+But on his table spread what is his own.<br />
+So mused the king: "Not all from spade and share<br />
+The harvest comes: seed to its fruit has grown,<br />
+Self-shaped, though stirred by smart of sun and air;<br />
+And in life's myriad hands beaten and pressed,<br />
+Man is not made, but man made manifest."<br />
+<br />
+So finding gain in threatened loss, his mind<br />
+Self-poised, through sorrow and joy makes even way,<br />
+Content if, toiling past, his fingers find<br />
+Her fingers, and in trembling silence say,<br />
+"Here in unstable circumstance entwined<br />
+We two have kissed, and whither we may tend,<br />
+Once mixed, must find each other at the end."<br />
+<br />
+And she within her heart's most secret place<br />
+Has nursed a thought that grew from day to day,<br />
+Like wind-borne seed that on a rocky face<br />
+Finds root and strength to shatter ancient sway,<br />
+A thought of Love that chafes at time and space,<br />
+And moves from Love that was through Love to be<br />
+To some exalted end no eye can see.<br />
+<br />
+Yet nought of this was uttered each to each;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span><br />
+But when, like forest monarchs strong and proud,<br />
+A silver birch beside a sinewy beech,<br />
+They stood at feast to hail the gathering crowd,<br />
+Swift winds of joy came full of happy speech,<br />
+And through the host light raptures laughed and played,<br />
+Witless of yellowing leaf or sodden shade.<br />
+<br />
+Then came a day when on the bare flag-stone<br />
+The slow snail crawled; the chestnut's candles turned<br />
+Downward as dead; the wolf-hound with a groan<br />
+Gazed in King Eochaidh's eyes through eyes that burned<br />
+Great threat; the spear-grass hither and thither blown<br />
+Bent on the sand and traced its rings awry,<br />
+And sun and moon slid sideways down the sky.<br />
+<br />
+Swiftly to Eochaidh the dread omens tell<br />
+The day of forfeiture; yet to Etain<br />
+No word he speaks. Her eyes so softly well<br />
+With wondrous beauty, all his heart is drawn<br />
+In love to hold her from the coming spell.<br />
+Pushed past its hour, the unspoken doom may break,<br />
+And love and honour stand without a shake.<br />
+<br />
+On windy gap and boggy mountain path<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span><br />
+He sets his watchers. Knee-deep where the fists<br />
+Of bracken fronds are clenched in tiny wrath,<br />
+Stern guards now stand, and where in sculptured cists<br />
+Old kings are harvested in Death's long swathe.<br />
+Closed from alarm the shingled roofs now rise<br />
+Ringed through the dark with flaming searching eyes.<br />
+<br />
+The word has passed, "The king shall have his whim:<br />
+No stranger looks upon the queen to-night."<br />
+Around the feasting board men great of limb<br />
+Shut fast each door, and blind the hope of sight<br />
+With shining shields that turn the torches dim.<br />
+Throned firm in strength defying power or guile,<br />
+He joys, and hopes&mdash;yet fears Etain's faint smile.<br />
+<br />
+Now harp and song have touched their utmost height,<br />
+And fall in sudden silence at a sound<br />
+Deeper than sound, and pale before a light<br />
+Clearer than light. Above, beneath, around,<br />
+All heaven and earth are shaken with a might<br />
+Past might, swift chariots clash, and mixed with these,<br />
+Far thunderings and the roar of distant seas!<br />
+<br />
+And in their midst is Mider, a shining God<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span><br />
+From whose majestic presence swiftly spreads<br />
+Peace not of earth. Before his face, unflawed<br />
+By shadow of taint, brave warriors bow their heads.<br />
+And now the king, snapping his silver rod<br />
+Of power, with sudden eyes made clear, with cheeks<br />
+Flamed by swift vision, through the silence speaks.<br />
+<br />
+"Now have I seen the shining hand of Him<br />
+Who sifts the world for His divine desire;<br />
+And gathers, and within His quern's wide rim<br />
+Grinds all things meet for His transforming fire,<br />
+And kneads them to a purpose far and dim;<br />
+Who fashions all things to His growing plan,<br />
+And breaks ... and moulds ... and breaks the heart of man.<br />
+<br />
+"Take Thou Thy will&mdash;so it be her's?..." A hope<br />
+Shoots a faint arrow instantly&mdash;no more.<br />
+A blinding fire falls from night's glimmering slope.<br />
+Flame-like the twain meet on the rushy floor&mdash;<br />
+And vanish. King and clansmen blindly grope<br />
+Into cool air. Across the sky two swans<br />
+Fly slowly toward the day that palely dawns.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">POEMS AND LYRICS</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">DEATH AND LIFE</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>To the memory of Eveleen Nicolls</i></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+
+<tr><td align="center">I</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+The long, dark slope is topped with mist,<br />
+But here the sun is on the grass:<br />
+Beneath, the sea-waves break, and twist<br />
+Backward like snakes of molten glass.<br />
+<br />
+Across an ancient sand-heaped wall<br />
+The foot thro' graves forgotten goes,<br />
+And stops where old, old voices call<br />
+Thro' generations of repose.<br />
+<br />
+But where a sorrow of to-day<br />
+Has set a freshly-fashioned mound,<br />
+A bird slides down his airy way<br />
+And makes the silence ring with sound.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="center">II<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+What gloom might now our spirits balk<br />
+Fades out before that high reproof;<br />
+And thro' the fabric of your talk<br />
+Go light and shadow, warp and woof,<br />
+<br />
+With something deeper than the word,&mdash;<br />
+Some stately certitude of faith<br />
+Whose eye at Life had never blurred,<br />
+Nor quivered at the eye of Death,<br />
+<br />
+But saw, in that swift, woman's way,<br />
+Thro' changings to the changeless Whole,<br />
+And Life and Death as waves that sway<br />
+Across the ocean of the Soul.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+
+
+<tr><td align="center">III<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+Then when the hill was lost in mist,<br />
+And in the sea the sky was glassed,<br />
+We wandered home in amethyst;<br />
+And you upon the morrow passed<br />
+<br />
+On that last journey to the West<br />
+Whose end was in the Atlantic wave,<br />
+Where, on your youth's triumphant crest,<br />
+One stroke, another's life to save,<br />
+<br />
+With glory crowned your life complete,<br />
+Proud as the horsed and pluméd seas<br />
+That laid your body at my feet&mdash;<br />
+A wonder past Praxiteles.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td align="center">IV<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+Oh! bear her by the weeping crest,<br />
+And past the fields of fallen ears,<br />
+On her last journey from the West,<br />
+This holy Lady Day of tears.<br />
+<br />
+But yet, tho' heads are bared and bowed,<br />
+And down the road the keeners keen,<br />
+Some spirit-music, deep and proud,<br />
+Slips out their thin, shrill cries between<br />
+<br />
+And, like the bird that other day,<br />
+That made the silence ring with sound,<br />
+It floats along the sun-set way,<br />
+A joy above our sorrow's mound.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td align="center">V<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+What grief might now our spirits balk<br />
+Fades out before that high reproof;<br />
+And thro' the hushed and wavering talk<br />
+That fills the streets from roof to roof,<br />
+<br />
+A fire from your high altar shines,<br />
+And kindles thro' our dusk of strife<br />
+A faith whose inner eye divines<br />
+That Death is minister to Life,<br />
+<br />
+And all our years a moment's dream<br />
+In one great Mind that grasps the whole,<br />
+And Life and Death but waves that gleam<br />
+Along the ocean of the Soul.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">A SCHOOLBOY PLAYS CUCHULAIN</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+'Way there! for one who hastens forth<br />
+To guard the Marches of the North,<br />
+Where Connacht's hosts with flame and brand<br />
+Hurl menace toward his native land,<br />
+And Macha's Curse on arm and will<br />
+Hangs dreadfully from hill to hill.<br />
+<br />
+'Way there! Four valorous feet of height,<br />
+Twelve long, long years of age and fight,<br />
+He fronts without a thought of fear<br />
+Ten thousand with his wooden spear.<br />
+Soon shall he fling the charging field<br />
+Back on his puissant pasteboard shield,<br />
+And soon shall haughty Maeve bend down<br />
+A vassal to his tinsel crown.<br />
+<br />
+'Way there! Who laughs has hardly heard<br />
+A hidden trumpet's secret word,<br />
+Or glimpsed through those poor arms he bears<br />
+The weapons that the spirit wears.<br />
+In that wild breast a thousand years<br />
+Rise up from ineffectual tears,<br />
+And kindle once again the flame<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span><br />
+Of Freedom at a burning name.<br />
+<br />
+What if for him no flag unfurled<br />
+Should shake red battle on the world;<br />
+On other fields, in other mood,<br />
+The ancient conflict is renewed,<br />
+And Michael and his warring clan<br />
+Tramp onward through the heart of man.<br />
+At Life's loud fires he shall anneal<br />
+A subtler blade than transient steel,<br />
+When Love, invincible in Faith,<br />
+Shall smile upon the face of Death,<br />
+And Will and Heart, as one, conspire<br />
+To dare the utmost of desire.<br />
+Then shall be, with his spirit's lance,<br />
+Unhorse cold Pride and Circumstance,<br />
+Shake Wrong's old strongholds to the ground,<br />
+And Right's victorious trumpet sound,<br />
+And light Earth's ramparts with the gleam<br />
+Of Ireland's unextinguished Dream<br />
+That burned in him who hastened forth<br />
+To guard the Marches of the North,<br />
+When Macha's Curse on arm and will<br />
+Hung dreadfully from hill to hill.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">HOW THE MOUNTAINS CAME TO BE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+A bird once came and said to me,<br />
+"Hear how the mountains came to be.<br />
+An angel from his crystal sphere<br />
+Fell to the earth. A chilly fear<br />
+Shot thro' his wings from tip to tip,<br />
+For there was neither boat nor ship,<br />
+Mountain nor stream, nor maid nor man,<br />
+Far as the angel's eye could scan;<br />
+Dead flatness far as he could see<br />
+Before the mountains came to be.<br />
+He stretched his wings to fly away,<br />
+But round his feet the oozy clay<br />
+Gripped fast, and held him to the ground.<br />
+He stretched and strove until a sound<br />
+Went thro' him from he knew not where<br />
+And said, 'The only way is prayer.'<br />
+He dropped his wings and raised his eyes,<br />
+And sent his soul into the skies.<br />
+He prayed and prayed, and as he prayed<br />
+A wind among his plumage played<br />
+And bore him upward toward his sphere.<br />
+Around his feet from far and near<br />
+There came a sound that seemed to say,<br />
+'Pray on! pray on! we too would pray.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span><br />
+Thy prayer has touched the sleeping Powers:<br />
+Pray on, thy prayer shall yet be ours;<br />
+We too have wings that pine for flight,<br />
+We too have eyes that long for light.'<br />
+Upward he moved, and still his eyes<br />
+Were fastened on the distant skies,<br />
+And as he rose toward heaven dim<br />
+He drew the earth up after him.<br />
+About his feet the oozy clay<br />
+Gripped fast, but could not stop or stay<br />
+His course, till on his skyey stair<br />
+He paused beyond the need for prayer,<br />
+While from the air beneath, around,<br />
+There rose a tumult of glad sound.<br />
+The angel turned the sound to seek,<br />
+And lo! his foot was on a peak<br />
+That fell away to where the world<br />
+Lay like a painted flag unfurled<br />
+And shaken out from sea to sea,&mdash;<br />
+And thus the mountains came to be."<br />
+So said the bird, and what the masque<br />
+Of meaning hid, I meant to ask;<br />
+But off he flew before I knew&mdash;<br />
+And yet I think the tale is true<br />
+If one could only hear aright,<br />
+And see with something more than sight.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">LOVE IN ABSENCE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Hills crowned with age,<br />
+And solemn seas,<br />
+Are full of sage<br />
+Philosophies.<br />
+Yet, lacking thee,<br />
+I am not wise:<br />
+I need thine eyes<br />
+That I may see!<br />
+<br />
+Insect and bird<br />
+Chant prose and verse,<br />
+God's passion-stirred<br />
+Interpreters.<br />
+Howe'er I seek,<br />
+Their meaning slips:<br />
+I need thy lips<br />
+That they may speak!<br />
+<br />
+Long days that shine,<br />
+Or richly weep;<br />
+The dreamful mine<br />
+Of happy sleep,<br />
+Without thee, give<br />
+A slender part:<br />
+I need thy heart<br />
+That life may live!<br />
+<br />
+Hear then my cry,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span><br />
+And hasten, sweet!<br />
+The world and I<br />
+Are incomplete;<br />
+Poor with all pelf;<br />
+Bound most when freed:<br />
+Thy Self I need,<br />
+To be my Self!</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">TREES IN WINTER</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Gaunt and spare,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The silly trees</span><br />
+Strip them bare<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To winter's breeze;</span><br />
+<br />
+Yet when July<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sweltered red,</span><br />
+Dressed unduly<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Heel to head!</span><br />
+<br />
+Who will whisper<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Unto me,</span><br />
+Why is this<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Perversity?</span><br />
+<br />
+Bent his head<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A stately beech:</span><br />
+Slowly said<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In gentle speech:</span><br />
+<br />
+"Why, O man! not<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Find a moral</span><br />
+(Though you cannot<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In the laurel,)</span><br />
+<br />
+"In our vigour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And our pelf,</span><br />
+Type and figure<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of yourself?</span><br />
+<br />
+"Sun-kissed amity<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Conceals</span><br />
+What calamity<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reveals:</span><br />
+<br />
+"Summer glozes<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Stain and scar;</span><br />
+Winter shows us<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As we are.</span><br />
+<br />
+"Well if thou,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In trying hour,</span><br />
+Stand, or bow,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In naked power,</span><br />
+<br />
+"Like the spare<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">But sinewy trees</span><br />
+Standing bare<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To winter's breeze!"</span></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">A SPRING CAPRICE BY A ROBIN</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Rubato</i></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Who, on such a day of spring,<br />
+Would be careful how he sing?<br />
+Let the overflowing heart<br />
+Get a start,<br />
+Who shall care if no one knows<br />
+How to find a perfect close<br />
+To his strain,<br />
+When the brain&mdash;<br />
+Drunk with sun and hyacinth,<br />
+Primroses and bursting oak,<br />
+And the sower's puffs of smoke<br />
+Over fields of brown&mdash;<br />
+Stumbling down<br />
+A melodious labyrinth,<br />
+Somehow, nohow, finds a way out,<br />
+Has his say out&mdash;<br />
+And begins it all again,<br />
+Caring nothing how he sing<br />
+When the brain,<br />
+Wild with Spring,<br />
+Gives a start<br />
+To his mad, melodious, overflowing heart?<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Kilcarberry, Wexford.</i></span></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">A SPRING RONDEL BY A STARLING</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+I clink my castanet,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And beat my little drum;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">For spring at last has come,</span><br />
+And on my parapet<br />
+Of chestnut, gummy-wet,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Where bees begin to hum,</span><br />
+I clink my castanet,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">And beat my little drum.</span><br />
+<br />
+"Spring goes," you say, "suns set."<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">So be it! Why be glum?</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Enough, the spring has come;</span><br />
+And without fear or fret<br />
+I clink my castanet,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">And beat my little drum.</span></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE FAIRY RING</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Enfolded in the Fairy Ring<br />
+My loved one sleeping lies,<br />
+To simple souls a dreadful thing,<br />
+For half a hundred eyes<br />
+Peep out from where among the grass<br />
+Floats up a magic lay<br />
+To call the souls of all who pass,<br />
+To fairyland away.<br />
+<br />
+But I who know her heart's desire,<br />
+Fear neither spell nor frown;<br />
+For not till fire shall stifle fire,<br />
+Or water water drown,<br />
+Or love hate love, can any harm<br />
+In kindred hearts abide.<br />
+Oh! she can combat charm with charm,<br />
+My elfin-hearted bride!<br />
+<br />
+And ye, whose minds are set to win<br />
+Fame's leaf or fortune's prize!<br />
+Beware the spell that lurks within<br />
+The circle of her eyes;<br />
+For she has power to blow like straws<br />
+Earth's baubles from the hand,<br />
+And call the souls of all who pause,<br />
+Away to fairyland.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">"LABORARE EST ORARE,"</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">A RONDEAU OF FIELD-LABOURERS</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+"To labour is to pray." We heave<br />
+The heavy clay; we dig and cleave;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And knees and hands deep in the sod,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Search out and shape the Will of God</span><br />
+Creation's purpose to achieve.<br />
+<br />
+Slant showers may wound, sharp winds bereave&mdash;<br />
+We lift no soiled and suppliant sleeve:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">(Sure God and Mary bless the rod:)</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">To labour is to pray.</span><br />
+<br />
+And so we are content to leave<br />
+Prayers for long-headed folk to weave.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">We work His Will in ear and pod;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And when His harvest-eyes applaud,</span><br />
+We know&mdash;what others but believe&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">To labour is to pray.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Ballymore, Donegal.</i></span></td></tr></table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">PARAPHRASES AND<br />
+INTERPRETATIONS</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">DAEDALUS AND ICARUS</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>The Builder of the Cretan Labyrinth and his Son</i></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Quote Daedalus to Icarus:<br />
+"With rule and plumbline,&mdash;thus, and&mdash;thus,<br />
+We space and build our labyrinth,<br />
+And build, besides, a graven plinth<br />
+To bear the future fame of Us,"<br />
+Quote Daedalus to Icarus.<br />
+<br />
+Quoth Icarus to Daedalus:<br />
+"Before these Cretans make a fuss,<br />
+And set our names up with a shout,<br />
+Perhaps we'd better first get out,<br />
+And show the master-mind of Us,"<br />
+Quoth Icarus to Daedalus.<br />
+<br />
+Then round and round went Daedalus,<br />
+And out and in went Icarus.<br />
+They parted for an hour's whole space....<br />
+They met upon the selfsame place!<br />
+"I think we're stuck," quoth Icarus,<br />
+"I think we are," quoth Daedalus.<br />
+<br />
+In short, to be perspicuous,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span><br />
+Like this old tale of Daedalus;<br />
+'Spite of our mouths with freedom filled,<br />
+From life's poor trivial things we build<br />
+A maze about the feet of us<br />
+That shuts us in like Daedalus.<br />
+<br />
+But Daedalus and Icarus<br />
+Made wings, and set them&mdash;thus, and&mdash;thus;<br />
+And that blind maze that hemmed them in<br />
+They sloughed, as drops the snake its skin:<br />
+And so at last shall all of us,<br />
+Like Daedalus and Icarus.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">A PARAPHRASE</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>From the Prose of Jeremy Taylor</i></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+As the silk-worm, shut from sight,<br />
+Cuts a pathway into light;<br />
+Makes on mottled leaves repast<br />
+Till its wormy coat is cast;<br />
+Winds itself in silken weed;<br />
+Sheds the future's pearly seed;<br />
+Leaves behind its dower of silk,<br />
+And with wings as white as milk<br />
+Spread for flight, completes its span;<br />
+So evolves the soul of man.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">HOSPITALITY</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>From the Irish, Seventh to Tenth Century</i></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+O king of stars that watch the night!<br />
+Whether my house be dark or bright,<br />
+Its door to none shall barréd be,<br />
+Lest Christ should close his house to me.<br />
+<br />
+And if thy house shall hold a guest,<br />
+And aught from him thou hast suppressed,<br />
+Not all to him the wrong is done:<br />
+Thou hast concealed from Mary's Son.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE STUDENT</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>From the Irish, Seventh to Tenth Century</i></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+High on my hedge of bush and tree<br />
+A blackbird sings his song to me,<br />
+And far above my linéd book<br />
+I hear the voice of wren and rook.<br />
+<br />
+From the bush-top, in garb of grey,<br />
+The cuckoo calls the hours of day.<br />
+Right well do I&mdash;God send me good!&mdash;<br />
+Set down my thoughts within the wood.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">AT A HOLY WELL</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+He dragged his knees from flag to flag,<br />
+And prayed for health with awe-struck brow,<br />
+Then hung his ill's discarded rag<br />
+On the o'erhanging hawthorn bough.<br />
+<br />
+And in the adoring hush that fell,<br />
+I, from the form set inly free,<br />
+Knelt at my heart's most holy well<br />
+And worshipped mine own mystery.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Templemanaghan, Kerry.</i></span></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE PRIEST'S LAKE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Beneath the bridge, with noisy rout,<br />
+The Atlantic fills the quiet lake ...<br />
+A pause ... a turn ... then with a shout<br />
+Seaward the brimming waters break.<br />
+<br />
+"Open thy gates," the Spirit saith,<br />
+"O Soul! My wave thy shore shall sweep,<br />
+Then back across the pause of death<br />
+Draw thee with shoutings to the deep!"<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Ardbear, Connemara.</i></span></td></tr></table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SONNETS</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">A PAPER-SELLER</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Clearly, and iterant as a swinging bell,<br />
+I heard across the surges of the Strand<br />
+A woman's voice, and saw a woman's hand<br />
+With "Votes for Women." A sudden vision fell<br />
+Across my path, and made my pulses swell<br />
+With agony of joy: I seemed to stand<br />
+At some far hill, from whence was faintly fanned<br />
+A whisper, "He descended into Hell."<br />
+<br />
+Sister! with foot in gutter, foot on kerb,<br />
+Tasting humiliations's bitter herb<br />
+In thy great calm of self laid wholly down!<br />
+Thine are the thorns of Christly souls who bend<br />
+To lift the world; and thou too shalt ascend<br />
+To thine own Heaven and everlasting crown!<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Strand, London.</i></span></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">TO ONE IN PRISON</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Dear! on Love's altar thou hast laid thee down,<br />
+Priestess and Victim of such Sacrifice<br />
+As might melt praise from very hearts of ice,<br />
+But wins the scoff of sycophant and clown.<br />
+Yet in that band, whose glory is the frown<br />
+Of sceptred tyranny and stained device,<br />
+Thou hast a place; and thee it shall suffice<br />
+To tread with them the path to high renown.<br />
+<br />
+And I&mdash;even I, unworthy though I be&mdash;<br />
+For these my wounds of utter loneliness,<br />
+Tired head and sleepless eyes, some part would claim<br />
+In the deep rubric of thy mystery;<br />
+So may I, in proud years that rise to bless,<br />
+Stand in the shadow of thine honoured name.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Nov. 23&mdash;Dec. 23, 1910.</i></span></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">A HOME-COMING</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+What flags are these?... what trumpets?... Oh! what drums?<br />
+What pride august?... what solemn minstrelsy?<br />
+Hush! drums, ecstatic drums: say who is she<br />
+That in the midst majestically comes.<br />
+Is she some queen whose haughty eye benumbs<br />
+Proud potentates; whose word can lift the sea<br />
+Of shattering war, and fling red misery<br />
+Across the world?... Speak, drums! Oh! aching drums!<br />
+<br />
+Hush! hush! wild drums, drums in my happy heart!<br />
+Not thus she comes, my life's exalted queen,<br />
+But in sweet silence far outlauding praise.<br />
+Her's not the flaming sword that puts apart,<br />
+But Right's resistless blade, whose stroke unseen<br />
+Wounds but to heal, and crown with Freedom's bays!</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">LOVE, THE DESTROYER</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td>
+Come from behind those eyes, that I may see<br />
+Thyself, beloved! not lip, or hand, or brain.<br />
+These are not thou. These are the servile train<br />
+That crowd me from thine inmost mystery.<br />
+Show me thy naked soul!... or it may be<br />
+That, lacking this, I shall, in Love's mad strain,<br />
+Shatter the form, and sift it grain by grain<br />
+To find thine utter Self&mdash;thee&mdash;very Thee!...<br />
+<br />
+Ah! Love, forgive!... Be this my penitence<br />
+That in my passion I have glimpsed the goal<br />
+Of all calamity, and surely scanned<br />
+In flood and flame, earthquake and pestilence,<br />
+Love raging forth, to find Love's inmost soul,<br />
+With bridal gifts in Ruin's awful hand!</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ENVOY</span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><i>THE LOVING CUP</i></span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="table">
+<tr><td align="center"><i>I</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+<i>I raise to you, O Queen, this Loving Cup, this Mether,<br />
+Filled with Mead<br />
+Made from honey of the heather,<br />
+Brought by many a humming wing,<br />
+And with water from the spring;<br />
+Mixed by cunning hands together<br />
+In a foamy ferment<br />
+Thou would lead<br />
+Sullen tongues to song,<br />
+If along<br />
+Harpstrings now a rousing air went.</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="center"><i>II</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+<i>But in this our souls' espousal<br />
+Axe nor skeen<br />
+Throb and bleed<br />
+For the spear-clash of carousal,<br />
+Spoils of slaughter<br />
+Ravening:<br />
+No, for peace has mixed our mether,<br />
+With its Mead,<br />
+O my Queen,</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span><br />
+<i>Made from honey of the heather,<br />
+And with water<br />
+From the spring.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"><i>III</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+<i>Ah! but what avail<br />
+Song and ale,<br />
+If beneath our quaffing<br />
+Moves not something deeper than our laughing?</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"><i>IV</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+<i>So to you, O Queen,<br />
+Here with hands unseen<br />
+I raise my Heart's deep Mether,<br />
+Where together,<br />
+Sweetness brought on Fancy's wing<br />
+From the flowers<br />
+Of happy hours,<br />
+And a draught from Thought's cool spring,<br />
+Blend in song's melodious ferment,<br />
+With an undertone<br />
+Caught in deeper hours alone,<br />
+When along Life's solemn harp the Spirit's air went.</i></td></tr></table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">NOTES</span></p>
+
+
+<p><i>Etain the Beloved</i>:&mdash;This poem is founded on an ancient Irish myth. It
+is not a translation from the Gaelic; but rather is an attempt at
+transfiguration, by seeking to "unfold into light" the spiritual vision
+that was the inspiration, and is the secret of the persistence and
+resilience, of the Celt. Such modifications as I have made in the story
+have neither archćological nor philological significance: they arise
+entirely from whatever measure of insight into artistic necessity, on
+the side of pure literature, has been granted to me; and also from
+obedience to a view of the universe which is embodied in the ancient
+Irish mythology, and whose operations the personages of the story body
+forth as Psyche bodied forth the soul of humanity to the Greek.</p>
+
+<p>The names of the personages may be pronounced thus: Etain&mdash;Etawn',
+Eochaidh&mdash;Yo'hee, Ailill&mdash;Al'yil, Mider&mdash;Mid'yir.</p>
+
+<p>Dagda is the Irish God of Day, Balor the Irish God of Night.</p>
+
+<p>A dun is a fortified dwelling, a liss is a place for domestic animals.</p>
+
+<p><i>Death and Life</i>:&mdash;On Friday, August 13, 1909, the author went by
+currach from Dunquin to the Great Blasket Island, Kerry, to visit Miss
+Eveleen Nicolls, M.A., who was spending a holiday on the island. Instead
+of joining her, as was intended, in music and conversation amongst the
+islanders, he had to participate in an endeavour, alas! unsuccessful, to
+restore her to life. She had been bathing with a fisher-girl. The latter
+got into difficulties in the strong Atlantic current, and an effort by
+Miss Nicolls to save the girl ended in the heroic sacrifice of her own
+life.</p>
+
+<p><i>A Schoolboy plays Cuchulain</i>:&mdash;Cuchulain, the supreme hero of Celtic
+romance, who, single-handed, defended his province against the army of
+Queen Maeve. Maeve had chosen for a foray the time when the Ulster
+chiefs lay in weakness under a curse by the warrior Goddess, Macha.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hospitality</i>: <i>The Student</i>:&mdash;Put into verse from the literal
+translations of Kuno Meyer in "Ancient Irish Poetry."</p>
+
+<p><i>To One in Prison</i>: <i>A Home-coming</i>:&mdash;Occasioned by the imprisonment of
+the author's wife for taking part in the active movement for the
+political enfranchisement of women.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><i>BOOKS BY JAMES H. COUSINS</i></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>THE QUEST. Cr. 8vo. Cloth, 2s. 6d. net; paper-cover, 1s. net.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Rarely is it the fortune of the reviewer to meet with verse of such
+distinction."&mdash;<i>New Ireland Review.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"An imagination filled with haunting and refreshing images."&mdash;<i>Black
+and White.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"His extraordinary imaginative powers, his skill in painting
+word-pictures, and the glamour which he throws over all, are
+marvellous."&mdash;<i>Irish Independent.</i></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>THE AWAKENING. Royal 16mo. Cloth, gilt, 1s. net; paper, 6d. net. With
+decorative borders and cover designed by <span class="smcap">T. Scott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Unique mastery of the sonnet."&mdash;<i>Irish News.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Ripe thought fitly expressed. A new pleasure on each
+page."&mdash;<i>Glasgow Herald.</i></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>THE BELL-BRANCH. Foolscap 8vo. Boards, Irish linen back, 1s. net.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Artistically Mr. Cousins can only be put below the two leaders of
+his movement; he has the calm intensity, the subtle strangeness of
+simplicity, which seem to be as easy as breathing to an Irish
+poet."&mdash;<i>The Nation.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Mr. Cousins has gradually perfected a method of self-expression,
+and his verse, exquisitely fashioned, delights with its individual
+note."&mdash;<i>Northern Whig.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Many an English poet would willingly sacrifice a page or two of his
+consummate verse if he might but catch the charm of such a lullaby
+as this."&mdash;<i>The Times.</i></p>
+
+
+<p class="center">MAUNSEL AND COMPANY, LIMITED,<br/>
+96 MIDDLE ABBEY STREET, DUBLIN.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Etain the Beloved and Other Poems, by
+James Henry Cousins
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ETAIN THE BELOVED AND OTHER POEMS ***
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+Project Gutenberg's Etain the Beloved and Other Poems, by James Henry Cousins
+
+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: Etain the Beloved and Other Poems
+
+Author: James Henry Cousins
+
+Release Date: November 25, 2011 [EBook #38135]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ETAIN THE BELOVED AND OTHER POEMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ETAIN THE BELOVED
+ AND OTHER POEMS
+
+
+
+
+_BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
+
+
+ The Quest
+ The Bell-Branch
+ The Awakening
+ The Wisdom of the West
+ Ben Madighan (out of Print)
+ Sung by Six "
+ The Legend of the Blemished King (out of Print)
+ The Voice of One "
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: JAMES H. COUSINS
+ _From a pencil sketch by Florence Gillespie_]
+
+
+
+
+ ETAIN THE BELOVED
+
+ AND OTHER POEMS
+
+ BY JAMES H. COUSINS
+
+ MAUNSEL & COMPANY, LIMITED,
+ 96 MIDDLE ABBEY STREET, DUBLIN
+ 1912
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ ETAIN THE BELOVED 1
+
+ POEMS AND LYRICS
+
+ DEATH AND LIFE 49
+
+ A SCHOOLBOY PLAYS CUCHULAIN 54
+
+ HOW THE MOUNTAINS CAME TO BE 56
+
+ LOVE IN ABSENCE 58
+
+ TREES IN WINTER 60
+
+ A SPRING CAPRICE 62
+
+ A SPRING RONDEL 63
+
+ THE FAIRY RING 64
+
+ LABORARE EST ORARE 65
+
+ PARAPHRASES AND INTERPRETATIONS
+
+ DAEDALUS AND ICARUS 69
+
+ A PARAPHRASE 71
+
+ HOSPITALITY 72
+
+ THE STUDENT 73
+
+ AT A HOLY WELL 74
+
+ THE PRIEST'S LAKE 75
+
+ SONNETS
+
+ A PAPER-SELLER 79
+
+ TO ONE IN PRISON 80
+
+ A HOME-COMING 81
+
+ LOVE, THE DESTROYER 82
+
+ ENVOY
+
+ THE LOVING CUP 84
+
+ NOTES 87
+
+
+
+
+ETAIN THE BELOVED
+
+
+
+
+_TO PENROSE MORRIS_
+
+
+
+
+ETAIN THE BELOVED
+
+
+ I
+
+ Strong in the strength that finds in gentleness
+ A way to peace, King Eochaidh on the throne
+ Of Erin sits. Around his footstool press
+ Clansmen and chiefs. Some wind of thought has blown
+ Their eyes to flame. Some purpose, in the stress
+ Of travailing tongues, to birth finds not a way:
+ What all would utter, none has wit to say.
+
+ Into their midst one came, an aged bard
+ Upon whose flowing hair Wisdom had laid
+ Her gift of silver. On those faces, scarred
+ From old forgotten fights, he looked, and weighed
+ The meaning in their eyes, though sorely marred;
+ And from the tangled fibre of their thought
+ Into the web of speech their purpose wrought.
+
+ "Thy word, O King, has passed by hill and dale
+ Throughout all Erin, bidding to the Feast
+ Of Tara all thy people, with the tale
+ Of tribute due from greatest and from least.
+ Nor should this word than others less prevail,
+ But that the herald-spear thy will hath sent,
+ Against the shield of custom has been bent.
+
+ "Thou knowest, O King, that from most ancient years
+ No chieftain wifeless rules for thee the land,
+ Nor mateless at a festival appears;
+ But fixed in all experience doth stand:
+ And thus, made master of all human fears,
+ Fears not, but strongly round the camp-fires goes,
+ Full sharer of thy people's joys and woes.
+
+ "Equal in yoke and honour, as the day
+ And night, that are but breathings of the soul,
+ They on life's crooked journey take their way
+ Diverse in gift, in essence one and whole.
+ This is the custom, King! Yet custom may,
+ If but of man, be as a smith who twists
+ An iron chain to bind upon his wrists.
+
+ "But custom may, if fashioned to the Law
+ That made the world, be as the straitened string
+ From which the Master of the Feast may draw
+ Majestic speech, a living, wondrous thing
+ To rid the brow of pale contention's flaw,
+ And passing like the honey-cup along,
+ Gather their wandering lips to one great song.
+
+ "And such the custom that thy people plead:
+ For when of old the deathless Lord of Life
+ Dagda came forth, and knew the immortal need
+ That burned within his heart, he took to wife
+ Dana the Mother of all human seed.
+ In her his breath found music and a name.
+ In her his fire has blossomed into flame.
+
+ "Throughout the world that fire and music run
+ One sings within the maiden's wondering heart:
+ One stirs the veins of manhood, as the sun
+ Sets the spring's fingers thrilling with the smart
+ Of keen, ecstatic life that's but begun.
+ In every seed that breaks and wind that blows,
+ Each in the other seeks and finds repose.
+
+ "Wherefore, O King, since thou art yet unwed,
+ And thus in kingship standest incomplete,
+ Unfurnished in thy heart, from whence are fed
+ The streams of power and wisdom, it is not meet
+ That unto thee thy people bow the head,
+ And here thy sovereignty with tribute own
+ Till thou hast set a Queen upon thy throne."
+
+ He ceased, and all the faces of the crowd
+ Shone with the light that kindles when the boon
+ Of speech has eased the heart; as when a cloud
+ Falls from the labouring shoulder of the moon,
+ And all the world stands smiling silver-browed.
+ King Eochaidh for a moment bent his head
+ In thought; then smiling he arose and said:
+
+ "I am not careless of the ancient need
+ That moves your minds. Within my own it moves
+ Like a long-hidden, unforgotten seed
+ The spring has touched uneasily: like hooves
+ Long captive, when the trumpet has decreed
+ A royal pilgrimage, and in the liss
+ They dance to taste the highway's ringing bliss.
+
+ "So have I watched for that sure sign that fills
+ The horn of fate, that bending this our realm
+ Unto the Will that works behind our wills,
+ It may remain; as when storms overwhelm,
+ And leafy spray whirls over the roaring hills,
+ The swaying pine bends as the storm wars by,
+ And lives to shake proud arms against the sky.
+
+ "But now the horn is full, the hour is here.
+ Our wills as one move onward to their end.
+ Here now I lift on high the royal spear,
+ And thus through Erin proclamation send:
+ 'Search for the promised maiden far and near
+ Whom the high Gods have destined at my side
+ To reign.' Go forth. The King awaits his bride.
+
+ "She shall be found in some most quiet place
+ Where Beauty sits all day beside her knee
+ And looks with happy envy on her face;
+ Where Virtue blushes, her own guilt to see,
+ And Grace learns new, sweet meanings from her grace;
+ Where all that ever was or will be wise
+ Pales at the burning wisdom of her eyes.
+
+ "When you at last, far off like worshippers
+ Within some holy circle, bow your heads,
+ You shall await till on that face of her's
+ A smile like spring's first morning slowly spreads;
+ And when her lip with wondrous music stirs,
+ Bear hither like the wind her deathless name,
+ That I may light my heart at its white flame."
+
+ Scarce had he ceased when from the royal tent
+ Broke the full tide of their loud ecstacy,
+ And through the woods like summer thunder went,
+ Full of great rumour of mighty things to be
+ That died far off like twilight breezes spent.
+ Then sang the bard in hidden wisdom skilled:
+ "Thus is the purpose of the Gods fulfilled.
+
+ "_Lift now the hands that may not bless
+ A wifeless feast, a queenless throne,
+ A court or council womanless,
+ Or life one-limbed and sideways grown,
+ That holds the hands that may not bless._
+
+ "_The starry Virgin of the east
+ Steps up the sky to lead the sign
+ Where most has kissed and mixed with least,
+ And one-in-twain life's torches shine
+ Behind the Virgin of the east._
+
+ "_Then lift the hands that gladly bless
+ Full life, to life's great fulness grown,
+ A power to stand through shock and stress,
+ And rear an everlasting throne
+ Held high on hands that gladly bless._"
+
+ Then on a night when on his hearth the gleam
+ Of crackling faggots flung a wavering glow
+ Along his red-yew roof from beam to beam
+ Like glancing eyes, King Eochaidh to and fro
+ Turned on his couch, dreaming a happy dream
+ Of snapping stems, and crisp leaves crushed by feet
+ With high desire made musical and fleet.
+
+ Out of the fire a swift and slender shaft
+ Of yellow flame pierced through the King's dropped lids,
+ And woke a murmur of bees whose eager craft
+ Rifled the treasures of blossomy pyramids;
+ Whereat the King, raising his hand, low laughed,
+ Then passed like some worn swimmer on the sweep
+ Of strong waves toward the unfathomed gulf of sleep.
+
+ At length in that white hour when dewy wings
+ Stir with new day's delight, there came a sound
+ As though a passion of voices and smitten strings
+ Mingled and swelled and flew along the ground,
+ Till at the utmost of its triumphings,
+ Through the King's sleep and on his door the dawn
+ Broke, and a mighty shout: "Etain! Etain!"
+
+
+ II
+
+ Thereafter, on a morning rich with spring,
+ When round his feet new-opened flowers looked up
+ Wide-eyed and wet at some most wondrous thing,
+ And crystal draughts from many an odorous cup
+ Were spilled by winds in playful rioting,
+ King Eochaidh stood beside a quiet shore,
+ Dumb with a joy he never knew before.
+
+ From league to league alone his path had lain
+ On windy hills, through forests dark, or deep
+ In dank, sonorous glens. Through every vein
+ A burning joy had drunk the mists of sleep,
+ And sung "Etain, Etain," till the refrain
+ Irked, and he slept, and when he sprang awake
+ Saw that which made his heart with rapture shake.
+
+ There by the sea, Etain his destined bride
+ Sat unabashed, unwitting of the sight
+ Of him who gazed upon her gleaming side,
+ Fair as the snowfall of a single night;
+ Her arms like foam upon the flowing tide;
+ Her curd-white limbs in all their beauty bare,
+ Straight as the rule of Dagda's carpenter.
+
+ Her cheeks were like the foxglove when it glows
+ At noon: her eyes blue as the hyacinth.
+ Like moonlight struck to marble, nobly rose
+ Her neck upon her shoulder's polished plinth;
+ And like the light that swiftly comes and goes
+ Through breaking waves, among her hair her hands
+ Broke into wavy gold its plaited strands.
+
+ Then came her maidens, bright and blossoming
+ With beauty, and before her beauty bowed,
+ And stood around her in a laughing ring
+ To robe her starry splendour like a cloud.
+ And as her hair they twined, the hidden king
+ Scarce knew if on her lips, that knew no wrong,
+ Or in his own hushed heart he heard this song.
+
+ _The king comes riding from the north,
+ From battles won, with marching men.
+ Ah, whose white eager arms go forth
+ To bid him welcome home again
+ When he comes riding from the north?_
+
+ _The king comes riding from the south,
+ And halts beside the royal liss.
+ Ah, whose the happy smiling mouth
+ That gives and takes a long warm kiss
+ When he comes riding from the south?_
+
+ _The king comes riding from the east.
+ O night how dark! O way how long!
+ Ah, whose dear eyes shall light the feast?
+ Ah, who shall lift his heart with song
+ When he comes riding from the east?_
+
+ _The king comes riding from the west,
+ And smiles unto himself, and sighs.
+ Ah, whose the white and easeful breast
+ Where he shall close his kingly eyes
+ When he comes riding from the west?_
+
+ Small wonder now that Eochaidh's leaping heart
+ Strained like a hound in leash: yet through his bliss
+ There passed a thin cold blade with sudden smart
+ Of doubt that he but dreamed, of dread that this
+ Was but a vision that would soon depart:
+ But when the song had ceased, there stood the maid
+ Flushed with keen joy, and like a queen arrayed.
+
+ A mantle of bright purple, waving, wound
+ Her form, and from her shoulders white as milk
+ Fell in reluctant folds and touched the ground.
+ Upon her breast the flash of emerald silk--
+ As though the glory of earth had wrapped her round--
+ Mixed with the glow of red embroidered gold
+ That seemed with light her body to enfold.
+
+ A sudden breeze came singing from the sea
+ And broke with sunlight through the leafy shade.
+ Then came King Eochaidh forth, and on his knee
+ Bent low before the silent, trembling maid.
+ "The king," he said, "has come, and kneels to thee,
+ Foredoomed to share the burden of his throne,
+ And glorify its glory with thine own."
+
+ Then through her frame a gentle tremor went
+ And lit her face with exquisite swift fire
+ That woke forgotten dreams, whose shaken scent
+ Sweetened the quiet winds of her desire
+ With some divine, unuttered ravishment,
+ Some earnest of great doom that filled her heart
+ With sorrow, joy's majestic counterpart.
+
+ Upon his head she gently laid her hand,
+ And said, "Arise! To thee my heart has bowed
+ When minstrel after minstrel, tired and tanned,
+ Has supped beside our hearth, and sung the proud
+ High song that bears thy greatness through the land.
+ For thee from life's clear dawn my love remained
+ Fixed, and at length to thee I have attained."
+
+
+ III
+
+ Across the woods of Meath the bird of day
+ Fell from the boughs of noon with bleeding wing,
+ While dark-browed Balor strode the eastern way,
+ And scattered darkness from his cloudy sling,
+ Till at his feet the hosts of Erin lay
+ Smitten with sleep; then round their dreams he cast
+ The chains wherewith he binds his prisoners fast.
+
+ From dawn till dark, in many a hero-game
+ Glad eyes had flashed, or bent in pride august
+ To hear the chant of some undying name
+ Whose deeds were strong as wine. Anon the dust
+ Of festive feet stormed in a wild acclaim
+ Around the royal place where, side by side,
+ Sat Eochaidh and Etain his new-made bride.
+
+ Now ancient Sleep, with Silence for his queen,
+ Reigns o'er those palaces of stately fir
+ That drowse in curtained moonlight's misty sheen.
+ Within, the arras hardly seems to stir
+ Its languorous folds of purple, blue and green,
+ Whose colours part or mix, as rise and fall
+ The pine fire's odorous gleams on roof and wall.
+
+ No sound, no life, save where with soft salute
+ The wide-eyed sentinels a moment wait
+ And listen sidelong to the passing bruit
+ Of ghostly winds, that murmur at their state
+ And pass, with peevish cry and soundless foot,
+ Where the dead fly upon the waveless moat
+ Makes of the dead dropped leaf a funeral boat.
+
+ Yet in the midst of silence so profound,
+ One stirred his rushy couch as though in pain,
+ For through his dreams a torrent of swift sound
+ Stumbled in foam about his echoing brain,
+ And all his thought in loud confusion drowned
+ And bore him toward a dim and perilous steep
+ That flung its shadow on a writhing deep.
+
+ Then like the sun obscured by valley smoke,
+ With some vague trouble glooming in his eye,
+ Ailill the brother of the king awoke
+ And scanned the portents of the morning sky,
+ Till on his mind a mellowing radiance broke,
+ And in his heart there dawned a wondrous face
+ That lit his world with Love's exalted grace.
+
+ Often in dreams a shadow by his side
+ Had sung of one who came in some great hour
+ With Love--and woe. Now came his brother's bride;
+ And when he bent before her in her bower,
+ Within his heart the shadow rose and cried,
+ And passed away, while all his being shook,
+ Stricken with joy and sorrow in a look.
+
+ Among the clamours of the festal time
+ His love for ease he hid, again pursued,
+ Finding a solace in the chanted rhyme
+ Of aged bards, or youths in merry mood
+ Where angry words were counted as a crime;
+ And fireside friendship staunched his hungry sighs
+ When she no more was banquet for his eyes.
+
+ But when the marriage festival was past,
+ And restless day gave place to torturing night,
+ His captive passion burst its chains, and cast
+ Its ardours from his brain in living light;
+ Then like the thin voice of a spell-raised blast,
+ A dissonant note from hidden harp-strings drawn
+ Troubled the dreams of Eochaidh and Etain.
+
+ By day the dream had faded to a mist
+ In some far-folded valley of the mind;
+ But when, heart-charmed in evening's amethyst,
+ The labouring world grew wonderfully kind,
+ And upturned lips by brooding love were kissed;
+ Like silent rain in summer twilight spilled,
+ A wandering thought King Eochaidh touched and chilled.
+
+ Meanwhile with steps that would and would not shun
+ Bliss craved and spurned; with tongue that might not speak
+ The pain that some strange sweetness now had won,
+ Ailill moved to and fro; and soon his cheek
+ Paled like the austere Servants of the Sun;
+ And day by day his passion's famished flame
+ Nourished itself upon his wasting frame.
+
+ In vain the king's diviners daily strove
+ To find the spring of Ailill's gathering ill;
+ In vain Etain by stream and murmuring grove
+ Sought for the shadowy hand that held his will;
+ And when dark Balor cracked his whip, and drove
+ His winter herd across the bounds of day,
+ Ailill upon his couch in weakness lay.
+
+ So when a year had passed, and through the land
+ The king went forth on royal pilgrimage,
+ Unto Etain he gave his last command
+ That she, his brother's sickness to assuage,
+ Withhold no gift, but give with regal hand;
+ And should chill death blow out his flickering blaze,
+ His funeral-stone with honour she should raise.
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ From day to day Etain with eager thought
+ Outran sick Ailill's fleetest-footed needs;
+ From sun and wind a subtle medicine caught,
+ And charmed swift healing from the fresh-strewn reeds
+ Upon his floor, which her own hands had brought
+ From ferny hollows, where cool waters laughed
+ That Ailill from her cup with gladness quaffed.
+
+ Yet with each dawn that came with growing power
+ There grew a cloudy thought in Ailill's mind
+ That gloomed the joy of health's returning hour,
+ And put a sigh in evening's gentle wind,
+ And touched with ill-timed frost life's opening flower,
+ And turned to poverty the proffered wealth
+ In hands that wrought his sickness and his health.
+
+ And she, in service, found a hidden way
+ To strange new meanings in the eyes of life;
+ And reached a joy beyond the shrill affray
+ Of horns and harps loud with the songs of strife
+ Or little triumphs of a passing day;
+ And grasped, in giving, life's most perfect gift--
+ Love that is raised by that which it doth lift.
+
+ So moved the twain through sunshine barred with gloom,
+ Finding in each twin solace and despair:
+ He, like a frail and gently tended bloom,
+ Grudged each day's health that took him past her care;
+ And she, o'ershadowed by approaching doom,
+ Watching his need of her grow less and less,
+ Sickened with grief her lips dare not express.
+
+ Tossed thus on hidden billows of the soul,
+ And swept by winds that warred against the will,
+ They drained the little draught in life's poor bowl,
+ And all unwitting wrought each other ill;
+ Until at last, stung past the heart's control,
+ Marking Etain's white brow and pensive eye,
+ Thus Ailill broke the silence with a cry.
+
+ "O bitter joy! O sorrow passing sweet!
+ O blossoming life that leads to love's pale death!
+ O gain that speeds to loss on laggard feet!
+ O living voice that kills the word it saith!
+ O cooling touch that kindles quenchless heat!
+ How shall I all my heart's dear burden speak,
+ Or how keep silence at thy paling cheek?
+
+ "I love thee, Queen Etain, but in such wise
+ As never man loved woman heretofore:
+ Not with the love that lives upon her eyes,
+ And counts her breast the summit and the shore
+ Of all desire, and with tempestuous sighs
+ Flings to the winds the spoils of reason's thrift
+ In barter for her body's utmost gift.
+
+ "My love, O queen, is that serener kind
+ Whose word outruns the lumbering wain of speech,
+ And springs in light from mind to answering mind;
+ And takes its bliss beyond the body's reach,
+ Thought mixed with thought, as sunlight with sweet wind;
+ And crowds the ways, where human sorrow pleads,
+ With generations of exalted deeds.
+
+ "Ah, then take back the life that thou hast spent
+ In vain, since thou dost slay and heal my heart;
+ And let quick death beat down my failing tent,
+ And its lone habitant be blown apart
+ Through the wide wastes of night's black firmament,
+ Where move the Powers in whose dread hands may be
+ The source and end of dreams and destiny.
+
+ "There past the chain of hours my faithful ghost
+ May through thy dreams move silently and dim;
+ And needing then the least, may serve thee most;
+ Or crying seaward from life's misty rim,
+ Call forth thy heart beyond its mortal coast:
+ Happy if in thy spirit's wakening sigh
+ My name one murmured moment live and die."
+
+ Thus Ailill spoke; and like a summer shower
+ His eager words, tingling on heart and brain,
+ Stirred many a leaf to life, and many a flower;
+ And sank beneath her spirit's thirsty plain,
+ Till hidden springs, touched with a strange new power,
+ Welled in her eyes with flash of sudden streams
+ From hills that crowned some far-off world of dreams.
+
+ Clear-visioned in her meditative eye
+ Rolled the great world, and lo! a silent moth
+ Shredded its mighty frame, till down the sky
+ It fluttered like a poor discarded cloth
+ From some dead face flung out by hands that die;
+ And thinned like vapours round the lips of day,
+ And like a breath passed utterly away.
+
+ And as it passed she knew that nevermore
+ Life would be life again; yet in her mind
+ Lurked the dim fear of one who leaves the shore,
+ And on the sightless hazard of the wind
+ Moves into doubt and darkness. O'er and o'er
+ She turned her thought, till softly on her ear
+ There broke a song a bard was chanting near.
+
+ _Because the strong are fallen low,
+ Who deems that Strength himself is slain?
+ Through depth and height his arm shall go,
+ And he shall rear his house again,
+ Although the strong are fallen low._
+
+ _Because the living all are dead,
+ Who deems that Life has found a grave?
+ Among the stars she lifts her head,
+ She dances lightly on the wave,
+ Although the living all are dead._
+
+ _Because the beautiful has passed,
+ Was Beauty but a passing word?
+ Behold, the dust through chaos cast
+ With lovelier loveliness is stirred,
+ Although the beautiful has passed._
+
+ _And if earth's lovers love amiss,
+ Who deems that Love has perished quite?
+ Lo, cloudy lips the mountains kiss,
+ And day is bosomed on the night,
+ Although earth's lovers love amiss._
+
+ Swiftly and silently her thought's faint wing
+ Sought between wind and wind a certain way;
+ For one was keen with glad awakening
+ In perfumed morn of some ecstatic day;
+ And one was loud with song, and quivering string,
+ And all life's pageantry and noisy breath
+ Wherewith men strive to drown the voice of death.
+
+ Then said Etain: "King Eochaidh in his might
+ Drew me to bonds of happiness; but thou
+ Art as a voice that calls across the night
+ To where some dawn blows freshly on the brow,
+ And love with love moves freely as the light,
+ Mingling in happy dreams their shadowy wings
+ Beyond these perishing substantial things.
+
+ "Ah, me, the pain in joy, the joy in grief!
+ Who tells the end when once has moved the foot?
+ Thy hand is on my life's new-opened leaf:
+ Who knows the hand may pluck its ripened fruit?
+ To thee--and past, the journey may be brief.
+ Yet I the king's behest shall all fulfil--
+ 'Nothing withhold to heal my brother's ill.'
+
+ "So in the gaze of dawn and wondering flowers
+ We shall keep tryst by stream and whispering tree;
+ Perchance to win from life's controlling powers
+ The healing of thy heart's infirmity;
+ Perchance--" "Oh! speed the hazard of those hours,"
+ He cried, "that blind the flame of low desire
+ In the white light of Love's transmuting fire."
+
+
+ V
+
+ Hard by the swift-winged star, the moth-like moon
+ Sheds golden dust on waves of day that ebb
+ Into the deep beyond life's wan lagoon.
+ The spider Night now spins his monstrous web,
+ And spots the dark with many a pale cocoon
+ Hung in his vaporous cave, whose phantoms creep
+ In visions round the heavy brain of sleep.
+
+ Yet one, among the sleepers, never turns
+ To ease his shoulder of the weight of night;
+ But with the shield of sweet oblivion spurns
+ Those wandering shafts that tease with sound and sight;
+ Till in a quiet, deep as kingly urns
+ In buried places, Ailill deadly lies,
+ Blind to the spreading signal of the skies.
+
+ Now the thick dark, that pressed Etain's calm face
+ Like softest wool, thins out, and moves, and lifts;
+ And like a memory's vague recovered trace
+ The silent world, looming through cloudy rifts,
+ Floats greyly on the grey abyss of space,
+ Then slowly forms, and stands at last in light
+ Built on the crumbled ruins of the night.
+
+ Soon on a cloud o'erhung with heliotrope
+ Day's harp is lifted, wire on golden wire;
+ And now great Dagda's burning fingers grope
+ From string to string, then reaching high and higher
+ Unto the utterance of some eager hope,
+ Break through the vibrant silences, and spring
+ Into one living voice of leaf and wing.
+
+ Somewhere the snipe now taps his tiny drum;
+ The moth goes fluttering upward from the heath;
+ And where no lightest foot unmarked may come,
+ The rabbit, tiptoe, plies his shiny teeth
+ On luscious herbage; and with strident hum
+ The yellow bees, blustering from flower to flower,
+ Scatter from dew-filled cups a sparkling shower.
+
+ The meadowsweet shakes out its feathery mass;
+ And rumorous winds, that stir the silent eaves,
+ Bearing abroad faint perfumes as they pass,
+ Thrill with some wondrous tale the fluttering leaves,
+ And whisper secretly along the grass
+ Where gossamers, for day's triumphal march,
+ Hang out from blade to blade their diamond arch.
+
+ Forth came Etain, and with a little cry
+ Scattered the councils of the feathery brood;
+ And faced unblenched the red sun's winkless eye
+ That hawk-like hung above the quivering wood;
+ And passed with stately step and head on high
+ Toward a secluded place--where one doth wait
+ Silent and imperturbable as fate.
+
+ Sweetly the wizard palms of morning sleek
+ Her brow with spells; and when a butterfly
+ Brushes with soft familiar wing her cheek,
+ Through the deep woods she hears a ghostly sigh,
+ As if a hidden god were fain to speak
+ An ancient ageless love that, fold by fold,
+ Wraps her with joy in throbbing arms of old.
+
+ Now is her sandalled foot upon the edge
+ Of a loud-leaping stream, that flings its damp
+ To cool the sorrel shaking on its ledge
+ Under the squirrel's pine, and in a swamp
+ Goes dumb among the heron-haunted sedge,
+ Where the swift kingfisher, a moment seen,
+ Flashes and fades, a flame of sudden green.
+
+ At length she stands within the appointed place,
+ Where leafy boughs in odorous dusk are blent.
+ But wherefore now across her tranced face
+ Pass the quick fingers of bewilderment,
+ And doubt on doubt like shadows shadows chase?
+ Faintly she speaks, "Ailill I came to see.
+ Who art thou--for thou art yet art not he?"
+
+ From her soft eye no loosened glances tell
+ Desire or dread, to him whose cloudless gaze
+ Knows from what heights of old her footsteps fell
+ Out of clear light, into this web of days
+ And nights and mystery inscrutable,
+ And marks how in the calm of inner power
+ She moves unmoved to meet her destined hour.
+
+ "Etain," he whispered, and again, "Etain."
+ Such utter love went throbbing through her name
+ That nigh beyond her doubt her foot had gone;
+ Yet stood she wavering like a lonely flame
+ Outburning night, that feels the shake of dawn;
+ Then said, "Thy name, that doubt aside he cast?"
+ "Mider," he answered, "come for thee at last."
+
+ "Mider?" she echoed, "Mider?" and the sound
+ Smote upon hidden doors, and roused from sleep
+ Faint eyes that dreamed, vague hands that groped around
+ The thought behind her thought, and from the deep
+ Beneath her thought climbed upward, to the bound
+ Whose shadowy marge like midnight gloom is cast
+ Between the passing moment and the past.
+
+ Then Mider said, "For no poor worm's desire,
+ Nor aught of earth, thou comest, O beloved!
+ But for another's good thy thoughts conspire;
+ And far from self thy feet have hither moved
+ To the high purpose of the sacred fire
+ That burns thine upward path through joy and pain,
+ Through birth, through life, through death, to me again."
+
+ Then asked she all bewildered: "Who art thou
+ Whose eyes have read my soul?" And answered he,
+ "Thine am I by the immemorial vow
+ That made thee mine, beloved! eternally,
+ When for a bride-price, on thy peerless brow
+ I set a diadem beyond the worth
+ Of all the crowns of all the queens of earth."
+
+ Swiftly her thought divining, "Where, and when,
+ And wherefore parted, thou, beloved! shalt know.
+ That land which gleams in the rapt poet's ken,
+ Set in a sea that has no ebb or flow,
+ Beyond the spear-cast of the dreams of men,
+ Is mine, and from all changings far withdrawn
+ There spreads the realm of Mider--and Etain.
+
+ "And there we loved, till that Almighty Power
+ Who set the heavens wheeling with a nod,
+ Blew thee, a butterfly, from flower to flower,
+ Until beyond our realm, a splendid God
+ Knew thee and cherished in a blossomy bower,
+ And nightly thy fair form in purple laid,
+ And at thy side his couch of slumber made.
+
+ "But thee again the breath of tempest found,
+ And swept thee forth, and whirled from field to field,
+ And dashed thee where a roar of festal sound
+ Shook brazenly doffed helm and resting shield,
+ And flung thee in a cup that passed around
+ To one who drank it deep in bridal mirth--
+ And thou wert born a daughter of the earth.
+
+ "From year to year life's pleasures round thee played,
+ And fell behind the question of thine eyes
+ That searched the mysteries of leafy shade,
+ And the blue heron sailing in the skies
+ Cutting the silence with the rusty blade
+ His voice, and sought to spy the subtile might
+ That killed your gathered iris in a night.
+
+ "Ah, soon I saw sweet longing on thy face,
+ And love's compelling poppy on thy mouth,
+ And watched thee robe thy maiden blossoming grace
+ And dream a king came riding from the south;
+ Yet in thy sigh in Eochaidh's royal place,
+ Unseen I saw the waft of hidden wings
+ Set past these perishing substantial things.
+
+ "For thou wert born for love whose windless sail
+ Moves on great deeps beyond life's shallow range.
+ Love linked in flesh with failing flesh shall fail:
+ Love knit in thought with changing thought shall change,
+ Nor all desire against slow Time prevail;
+ For that old worm all dreams shall gnaw and rend,
+ And love that finds an end--itself shall end.
+
+ "Oh! not for thee the little irking chain
+ That frets the bark on life's expanding bole;
+ Nor love that maketh free, though it contain
+ All earth's white loves and thee supreme and sole
+ Beloved beneath all heaven; for who shall gain,
+ Since between love and love most subtly mixed
+ Untrodden silence stands forever fixed?
+
+ "My love would brood upon the holy thing
+ Within thine inmost being folded far,
+ Till it at length come forth on perfect wing
+ To brush with sweet eclipse the morning star,
+ And in high heaven its utter rapture sing,
+ Filling the universe with golden sound
+ Of love immortal, measureless, unbound!
+
+ "How shall immortal love find mortal bliss,
+ Or measureless be bound in narrow speech,
+ Or free and forge the bondage of a kiss?
+ Nay, but its end is ever out of reach,
+ Its life, of fairer life the chrysalis;
+ And all its days, desirable and fleet,
+ But prints of unseen Beauty's passing feet.
+
+ "Ah! Love is thine whose all-transfusing sun
+ Burns out the mystery of life and death;
+ And all thine hours but blossom unto one
+ That us in utter bondage compasseth.
+ Now to that timeless hour Time's footsteps run
+ To rear our throne, whose foot shall never know
+ The chafe of life's eternal ebb and flow.
+
+ "And he whose heart long time was scarred and swept
+ By hungering winds that robbed him of repose,
+ Wrapt in deep joy, beyond his joy has slept
+ Into a passionless calm, that wakes and knows
+ Love's highest bliss in honour stainless kept.
+ Farewell, and when a little while has flown
+ I come again." He ceased. She stood alone.
+
+ Far through the morn the horn of Eochaidh blew,
+ Outspeeding runners hot with glad return.
+ From post to post goes welcoming halloo:
+ Far off the shouldered spear-heads dance and burn
+ Through smother of wheels, and marching men that strew
+ Their wake with dust and song, and storm at last
+ Round dun and liss, their prosperous journey past.
+
+ And all that day go question and reply,
+ Twin bodkins looping up the stuff of life:
+ And all that dusk, warm cheek and glancing eye
+ Blow up love's ruddy peat in man and wife:
+ And all that night, harps throb and warpipes cry
+ Around the king, enthroned in joy complete,
+ Etain beside him, Ailill at his feet.
+
+ But through the songs of praise that round him swell,
+ One voice to him has music sweeter far.
+ Close to his heart she now the tale doth tell
+ Of duty done, and love escaped a scar;--
+ But not of that deep hour, unspeakable
+ With visitation from beyond the world,
+ Shut in her heart, a blossom closely curled.
+
+ On Eochaidh's royal brow sits glad content
+ That she, fate's minister to Ailill's pain,
+ Who dared in faith the perilous descent,
+ Now stands more white against averted stain.
+ And Ailill, all his heart in service spent,
+ Fills their glad hours with tender friendship's light
+ Sweet as the beam that silvers quiet night.
+
+
+ VI
+
+ Now at life's wheel Etain the day-long sings;
+ Not loud, but low as one who musing waits
+ An hour, whose promise in her deep eye springs
+ In keen transfiguring light that contemplates
+ The mystery of small, familiar things
+ Made great with gleams from past the verge of sight,
+ And strange with rumours of the infinite.
+
+ In that bright realm glimpsed through the shade of this
+ She sees great peace resolve earth's little strife;
+ And deepening vision sounds a deeper bliss,
+ Till joy rolls round the fretted shores of life;
+ And in swift stroke of hate, and love's long kiss,
+ She marks one law work out one hidden Will,
+ And life and death one happy doom fulfil.
+
+ So pass her days in labour sped with peace.
+ And now the king, heart-eased in her repose,
+ Gathers warm love about him like a fleece;
+ And through the land his joy wide-circling goes,
+ Stirring swift hands that bid the earth increase
+ Her gift of good, till wealth and fatness throng
+ Their duns with praise, and fill their mouths with song.
+
+ Life's labour widely shared the lightlier lies
+ Along the days; and when its tumults cease,
+ Free brain and limb are swift in rivalries
+ Upon the bloodless battlefields of peace
+ In thought's affray, or deed of strength whose prize
+ Scarce more adorneth him whose power prevails,
+ Than him who strongly dares and greatly fails.
+
+ And in long nights, when age and childhood sleep,
+ Bright eyes that flicker round the rushlit board
+ Mark how the chess-players, in silence deep,
+ Meet skill with skill, until delight is roared
+ At cunning scheme, or swift unreckoned leap:
+ But, cute as fox or quick as tern awing,
+ No hand is found to mate King Eochaidh's king.
+
+ Loudly his fame rolls through the echoing land;
+ But in his dreams, in some high tourney met,
+ He feels a strong inexorable hand
+ Counter his craft with calm unwavering threat
+ By an unseen far-seeing player planned,
+ That haunts his thoughts with hint of some deep strife
+ Waged vastly on the board of death and life.
+
+ Then from his couch, with apprehensive eye,
+ Forth goes the king for solace. Mile on mile
+ His happy realms in dawn's pale radiance lie
+ Secure in his great strength; so with a smile
+ He tramples out the night's thin troubling cry,
+ Then toward his palace turns, lo! at its door
+ There stands a chieftain never seen before.
+
+ Straightly he stands, nor from his pride's full height
+ Bends he from neck to knee one purple fold;
+ Nor dips his spear, nor casts his shield whose light
+ Glinting from snowy boss and bead of gold,
+ Strikes from the king some memory of the night,
+ So that his quickened eye is swift to trace
+ A touch of challenge in the stranger's face.
+
+ "Welcome, O stranger! and doubly were thy name
+ To me revealed." "Mider: to thee unknown.
+ No far-sung dun is mine, lineage or fame;
+ Yet in my realm I keep a steadfast throne,
+ And for my pleasure play a subtle game
+ With pawn and puissant knight and watching queen.
+ Fame trumpets far thy skill: now be it seen."
+
+ On swift-set piece and jewelled chessboard break
+ Slant arrows from the scarcely risen sun.
+ Rank faces rank. "Play, king!"... "Not without stake
+ I play; nor bate the forfeit quickly won,--
+ Thine?" "Fifty steeds whose hooves shall Erin shake."
+ Then Eochaidh, lightly at light-seeming task,
+ "And mine," he smiled, "whatever thou shalt ask!"
+
+ Matchless in skill, King Eochaidh moves elate ...
+ One moment ... then ... straight lip and slow-drawn breath
+ Yield sullenly to sure on-coming fate.
+ Behind his eyes vast shapes of Life and Death
+ Move hand to hand.... Soon ends the struggle--"Mate!"
+ The stranger calls.... King Eochaidh's boast is gone!
+ "The stake?" he vaguely asks.... "Thy wife, Etain."
+
+ Now like a spider wrapped in his own snare,
+ The king turned to and fro to rend the spell
+ Of ghastly loss. Pride stricken to despair
+ Tugged at life's roof-tree. Round him ruining fell
+ Puffed hopes and brittle joys that broke in air;
+ And high desires, reined short in sight of goal,
+ Stumbled to earth and snapped life's chariot-pole.
+
+ Then in that other's eye some glance revealed
+ Faint pity.... "Nay, not this!" King Eochaidh cried.
+ "Take thou the treasures won on hard-fought field,
+ Spoils of the furrow, tribute of the tide:
+ These for thy forfeit here I freely yield;
+ Not her whose smile makes festive life's poor crust,
+ But lost would turn its glories into dust!"
+
+ The stranger calmly answered, "King, the bird
+ Poised on a little trick within the brain,
+ Soars sunward. Kings on honour's lightest word
+ Unshaken, rear a realm that shall remain.
+ Snaps a small string: lo! all the song that stirred
+ With beauty and joy, sinks like storm-swallowed ships,
+ And bards unborn harp a high-king's eclipse.
+
+ "But fear not thou. Thy fame shall feel no wind
+ Of cold rebuke; for when these shadows lift,
+ Thou in life's loss the Spirit's gain shalt find:
+ Thou to thyself shalt give thine utmost gift;
+ And know thou only hast what is resigned.
+ I go--but come on one clear-omened day,
+ And thou shalt pay thy debt." He went away.
+
+ In that same hour the hungry nestling's cheep
+ Floods Etain's drowsing ear with gentle woe.
+ Sleep stirred by waking, waking soothed by sleep,
+ Around her heart in linking eddies flow;
+ Till at some passing wind that shakes the deep
+ Of dream, she wakes with eyes that strain to see
+ A haunting face behind life's mystery.
+
+ And in lone hours of many a moonless night,
+ Through jetting poplars and the shooting snags
+ Of wrinkled oaks, the king doth seek a light
+ From his heart's questionings, whose purpose flags
+ Before her face, lest in her eye's clear sight
+ One thought of faithlessness a moment read
+ Should bring to birth the thing he most doth dread.
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Strong in the strength that finds in gentleness
+ A way to peace, King Eochaidh on the throne
+ Of Erin sits. Around his footstool press
+ High cares of sovereignty, that crowd his own
+ Like gossips out of doors, and ease the stress
+ Of storming thought which, held from question clear,
+ Fears its mute doubt, yet vaguely doubts its fear.
+
+ In silent step, hushed pulse, and listening gaze,
+ He marks expectancy behind her smile,
+ Like some faint gleam from half-remembered days
+ Ere the high Gods had blown them to this isle
+ Among inscrutable divided ways,
+ Some hidden destiny to mar or make
+ In hands as strong to give as quick to take.
+
+ Now to the king the hollow moments haste
+ Across his heart to some heart-emptied hour:
+ And now he frets to leap with sinews braced
+ Through lagging days and meet the threatening power.
+ Yet from his conflict, inner lips now taste
+ The mingled wine of sweet and bitter fate--
+ Strength to withstand, Endurance to await.
+
+ These not as gifts the shadowy troublers bear,
+ But on his table spread what is his own.
+ So mused the king: "Not all from spade and share
+ The harvest comes: seed to its fruit has grown,
+ Self-shaped, though stirred by smart of sun and air;
+ And in life's myriad hands beaten and pressed,
+ Man is not made, but man made manifest."
+
+ So finding gain in threatened loss, his mind
+ Self-poised, through sorrow and joy makes even way,
+ Content if, toiling past, his fingers find
+ Her fingers, and in trembling silence say,
+ "Here in unstable circumstance entwined
+ We two have kissed, and whither we may tend,
+ Once mixed, must find each other at the end."
+
+ And she within her heart's most secret place
+ Has nursed a thought that grew from day to day,
+ Like wind-borne seed that on a rocky face
+ Finds root and strength to shatter ancient sway,
+ A thought of Love that chafes at time and space,
+ And moves from Love that was through Love to be
+ To some exalted end no eye can see.
+
+ Yet nought of this was uttered each to each;
+ But when, like forest monarchs strong and proud,
+ A silver birch beside a sinewy beech,
+ They stood at feast to hail the gathering crowd,
+ Swift winds of joy came full of happy speech,
+ And through the host light raptures laughed and played,
+ Witless of yellowing leaf or sodden shade.
+
+ Then came a day when on the bare flag-stone
+ The slow snail crawled; the chestnut's candles turned
+ Downward as dead; the wolf-hound with a groan
+ Gazed in King Eochaidh's eyes through eyes that burned
+ Great threat; the spear-grass hither and thither blown
+ Bent on the sand and traced its rings awry,
+ And sun and moon slid sideways down the sky.
+
+ Swiftly to Eochaidh the dread omens tell
+ The day of forfeiture; yet to Etain
+ No word he speaks. Her eyes so softly well
+ With wondrous beauty, all his heart is drawn
+ In love to hold her from the coming spell.
+ Pushed past its hour, the unspoken doom may break,
+ And love and honour stand without a shake.
+
+ On windy gap and boggy mountain path
+ He sets his watchers. Knee-deep where the fists
+ Of bracken fronds are clenched in tiny wrath,
+ Stern guards now stand, and where in sculptured cists
+ Old kings are harvested in Death's long swathe.
+ Closed from alarm the shingled roofs now rise
+ Ringed through the dark with flaming searching eyes.
+
+ The word has passed, "The king shall have his whim:
+ No stranger looks upon the queen to-night."
+ Around the feasting board men great of limb
+ Shut fast each door, and blind the hope of sight
+ With shining shields that turn the torches dim.
+ Throned firm in strength defying power or guile,
+ He joys, and hopes--yet fears Etain's faint smile.
+
+ Now harp and song have touched their utmost height,
+ And fall in sudden silence at a sound
+ Deeper than sound, and pale before a light
+ Clearer than light. Above, beneath, around,
+ All heaven and earth are shaken with a might
+ Past might, swift chariots clash, and mixed with these,
+ Far thunderings and the roar of distant seas!
+
+ And in their midst is Mider, a shining God
+ From whose majestic presence swiftly spreads
+ Peace not of earth. Before his face, unflawed
+ By shadow of taint, brave warriors bow their heads.
+ And now the king, snapping his silver rod
+ Of power, with sudden eyes made clear, with cheeks
+ Flamed by swift vision, through the silence speaks.
+
+ "Now have I seen the shining hand of Him
+ Who sifts the world for His divine desire;
+ And gathers, and within His quern's wide rim
+ Grinds all things meet for His transforming fire,
+ And kneads them to a purpose far and dim;
+ Who fashions all things to His growing plan,
+ And breaks ... and moulds ... and breaks the heart of man.
+
+ "Take Thou Thy will--so it be her's?..." A hope
+ Shoots a faint arrow instantly--no more.
+ A blinding fire falls from night's glimmering slope.
+ Flame-like the twain meet on the rushy floor--
+ And vanish. King and clansmen blindly grope
+ Into cool air. Across the sky two swans
+ Fly slowly toward the day that palely dawns.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS AND LYRICS
+
+
+
+
+DEATH AND LIFE
+
+_To the memory of Eveleen Nicolls_
+
+
+ I
+
+ The long, dark slope is topped with mist,
+ But here the sun is on the grass:
+ Beneath, the sea-waves break, and twist
+ Backward like snakes of molten glass.
+
+ Across an ancient sand-heaped wall
+ The foot thro' graves forgotten goes,
+ And stops where old, old voices call
+ Thro' generations of repose.
+
+ But where a sorrow of to-day
+ Has set a freshly-fashioned mound,
+ A bird slides down his airy way
+ And makes the silence ring with sound.
+
+
+ II
+
+ What gloom might now our spirits balk
+ Fades out before that high reproof;
+ And thro' the fabric of your talk
+ Go light and shadow, warp and woof,
+
+ With something deeper than the word,--
+ Some stately certitude of faith
+ Whose eye at Life had never blurred,
+ Nor quivered at the eye of Death,
+
+ But saw, in that swift, woman's way,
+ Thro' changings to the changeless Whole,
+ And Life and Death as waves that sway
+ Across the ocean of the Soul.
+
+
+ III
+
+ Then when the hill was lost in mist,
+ And in the sea the sky was glassed,
+ We wandered home in amethyst;
+ And you upon the morrow passed
+
+ On that last journey to the West
+ Whose end was in the Atlantic wave,
+ Where, on your youth's triumphant crest,
+ One stroke, another's life to save,
+
+ With glory crowned your life complete,
+ Proud as the horsed and plumed seas
+ That laid your body at my feet--
+ A wonder past Praxiteles.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Oh! bear her by the weeping crest,
+ And past the fields of fallen ears,
+ On her last journey from the West,
+ This holy Lady Day of tears.
+
+ But yet, tho' heads are bared and bowed,
+ And down the road the keeners keen,
+ Some spirit-music, deep and proud,
+ Slips out their thin, shrill cries between
+
+ And, like the bird that other day,
+ That made the silence ring with sound,
+ It floats along the sun-set way,
+ A joy above our sorrow's mound.
+
+
+ V
+
+ What grief might now our spirits balk
+ Fades out before that high reproof;
+ And thro' the hushed and wavering talk
+ That fills the streets from roof to roof,
+
+ A fire from your high altar shines,
+ And kindles thro' our dusk of strife
+ A faith whose inner eye divines
+ That Death is minister to Life,
+
+ And all our years a moment's dream
+ In one great Mind that grasps the whole,
+ And Life and Death but waves that gleam
+ Along the ocean of the Soul.
+
+
+
+
+A SCHOOLBOY PLAYS CUCHULAIN
+
+
+ 'Way there! for one who hastens forth
+ To guard the Marches of the North,
+ Where Connacht's hosts with flame and brand
+ Hurl menace toward his native land,
+ And Macha's Curse on arm and will
+ Hangs dreadfully from hill to hill.
+
+ 'Way there! Four valorous feet of height,
+ Twelve long, long years of age and fight,
+ He fronts without a thought of fear
+ Ten thousand with his wooden spear.
+ Soon shall he fling the charging field
+ Back on his puissant pasteboard shield,
+ And soon shall haughty Maeve bend down
+ A vassal to his tinsel crown.
+
+ 'Way there! Who laughs has hardly heard
+ A hidden trumpet's secret word,
+ Or glimpsed through those poor arms he bears
+ The weapons that the spirit wears.
+ In that wild breast a thousand years
+ Rise up from ineffectual tears,
+ And kindle once again the flame
+ Of Freedom at a burning name.
+
+ What if for him no flag unfurled
+ Should shake red battle on the world;
+ On other fields, in other mood,
+ The ancient conflict is renewed,
+ And Michael and his warring clan
+ Tramp onward through the heart of man.
+ At Life's loud fires he shall anneal
+ A subtler blade than transient steel,
+ When Love, invincible in Faith,
+ Shall smile upon the face of Death,
+ And Will and Heart, as one, conspire
+ To dare the utmost of desire.
+ Then shall be, with his spirit's lance,
+ Unhorse cold Pride and Circumstance,
+ Shake Wrong's old strongholds to the ground,
+ And Right's victorious trumpet sound,
+ And light Earth's ramparts with the gleam
+ Of Ireland's unextinguished Dream
+ That burned in him who hastened forth
+ To guard the Marches of the North,
+ When Macha's Curse on arm and will
+ Hung dreadfully from hill to hill.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE MOUNTAINS CAME TO BE
+
+
+ A bird once came and said to me,
+ "Hear how the mountains came to be.
+ An angel from his crystal sphere
+ Fell to the earth. A chilly fear
+ Shot thro' his wings from tip to tip,
+ For there was neither boat nor ship,
+ Mountain nor stream, nor maid nor man,
+ Far as the angel's eye could scan;
+ Dead flatness far as he could see
+ Before the mountains came to be.
+ He stretched his wings to fly away,
+ But round his feet the oozy clay
+ Gripped fast, and held him to the ground.
+ He stretched and strove until a sound
+ Went thro' him from he knew not where
+ And said, 'The only way is prayer.'
+ He dropped his wings and raised his eyes,
+ And sent his soul into the skies.
+ He prayed and prayed, and as he prayed
+ A wind among his plumage played
+ And bore him upward toward his sphere.
+ Around his feet from far and near
+ There came a sound that seemed to say,
+ 'Pray on! pray on! we too would pray.
+ Thy prayer has touched the sleeping Powers:
+ Pray on, thy prayer shall yet be ours;
+ We too have wings that pine for flight,
+ We too have eyes that long for light.'
+ Upward he moved, and still his eyes
+ Were fastened on the distant skies,
+ And as he rose toward heaven dim
+ He drew the earth up after him.
+ About his feet the oozy clay
+ Gripped fast, but could not stop or stay
+ His course, till on his skyey stair
+ He paused beyond the need for prayer,
+ While from the air beneath, around,
+ There rose a tumult of glad sound.
+ The angel turned the sound to seek,
+ And lo! his foot was on a peak
+ That fell away to where the world
+ Lay like a painted flag unfurled
+ And shaken out from sea to sea,--
+ And thus the mountains came to be."
+ So said the bird, and what the masque
+ Of meaning hid, I meant to ask;
+ But off he flew before I knew--
+ And yet I think the tale is true
+ If one could only hear aright,
+ And see with something more than sight.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE IN ABSENCE
+
+
+ Hills crowned with age,
+ And solemn seas,
+ Are full of sage
+ Philosophies.
+ Yet, lacking thee,
+ I am not wise:
+ I need thine eyes
+ That I may see!
+
+ Insect and bird
+ Chant prose and verse,
+ God's passion-stirred
+ Interpreters.
+ Howe'er I seek,
+ Their meaning slips:
+ I need thy lips
+ That they may speak!
+
+ Long days that shine,
+ Or richly weep;
+ The dreamful mine
+ Of happy sleep,
+ Without thee, give
+ A slender part:
+ I need thy heart
+ That life may live!
+
+ Hear then my cry,
+ And hasten, sweet!
+ The world and I
+ Are incomplete;
+ Poor with all pelf;
+ Bound most when freed:
+ Thy Self I need,
+ To be my Self!
+
+
+
+
+TREES IN WINTER
+
+
+ Gaunt and spare,
+ The silly trees
+ Strip them bare
+ To winter's breeze;
+
+ Yet when July
+ Sweltered red,
+ Dressed unduly
+ Heel to head!
+
+ Who will whisper
+ Unto me,
+ Why is this
+ Perversity?
+
+ Bent his head
+ A stately beech:
+ Slowly said
+ In gentle speech:
+
+ "Why, O man! not
+ Find a moral
+ (Though you cannot
+ In the laurel,)
+
+ "In our vigour
+ And our pelf,
+ Type and figure
+ Of yourself?
+
+ "Sun-kissed amity
+ Conceals
+ What calamity
+ Reveals:
+
+ "Summer glozes
+ Stain and scar;
+ Winter shows us
+ As we are.
+
+ "Well if thou,
+ In trying hour,
+ Stand, or bow,
+ In naked power,
+
+ "Like the spare
+ But sinewy trees
+ Standing bare
+ To winter's breeze!"
+
+
+
+
+A SPRING CAPRICE BY A ROBIN
+
+_Rubato_
+
+
+ Who, on such a day of spring,
+ Would be careful how he sing?
+ Let the overflowing heart
+ Get a start,
+ Who shall care if no one knows
+ How to find a perfect close
+ To his strain,
+ When the brain--
+ Drunk with sun and hyacinth,
+ Primroses and bursting oak,
+ And the sower's puffs of smoke
+ Over fields of brown--
+ Stumbling down
+ A melodious labyrinth,
+ Somehow, nohow, finds a way out,
+ Has his say out--
+ And begins it all again,
+ Caring nothing how he sing
+ When the brain,
+ Wild with Spring,
+ Gives a start
+ To his mad, melodious, overflowing heart?
+
+ _Kilcarberry, Wexford._
+
+
+
+
+A SPRING RONDEL BY A STARLING
+
+
+ I clink my castanet,
+ And beat my little drum;
+ For spring at last has come,
+ And on my parapet
+ Of chestnut, gummy-wet,
+ Where bees begin to hum,
+ I clink my castanet,
+ And beat my little drum.
+
+ "Spring goes," you say, "suns set."
+ So be it! Why be glum?
+ Enough, the spring has come;
+ And without fear or fret
+ I clink my castanet,
+ And beat my little drum.
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIRY RING
+
+
+ Enfolded in the Fairy Ring
+ My loved one sleeping lies,
+ To simple souls a dreadful thing,
+ For half a hundred eyes
+ Peep out from where among the grass
+ Floats up a magic lay
+ To call the souls of all who pass,
+ To fairyland away.
+
+ But I who know her heart's desire,
+ Fear neither spell nor frown;
+ For not till fire shall stifle fire,
+ Or water water drown,
+ Or love hate love, can any harm
+ In kindred hearts abide.
+ Oh! she can combat charm with charm,
+ My elfin-hearted bride!
+
+ And ye, whose minds are set to win
+ Fame's leaf or fortune's prize!
+ Beware the spell that lurks within
+ The circle of her eyes;
+ For she has power to blow like straws
+ Earth's baubles from the hand,
+ And call the souls of all who pause,
+ Away to fairyland.
+
+
+
+
+"LABORARE EST ORARE,"
+
+A RONDEAU OF FIELD-LABOURERS
+
+
+ "To labour is to pray." We heave
+ The heavy clay; we dig and cleave;
+ And knees and hands deep in the sod,
+ Search out and shape the Will of God
+ Creation's purpose to achieve.
+
+ Slant showers may wound, sharp winds bereave--
+ We lift no soiled and suppliant sleeve:
+ (Sure God and Mary bless the rod:)
+ To labour is to pray.
+
+ And so we are content to leave
+ Prayers for long-headed folk to weave.
+ We work His Will in ear and pod;
+ And when His harvest-eyes applaud,
+ We know--what others but believe--
+ To labour is to pray.
+
+ _Ballymore, Donegal._
+
+
+
+
+PARAPHRASES AND
+INTERPRETATIONS
+
+
+
+
+DAEDALUS AND ICARUS
+
+_The Builder of the Cretan Labyrinth and his Son_
+
+
+ Quote Daedalus to Icarus:
+ "With rule and plumbline,--thus, and--thus,
+ We space and build our labyrinth,
+ And build, besides, a graven plinth
+ To bear the future fame of Us,"
+ Quote Daedalus to Icarus.
+
+ Quoth Icarus to Daedalus:
+ "Before these Cretans make a fuss,
+ And set our names up with a shout,
+ Perhaps we'd better first get out,
+ And show the master-mind of Us,"
+ Quoth Icarus to Daedalus.
+
+ Then round and round went Daedalus,
+ And out and in went Icarus.
+ They parted for an hour's whole space....
+ They met upon the selfsame place!
+ "I think we're stuck," quoth Icarus,
+ "I think we are," quoth Daedalus.
+
+ In short, to be perspicuous,
+ Like this old tale of Daedalus;
+ 'Spite of our mouths with freedom filled,
+ From life's poor trivial things we build
+ A maze about the feet of us
+ That shuts us in like Daedalus.
+
+ But Daedalus and Icarus
+ Made wings, and set them--thus, and--thus;
+ And that blind maze that hemmed them in
+ They sloughed, as drops the snake its skin:
+ And so at last shall all of us,
+ Like Daedalus and Icarus.
+
+
+
+
+A PARAPHRASE
+
+_From the Prose of Jeremy Taylor_
+
+
+ As the silk-worm, shut from sight,
+ Cuts a pathway into light;
+ Makes on mottled leaves repast
+ Till its wormy coat is cast;
+ Winds itself in silken weed;
+ Sheds the future's pearly seed;
+ Leaves behind its dower of silk,
+ And with wings as white as milk
+ Spread for flight, completes its span;
+ So evolves the soul of man.
+
+
+
+
+HOSPITALITY
+
+_From the Irish, Seventh to Tenth Century_
+
+
+ O king of stars that watch the night!
+ Whether my house be dark or bright,
+ Its door to none shall barred be,
+ Lest Christ should close his house to me.
+
+ And if thy house shall hold a guest,
+ And aught from him thou hast suppressed,
+ Not all to him the wrong is done:
+ Thou hast concealed from Mary's Son.
+
+
+
+
+THE STUDENT
+
+_From the Irish, Seventh to Tenth Century_
+
+
+ High on my hedge of bush and tree
+ A blackbird sings his song to me,
+ And far above my lined book
+ I hear the voice of wren and rook.
+
+ From the bush-top, in garb of grey,
+ The cuckoo calls the hours of day.
+ Right well do I--God send me good!--
+ Set down my thoughts within the wood.
+
+
+
+
+AT A HOLY WELL
+
+
+ He dragged his knees from flag to flag,
+ And prayed for health with awe-struck brow,
+ Then hung his ill's discarded rag
+ On the o'erhanging hawthorn bough.
+
+ And in the adoring hush that fell,
+ I, from the form set inly free,
+ Knelt at my heart's most holy well
+ And worshipped mine own mystery.
+
+ _Templemanaghan, Kerry._
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIEST'S LAKE
+
+
+ Beneath the bridge, with noisy rout,
+ The Atlantic fills the quiet lake ...
+ A pause ... a turn ... then with a shout
+ Seaward the brimming waters break.
+
+ "Open thy gates," the Spirit saith,
+ "O Soul! My wave thy shore shall sweep,
+ Then back across the pause of death
+ Draw thee with shoutings to the deep!"
+
+ _Ardbear, Connemara._
+
+
+
+
+SONNETS
+
+
+
+
+A PAPER-SELLER
+
+
+ Clearly, and iterant as a swinging bell,
+ I heard across the surges of the Strand
+ A woman's voice, and saw a woman's hand
+ With "Votes for Women." A sudden vision fell
+ Across my path, and made my pulses swell
+ With agony of joy: I seemed to stand
+ At some far hill, from whence was faintly fanned
+ A whisper, "He descended into Hell."
+
+ Sister! with foot in gutter, foot on kerb,
+ Tasting humiliations's bitter herb
+ In thy great calm of self laid wholly down!
+ Thine are the thorns of Christly souls who bend
+ To lift the world; and thou too shalt ascend
+ To thine own Heaven and everlasting crown!
+
+ _Strand, London._
+
+
+
+
+TO ONE IN PRISON
+
+
+ Dear! on Love's altar thou hast laid thee down,
+ Priestess and Victim of such Sacrifice
+ As might melt praise from very hearts of ice,
+ But wins the scoff of sycophant and clown.
+ Yet in that band, whose glory is the frown
+ Of sceptred tyranny and stained device,
+ Thou hast a place; and thee it shall suffice
+ To tread with them the path to high renown.
+
+ And I--even I, unworthy though I be--
+ For these my wounds of utter loneliness,
+ Tired head and sleepless eyes, some part would claim
+ In the deep rubric of thy mystery;
+ So may I, in proud years that rise to bless,
+ Stand in the shadow of thine honoured name.
+
+ _Nov. 23--Dec. 23, 1910._
+
+
+
+
+A HOME-COMING
+
+
+ What flags are these?... what trumpets?... Oh! what drums?
+ What pride august?... what solemn minstrelsy?
+ Hush! drums, ecstatic drums: say who is she
+ That in the midst majestically comes.
+ Is she some queen whose haughty eye benumbs
+ Proud potentates; whose word can lift the sea
+ Of shattering war, and fling red misery
+ Across the world?... Speak, drums! Oh! aching drums!
+
+ Hush! hush! wild drums, drums in my happy heart!
+ Not thus she comes, my life's exalted queen,
+ But in sweet silence far outlauding praise.
+ Her's not the flaming sword that puts apart,
+ But Right's resistless blade, whose stroke unseen
+ Wounds but to heal, and crown with Freedom's bays!
+
+
+
+
+LOVE, THE DESTROYER
+
+
+ Come from behind those eyes, that I may see
+ Thyself, beloved! not lip, or hand, or brain.
+ These are not thou. These are the servile train
+ That crowd me from thine inmost mystery.
+ Show me thy naked soul!... or it may be
+ That, lacking this, I shall, in Love's mad strain,
+ Shatter the form, and sift it grain by grain
+ To find thine utter Self--thee--very Thee!...
+
+ Ah! Love, forgive!... Be this my penitence
+ That in my passion I have glimpsed the goal
+ Of all calamity, and surely scanned
+ In flood and flame, earthquake and pestilence,
+ Love raging forth, to find Love's inmost soul,
+ With bridal gifts in Ruin's awful hand!
+
+
+
+
+ENVOY
+
+
+
+
+_THE LOVING CUP_
+
+
+ _I_
+
+ _I raise to you, O Queen, this Loving Cup, this Mether,
+ Filled with Mead
+ Made from honey of the heather,
+ Brought by many a humming wing,
+ And with water from the spring;
+ Mixed by cunning hands together
+ In a foamy ferment
+ Thou would lead
+ Sullen tongues to song,
+ If along
+ Harpstrings now a rousing air went._
+
+
+ _II_
+
+ _But in this our souls' espousal
+ Axe nor skeen
+ Throb and bleed
+ For the spear-clash of carousal,
+ Spoils of slaughter
+ Ravening:
+ No, for peace has mixed our mether,
+ With its Mead,
+ O my Queen,
+ Made from honey of the heather,
+ And with water
+ From the spring._
+
+
+ _III_
+
+ _Ah! but what avail
+ Song and ale,
+ If beneath our quaffing
+ Moves not something deeper than our laughing?_
+
+
+ _IV_
+
+ _So to you, O Queen,
+ Here with hands unseen
+ I raise my Heart's deep Mether,
+ Where together,
+ Sweetness brought on Fancy's wing
+ From the flowers
+ Of happy hours,
+ And a draught from Thought's cool spring,
+ Blend in song's melodious ferment,
+ With an undertone
+ Caught in deeper hours alone,
+ When along Life's solemn harp the Spirit's air went._
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+
+_Etain the Beloved_:--This poem is founded on an ancient Irish myth. It
+is not a translation from the Gaelic; but rather is an attempt at
+transfiguration, by seeking to "unfold into light" the spiritual vision
+that was the inspiration, and is the secret of the persistence and
+resilience, of the Celt. Such modifications as I have made in the story
+have neither archaeological nor philological significance: they arise
+entirely from whatever measure of insight into artistic necessity, on
+the side of pure literature, has been granted to me; and also from
+obedience to a view of the universe which is embodied in the ancient
+Irish mythology, and whose operations the personages of the story body
+forth as Psyche bodied forth the soul of humanity to the Greek.
+
+The names of the personages may be pronounced thus: Etain--Etawn',
+Eochaidh--Yo'hee, Ailill--Al'yil, Mider--Mid'yir.
+
+Dagda is the Irish God of Day, Balor the Irish God of Night.
+
+A dun is a fortified dwelling, a liss is a place for domestic animals.
+
+_Death and Life_:--On Friday, August 13, 1909, the author went by
+currach from Dunquin to the Great Blasket Island, Kerry, to visit Miss
+Eveleen Nicolls, M.A., who was spending a holiday on the island. Instead
+of joining her, as was intended, in music and conversation amongst the
+islanders, he had to participate in an endeavour, alas! unsuccessful, to
+restore her to life. She had been bathing with a fisher-girl. The latter
+got into difficulties in the strong Atlantic current, and an effort by
+Miss Nicolls to save the girl ended in the heroic sacrifice of her own
+life.
+
+_A Schoolboy plays Cuchulain_:--Cuchulain, the supreme hero of Celtic
+romance, who, single-handed, defended his province against the army of
+Queen Maeve. Maeve had chosen for a foray the time when the Ulster
+chiefs lay in weakness under a curse by the warrior Goddess, Macha.
+
+_Hospitality_: _The Student_:--Put into verse from the literal
+translations of Kuno Meyer in "Ancient Irish Poetry."
+
+_To One in Prison_: _A Home-coming_:--Occasioned by the imprisonment of
+the author's wife for taking part in the active movement for the
+political enfranchisement of women.
+
+
+
+
+_BOOKS BY JAMES H. COUSINS_
+
+
+ THE QUEST. Cr. 8vo. Cloth, 2s. 6d. net; paper-cover, 1s. net.
+
+ "Rarely is it the fortune of the reviewer to meet with verse of such
+ distinction."--_New Ireland Review._
+
+ "An imagination filled with haunting and refreshing images."--_Black
+ and White._
+
+ "His extraordinary imaginative powers, his skill in painting
+ word-pictures, and the glamour which he throws over all, are
+ marvellous."--_Irish Independent._
+
+
+ THE AWAKENING. Royal 16mo. Cloth, gilt, 1s. net; paper, 6d. net. With
+ decorative borders and cover designed by T. SCOTT.
+
+ "Unique mastery of the sonnet."--_Irish News._
+
+ "Ripe thought fitly expressed. A new pleasure on each
+ page."--_Glasgow Herald._
+
+
+ THE BELL-BRANCH. Foolscap 8vo. Boards, Irish linen back, 1s. net.
+
+ "Artistically Mr. Cousins can only be put below the two leaders of
+ his movement; he has the calm intensity, the subtle strangeness of
+ simplicity, which seem to be as easy as breathing to an Irish
+ poet."--_The Nation._
+
+ "Mr. Cousins has gradually perfected a method of self-expression,
+ and his verse, exquisitely fashioned, delights with its individual
+ note."--_Northern Whig._
+
+ "Many an English poet would willingly sacrifice a page or two of his
+ consummate verse if he might but catch the charm of such a lullaby
+ as this."--_The Times._
+
+
+MAUNSEL AND COMPANY, LIMITED, 96 MIDDLE ABBEY STREET, DUBLIN.
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
+
+
+ Text in italics is surrounded with underscores: _italics_.
+
+ Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Etain the Beloved and Other Poems, by
+James Henry Cousins
+
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