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A  SELECTION  FROM  THE  LOVE  POETRY 
OF  WILLL^M  BUTLER  YEATS 


'O^^ 


University  of  California  •  Berkeley 


PAULINE  FORE  MOFFITT  LIBRARY 


Three  hundred  copies  of  this 
book  have  been  printed. 


The  Cuala  Press  wishes  to 
thank  Mr.  A.  H.  BuUen  and 
Mr.  Fisher  Unwin  for  per- 
mission to  reprint  from  vol- 
umes published  by  them, 
some  of  the  poems  in  this 
selection. 


-lov  . , 

didn  ni  amsoc 


A  SELECTION  FROM  THE  LOVE  POETRY 
OF  WILLIAM  BUTLER  YEATS 


THE  CUALA  PRESS 

CHURCHTOWN 

DUNDRUM 

MCMXIII 


^siW«*. 


svi  JM 


CONTENTS 
EARLT  POEMS  1 890-1 892  Page 

The  Pity  of  Love  i 

The  Rose  of  Battle  i 

When  You  are  Old  2 
The  Rose  of  the  World  3 

THE  WIND  AMONG  THE  REEDS  1 892-1 897 
The  Lover  Tells  of  the  Rose  in  His  Heart       4 
The  Lover  Mourns  for  the  Loss  of  Love  4 

He  Mourns  for  the  Change  that  has  come 
upon  Him  and  His  Beloved  5 

He  Tells  of  a  Valley  full  of  Lovers  5 

He  Remembers  Forgotten  Beauty  6 

He  Bids  His  Beloved  be  at  Peace  7 

He  Gives  His  Beloved  Certain  Rhymes  7 

He  Tells  of  the  Perfect  Beauty  8 

He  Reproves  the  Curlew  8 

The  Travail  of  Passion  8 

The  Lover  asks  Forgiveness  9 

The  Lover  Pleads  with  His  Friends  10 

He  wishes  His  Beloved  were  Dead  i  o 

A  Poet  to  His  Beloved  1 1 

He  Wishes  for  the  Cloths  of  Heaven  1 1 

IN  THE  SEVEN  WOODS  1897-1904 

Adam's  Curse  1 2 

The  Folly  of  Being  Comforted  X  3 


Old  Memory  ''  14 

Under  The  Moon  14 

Baile  and  Aillinn  1 5 

THE  GREEN  HELMET  1 904- 1 9 1 1 

The  Mask  24 

His  Dream  24 

A  Woman  Homer  Sung  25 

Peace  26 

The  Consolation  27 

No  Second  Troy  27 

Reconciliation  28 

King  and  No  King  28 

Against  Unworthy  Praise  29 


EARLT  POEMS 
THE  PITY  OF  LOVE  1890-1892 

A  pity  beyond  all  telling 
Is  hid  in  the  heart  of  love: 
The  folk  who  are  buying  and  selling; 
The  clouds  on  their  journey  above; 
The  cold  wet  winds  ever  blowing; 
And  the  shadowy  hazel  grove 
Where  mouse-grey  waters  are  flowing 
Threaten  the  head  that  I  love. 

THE  ROSE  OF  BATTLE 
Rose  of  all  Roses,  Rose  of  all  the  world  ! 
The  tall  thought-woven  sails,  that  flap  unfurled 
Above  the  tide  of  hours,  trouble  the  air. 
And  God's  bell  buoyed  to  be  the  water's  care; 
While  hushed  from  fear,  or  loud  with  hope,  a  band 
With  blown,  spray-dabbled  hair  gather  at  hand. 
Turn  if  you  may  from  battles  never  done^ 
I  call,  as  they  go  by  me  one  by  one, 
Danger  no  refuge  holds ^  and  war  no  peace ^ 
For  him  who  hears  love  sing  and  never  cease ^ 
Beside  her  clean-swept  hearth^  her  quiet  shade: 
But  gather  all  for  whom  no  love  hath  made 
A  woven  silence^  or  but  came  to  cast 
A  song  into  the  air^  and  singing  past 
To  smile  on  the  pale  dawn;  and  gather  you 

b 


Who  have  sought  more  than  is  in  rain  or  dew 
Or  in  the  sun  and  moon,  or  on  the  earthy 
Or  sighs  amid  the  wandering,  starry  mirth. 
Or  comes  in  laughter  from  the  sea's  sad  lips; 
And  wage  God's  battles  in  the  long  gray  ships. 
The  sad,  the  lonely,  the  insatiable. 
To  these  Old  Night  shall  all  her  mystery  tell; 
God^s  bell  has  claimed  them  by  the  little  cry 
Of  their  sad  hearts,  that  may  not  live  nor  die. 
Rose  of  all  Roses,  Rose  of  all  the  World! 
You,  too,  have  come  where  the  dim  tides  are  hurled 
Upon  the  wharves  of  sorrow,  and  heard  ring 
The  bell  that  calls  us  on;  the  sweet  far  thing. 
Beauty  grown  sad  with  its  eternity- 
Made  you  of  us,  and  of  the  dim  gray  sea. 
Our  long  ships  loose  thought-woven  sails  and  wait, 
For  God  has  bid  them  share  an  equal  fate; 
And  when  at  last  defeated  in  His  wars. 
They  have  gone  down  under  the  same  white  stars, 
We  shall  no  longer  hear  the  little  cry 
Of  our  sad  hearts,  that  may  not  live  nor  die. 


WHEN  YOU  ARE  OLD 
When  you  are  old  and  gray  and  full  of  sleep, 
And  nodding  by  the  fire,  take  down  this  book. 
And  slowly  read,  and  dream  of  the  soft  look 
Your  eyes  had  once  and  of  their  shadows  deep; 

2 


How  many  loved  your  moments  of  glad  grace, 
And  loved  your  beauty  with  love  false  or  true; 
But  one  man  loved  the  pilgrim  soul  in  you, 
And  loved  the  sorrows  of  your  changing  face. 

And  bending  down  beside  the  glowing  bars 
Murmur,  a  little  sadly,  how  love  fled 
And  paced  upon  the  mountains  overhead 
And  hid  his  face  amid  a  crowd  of  stars. 

THE  ROSE  OF  THE  WORLD 

Who  dreamed  that  beauty  passes  like  a  dream  ? 
For  these  red  lips,  with  all  their  mournful  pride, 
Mournful  that  no  new  wonder  may  betide, 
Troy  passed  away  in  one  high  funeral  gleam. 
And  Usna's  children  died. 

We  and  the  labouring  world  are  passing  by: 
Amid  men's  souls,  that  waver  and  give  place 
Like  the  pale  waters  in  their  wintry  race, 
Under  the  passing  stars,  foam  of  the  sky. 
Lives  on  this  lonely  face. 

Bow  down,  archangels,  in  your  dim  abode: 
Before  you  were,  or  any  hearts  to  beat, 
Weary  and  kind  one  lingered  by  His  seat; 
He  made  the  world  to  be  a  grassy  road 
Before  her  wandering  feet. 

3 


THE   WIND   AMONG 
THE  REEDS  1 892-1 897 

THE  LOVER  TELLS  OF  THE  ROSE  IN  HIS  HEART 

All  things  uncomely  and  broken,  all  things  worn  and  old. 
The  cry  of  a  child  by  the  roadway,  the  creak  of  a  lumbering  cart, 
The  heavy  steps  of  the  ploughman,  splashing  the  wintry  mould. 
Are  wronging  your  image  that  blossoms  a  rose  in  the  deeps  of  my 
heart. 

The  wrong  of  unshapely  things  is  a  wrong  too  great  to  be  told; 
I  hunger  to  build  them  anew  and  sit  on  a  green  knoll  apart, 
With  the  earth  and  the  sky  and  the  water,  remade,  like  a  casket 
of  gold 

For  my  dreams  of  your  image  that  blossoms  a  rose  in  the  deeps  of 
my  heart. 

THE  LOVER  MOURNS  FOR 

THE  LOSS  OF  LOVE 

Pale  brows,  still  hands  and  dim  hair, 

I  had  a  beautiful  friend 

And  dreamed  that  the  old  despair 

Would  end  in  love  in  the  end: 

She  looked  in  my  heart  one  day 

And  saw  your  image  v/as  there; 

She  has  gone  weeping  away. 


HE  MOURNS  FOR  THE  CHANGE  THAT  HAS 
COME  UPON  HIM  AND  HIS  BELOVED  AND 
LONGS  FOR  THE  END  OF  THE  WORLD 

Do  you  not  hear  me  calling,  white  deer  with  no  horns  ! 

I  have  been  changed  to  a  hound  with  one  red  ear; 

I  have  been  in  the  Path  of  Stones  and  the  Wood  of  Thorns, 

For  somebody  hid  hatred  and  hope  and  desire  and  fear 

Under  my  feet  that  they  follow  you  night  and  day. 

A  man  with  a  hazel  wand  came  without  sound; 

He  changed  me  suddenly;  I  was  looking  another  way; 

And  now  my  calling  is  but  the  calling  of  a  hound; 

And  Time  and  Birth  and  Change  are  hurrying  by. 

I  would  that  the  Boar  without  bristles  had  come  from  the  West 

And  had  rooted  the  sun  and  moon  and  stars  out  of  the  sky 

And  lay  in  the  darkness,  grunting,  and  turning  to  his  rest. 


HE  TELLS  OF  A  VALLEY  FULL  OF  LOVERS 

I  dreamed  that  I  stood  in  a  valley,  and  amid  sighs. 

For  happy  lovers  passed  two  by  two  where  I  stood; 

And  I  dreamed  my  lost  love  came  stealthily  out  of  the  wood 

With  her  cloud-pale  eyelids  falling  on  dream-dimmed  eyes: 

I  cried  in  my  dream,  O  women^  bid  the  young  men  lay 

Their  heads  on  your  knees ^  and  drown  their  eyes  with  your  hair^ 

Or  remembering  hers  they  will  find  no  other  face  fair 

Till  all  the  valleys  of  the  world  have  been  withered  away , 


HE  REMEMBERS  FORGOTTEN 
BEAUTY 

When  my  arms  wrap  you  round  I  press 
My  heart  upon  the  loveliness 
That  has  long  faded  from  the  world; 
The  jewelled  crowns  that  kings  have  hurled 
In  shadowy  pools,  when  armies  fled; 
The  love-tales  wrought  with  silken  thread 
By  dreaming  ladies  upon  cloth 
That  has  made  fat  the  murderous  moth; 
The  roses  that  of  old  time  were 
Woven  by  ladies  in  their  hair. 
The  dew-cold  lilies  ladies  bore 
Through  many  a  sacred  corridor 
Where  such  gray  clouds  of  incense  rose 
That  only  the  gods'  eyes  did  not  close: 
For  that  pale  breast  and  lingering  hand 
Come  from  a  more  dream-heavy  land, 
A  more  dream-heavy  hour  than  this; 
And  when  you  sigh  from  kiss  to  kiss 
I  hear  white  Beauty  sighing,  too, 
For  hours  when  all  must  fade  like  dew, 
All  but  the  flames,  and  deep  on  deep. 
Throne  over  throne  w^here  in  half  sleep. 
Their  swords  upon  their  iron  knees, 
Brood  her  high  lonely  mysteries 


HE  BIDS  HIS  BELOVED  BE  AT  PEACE 

I  hear  the  Shadowy  Horses,  their  long  manes  a-shake, 
Their  hoofs  heavy  with  tumult,  their  eyes  glimmering  white; 
The  North  unfolds  above  them  clinging,  creeping  night, 
The  East  her  hidden  joy  before  the  morning  break. 
The  West  weeps  in  pale  dew  and  sighs  passing  away, 
The  South  is  pouring  down  roses  of  crimson  fire: 
O  vanity  of  Sleep,  Hope,  Dream,  endless  Desire, 
The  Horses  of  Disaster  plunge  in  the  heavy  clay: 
Beloved,  let  your  eyes  half  close,  and  your  heart  beat 
Over  my  heart,  and  your  hair  fall  over  my  breast. 
Drowning  love's  lonely  hour  in  deep  twilight  of  rest. 
And  hiding  their  tossing  manes  and  their  tumultuous  feet. 

HE  GIVES  HIS  BELOVED  CERTAIN  RHYMES 
Fasten  your  hair  with  a  golden  pin. 
And  bind  up  every  wandering  tress; 
I  bade  my  heart  build  these  poor  rhymes: 
It  worked  at  them,  day  out,  day  in. 
Building  a  sorrowful  loveliness 
Out  of  the  battles  of  old  times. 

You  need  but  lift  a  pearl-pale  hand. 
And  bind  up  your  long  hair  and  sigh; 
And  all  men's  hearts  must  burn  and  beat; 
And  candle-like  foam  on  the  dim  sand. 
And  stars  climbing  the  dew-dropping  sky. 
Live  but  to  light  your  passing  feet. 

7 


HE  TELLS  OF  THE  PERFECT  BEAUTY 

O  cloud-pale  eyelids,  dream-dimmed  eyes, 
The  poets  labouring  all  their  days 
To  build  a  perfect  beauty  in  rhyme 
Are  overthrown  by  a  woman's  gaze 
And  by  the  unlabouring  brood  of  the  skies: 
And  therefore  my  heart  will  bow,  when  dew 
Is  dropping  sleep,  until  God  burn  time, 
Before  the  unlabouring  stars  and  you. 

HE  REPROVES  THE  CURLEW 

O,  curlew,  cry  no  more  in  the  air. 
Or  only  to  the  waters  in  the  West; 
Because  your  crying  brings  to  my  mind 
Passion-dimmed  eyes  and  long  heavy  hair 
That  was  shaken  out  over  my  breast: 
There  is  enough  evil  in  the  crying  of  wind. 

THE  TRAVAIL  OF  PASSION 
When  the  flaming  lute-thronged  angelic  door  is  wide; 
When  an  immortal  passion  breathes  in  mortal  clay; 
Our  hearts  endure  the  scourge,  the  plaited  thorns,  the  way 
Crowded  with  bitter  faces,  the  wounds  in  palm  and  side. 
The  hyssop-heavy  sponge,  the  flowers  by  Kidron  stream. 
We  will  bend  down  and  loosen  our  hair  over  you. 
That  it  may  drop  faint  perfume,  and  be  heavy  with  dew, 
Lilies  of  death-pale  hope,  roses  of  passionate  dream. 

8 


THE  LOVER   ASKS   FORGIVENESS 

BECAUSE  OF  HIS  MANY  MOODS 

If  this  importunate  heart  trouble  your  peace 

With  words  lighter  than  air. 

Or  hopes  that  in  mere  hoping  flicker  and  cease; 

Crumple  the  rose  in  your  hair; 

And  cover  your  lips  with  odorous  twilight  and  say, 

*0  hearts  of  wind-blown  flame  ! 

O  Winds,  elder  than  changing  of  night  and  day. 

That  murmuring  and  longing  came 

From  marble  cities  loud  with  tabors  of  old 

In  dove-gray  faery  lands; 

From  battle  banners,  fold  upon  purple  fold, 

Queens  wrought  with  glimmering  hands; 

That  saw  young  Niamh  hover  with  love-lorn  face 

Above  the  wandering  tide; 

And  lingered  in  the  hidden  desolate  place 

Where  the  last  Phoenix  died, 

And  wrapped  the  flames  above  his  holy  head; 

And  still  murmur  and  long: 

O  Piteous  Hearts,  changing  till  change  be  dead 

In  a  tumultuous  song:' 

And  cover  the  pale  blossoms  of  your  breast 

With  your  dim  heavy  hair. 

And  trouble  with  a  sigh  for  all  things  longing  for  rest 

The  odorous  twilight  there. 


THE  LOVER  PLEADS  WITH  HIS 
FRIEND  FOR  OLD  FRIENDS 

Though  you  are  in  your  shining  days, 

Voices  among  the  crowd 

And  new  friends  busy  with  your  praise. 

Be  not  unkind  or  proud, 

But  think  about  old  friends  the  most: 

Time's  bitter  flood  will  rise. 

Your  beauty  perish  and  be  lost 

For  all  eyes  but  these  eyes. 


HE  WISHES  HIS  BELOVED  WERE  DEAD 

Were  you  but  lying  cold  and  dead, 

And  lights  were  paling  out  of  the  West, 

You  would  come  hither,  and  bend  your  head, 

And  I  would  lay  my  head  on  your  breast; 

And  you  would  murmur  tender  words, 

Forgiving  me,  because  you  were  dead: 

Nor  would  you  rise  and  hasten  away, 

Though  you  have  the  will  of  the  wild  birds. 

But  know  your  hair  was  bound  and  wound 

Above  the  stars  and  moon  and  sun : 

O  would,  beloved,  that  you  lay 

Under  the  dock-leaves  in  the  ground, 

While  lights  were  paling  one  by  one. 


lO 


A  POET  TO  HIS  BELOVED 

I  bring  you  with  reverent  hands 
The  books  of  my  numberless  dreams; 
White  woman  that  passion  has  worn 
As  the  tide  wears  the  dove-gray  sands. 
And  with  heart  more  old  than  the  horn 
That  is  brimmed  from  the  pale  fire  of  time: 
White  woman  with  numberless  dreams 
I  bring  you  my  passionate  rhyme. 

HE  WISHES  FOR  THE  CLOTHS  OF 

HEAVEN 
Had  I  the  heavens'  embroidered  cloths, 
Enwrought  with  golden  and  silver  light, 
The  blue  and  the  dim  and  the  dark  cloths 
Of  night  and  light  and  the  half  light, 
I  would  spread  the  cloths  under  your  feet: 
But  I,  being  poor,  have  only  my  dreams; 
I  have  spread  my  dreams  under  your  feet; 
Tread  softly  because  you  tread  on  my  dreams. 


II 


IN  THE  SEVEN 

WOODS  1 897- 1 904 

ADAM^S  CURSE 
Wc  sat  together  at  one  summer's  end, 
That  beautiful  mild  woman,  your  close  friend, 
And  you  and  I,  and  talked  of  poetry. 

I  said:  *A  line  will  take  us  hours  maybe; 
Yet  if  it  does  not  seem  a  moment's  thought, 
Our  stitching  and  unstitching  has  been  naught. 
Better  go  down  upon  your  marrow-bones 
And  scrub  a  kitchen  pavement,  or  break  stones 
Like  an  old  pauper,  in  all  kinds  of  weather; 
For  to  articulate  sweet  sounds  together 
Is  to  work  harder  than  all  these,  and  yet 
Be  thought  an  idler  by  the  noisy  set 
Of  bankers,  schoolmasters,  and  clergymen 
The  martyrs  call  the  world.' 

That  woman  then 
Murmured  with  her  young  voice,  for  whose  mild 

sake 
There's  many  a  one  shall  find  out  all  heartache 
In  finding  that  it's  young  and  mild  and  low: 
'There  is  one  thing  that  all  we  women  know, 
Although  wc  never  heard  of  it  at  school — 
That  we  must  labour  to  be  beautiful.' 

12 


I  said:  *It's  certain  there  is  no  fine  thing 

Since  Adam*s  fall  but  needs  much  labouring. 

There  have  been  lovers  who  thought  love  should  be 

So  much  compounded  of  high  courtesy 

That  they  would  sigh  and  quote  with  learned  looks 

Precedents  out  of  beautiful  old  books; 

Yet  now  it  seems  an  idle  trade  enough.' 

We  sat  grown  quiet  at  the  name  of  love; 
We  saw  the  last  embers  of  daylight  die, 
And  in  the  trembling  blue-green  of  the  sky 
A  moon,  worn  as  if  it  had  been  a  shell 
Washed  by  time's  waters  as  they  rose  and  fell 
About  the  stars  and  broke  in  days  and  years. 

I  had  a  thought  for  no  one's  but  your  ears; 

That  you  were  beautiful,  and  that  I  strove 

To  love  you  in  the  old  high  way  of  love; 

That  it  had  all  seemed  happy,  and  yet  we'd  grown 

As  weary-hearted  as  that  hollow  moon. 

THE  FOLLY  OF  BEING  COMFORTED 

One  that  is  ever  kind  said  yesterday: 
'Your  well-beloved's  hair  has  threads  of  grey. 
And  little  shadows  come  about  her  eyes; 
Time  can  but  make  it  easier  to  be  wise, 
Though  now  it's  hard,  till  trouble  is  at  an  end; 

13 


And  so  be  patient,  be  wise  and  patient,  friend.' 
But,  heart,  there  is  no  comfort,  not  a  grain; 
Time  can  but  make  her  beauty  over  again. 
Because  of  that  great  nobleness  of  hers 
The  fire  that  stirs  about  her  when  she  stirs 
Burns  but  more  clearly.  O  she  had  not  these  ways, 
When  all  the  wild  summer  was  in  her  gaze. 

0  heart !  O  heart !  if  she'd  but  turn  her  head. 
You'd  know  the  folly  of  being  comforted. 

OLD  MEMORY 

Thought  fly  to  her  when  the  end  of  day 

Awakens  an  old  memory,  and  say, 

'Your  strength,  that  is  so  lofty  and  fierce  and  kind. 

It  might  call  up  a  new  age,  calling  to  mind 

The  queens  that  were  imagined  long  ago, 

Is  but  half  yours:  he  kneaded  in  the  dough 

Through  the  long  years  of  youth,  and  who  would  have  thought 

It  all,  and  more  than  it  all,  would  come  to  naught, 

And  that  dear  words  meant  nothing?'  But  enough, 

For  when  we  have  blamed  the  wind  we  can  blame  love; 

Or,  if  there  needs  be  more,  be  nothing  said 

That  would  be  harsh  for  children  that  have  strayed. 

UNDER  THE  MOON 

1  have  no  happiness  in  dreaming  of  Brycelinde, 
Nor  Avalon  the  grass-green  hollow,  nor  Joyous  Isle, 


Where  one  found  Lancelot  crazed  and  hid  him  for  a  while; 

Nor  Ulad,  when  Naoise  had  thrown  a  sail  upon  the  wind. 

Nor  lands  that  seem  too  dim  to  be  burdens  on  the  heart; 

Land-under- Wave,  where  out  of  the  moon's  light  and  the  sun's 

Seven  old  sisters  wind  the  threads  of  the  long-lived  ones; 

Land-of-the-Tower,  where  Aengus  has  thrown  the  gates  apart, 

And  Wood-of- Wonders,  where  one  kills  an  ox  at  dawn. 

To  find  it  when  night  falls  laid  on  a  golden  bier: 

Therein  are  many  queens  like  Bran  wen  and  Guinivere; 

And  Niamh  and  Laban  and  Fand,  who  could  change  to  an  otter 

or  fawn. 

And  the  wood-woman,  whose  lover  was  changed  to  a  blue-eyed 

hawk; 

And  whether  I  go  in  my  dreams  by  woodland,  or  dun,  or  shore, 

Or  on  the  unpeopled  waves  with  kings  to  pull  at  the  oar, 

I  hear  the  harp-string  praise  them,  or  hear  their  mournful  talk. 

Because  of  a  story  I  heard  under  the  thin  horn 

Of  the  third  moon,  that  hung  between  the  night  and  the  day, 

To  dream  of  women  whose  beauty  was  folded  in  dismay. 

Even  in  an  old  story,  is  a  burden  not  to  be  borne. 


BAILE  AND  AILLINN 

Argument.  Baile  and  Aillinn  were  lovers,  but  Aen- 
gus, the  Master  of  Love,  wishing  them  to  be  happy 
in  his  own  land  among  the  dead,  told  to  each  a  story 
of  the  other's  death,  so  that  their  hearts  were  broken 
and  they  died. 

15 


/  hardly  hear  the  curlew  cry^ 
Nor  the  grey  rush  when  wind  is  high^ 
Before  my  thoughts  begin  to  run 
On  the  heir  of  JJlad^  Buans  son^ 
Baile  who  had  the  honey  mouthy 
And  that  mild  woman  of  the  souths 
Aillinn^  who  was  King  Lugaid's  heir. 
Their  love  was  never  drowned  in  care 
Of  this  or  that  things  nor  grew  cold 
Because  their  bodies  had  grown  old; 
Being  forbid  to  marry  on  earth 
They  blossomed  to  immortal  mirth. 

About  the  time  when  Christ  was  born, 
When  the  long  wars  for  the  White  Horn 
And  the  Brown  Bull  had  not  yet  come, 
Young  Baile  Honey-Mouth,  whom  some 
Called  rather  Baile  Little- Land, 
Rode  out  of  Emain  with  a  band 
Of  harpers  and  young  men,  and  they 
Imagined,  as  they  struck  the  way 
To  many  pastured  Muirthemne, 
That  all  things  fell  out  happily 
And  there,  for  all  that  fools  had  said, 
Baile  and  Aillinn  would  be  wed. 

They  found  an  old  man  running  there. 
He  had  ragged  long  grass-yellow  hair; 

i6 


He  had  knees  that  stuck  out  of  his  hose; 
He  had  puddle  water  in  his  shoes; 
He  had  half  a  cloak  to  keep  him  dry; 
Although  he  had  a  squirrel's  eye. 

0  wandering  birds  and  rushy  beds^ 
Tou  put  such  folly  in  our  heads 
With  all  this  crying  in  the  wind 
No  common  love  is  to  our  mind. 
And  our  poor  Kate  or  Nan  is  less 
Than  any  whose  unhappiness 
Awoke  the  harp  strings  long  ago. 

Yet  they  that  know  all  things  but  know 

That  all  life  had  to  give  us  is 

A  child's  laughter,  a  woman  s  kiss. 

Who  was  it  put  so  great  a  scorn 

In  the  grey  reeds  that  night  and  morn 

Are  trodden  and  broken  by  the  herds ^ 

And  in  the  light  bodies  of  birds 

That  north  wind  tumbles  to  and  fro 

And  pinches  among  hail  and  snow  ? 

That  runner  said  'I  am  from  the  south; 

1  run  to  Baile  Honey-Mouth 
To  tell  him  how  the  girl  Aillinn 
Rode  from  the  country  of  her  kin 
And  old  and  young  men  rode  with  her: 
For  all  that  country  had  been  astir 

«7 


If  anybody  half  as  fair 
Had  chosen  a  husband  anywhere 
But  wliere  it  could  see  her  every  day. 
When  they  had  ridden  a  little  way 
An  old  man  caught  the  horse's  head 
With  'You  must  home  again  and  wed 
With  somebody  in  your  own  land.* 
A  young  man  cried  and  kissed  her  hand 
'O  lady,  wed  with  one  of  us;' 
And  when  no  face  grew  piteous 
For  any  gentle  thing  she  spake 
She  fell  and  died  of  the  heart-break.' 

Because  a  lover's  heart's  worn  out 
Being  tumbled  and  blown  about 
By  its  own  blind  imagining, 
And  will  believe  that  anything 
That  is  bad  enough  to  be  true,  is  true, 
Baile's  heart  was  broken  in  two; 
And  he  being  laid  upon  green  boughs 
Was  carried  to  the  goodly  house 
Where  the  hound  of  Ulad  sat  before 
The  brazen  pillars  of  his  door; 
His  face  bowed  low  to  weep  the  end 
Of  the  harper's  daughter  and  her  friend; 
For  although  years  had  passed  away 
He  always  wept  them  on  that  day, 
I)  1 8 


For  on  that  day  they  had  been  betrayed; 
And  now  that  Honey-Mouth  is  laid 
Under  a  cairn  of  sleepy  stone 
Before  his  eyes,  he  has  tears  for  none. 
Although  he  is  carrying  stone,  but  two 
For  whom  the  cairn's  but  heaped  anew. 

We  hold  because  our  memory  is 

So  full  of  that  thing  and  of  this 

That  out  of  sight  is  out  of  mind. 

But  the  grey  rush  under  the  wind 

And  the  grey  bird  with  crooked  bill 

Have  such  long  memories  that  they  still 

"Remember  Deirdre  and  her  man^ 

And  when  we  walk  with  Kate  or  Nan 

About  the  windy  water  side 

Our  heart  can  hear  the  voices  chide. 

How  could  we  be  so  soon  content 

Who  know  the  way  that  Naoise  went  ? 

And  they  have  news  of  Deirdre" s  eyes 

Who  being  lovely  was  so  wise,, 

Ah  wise,,  my  heart  knows  well  how  wise. 

Now  had  that  old  gaunt  crafty  one. 
Gathering  his  cloak  about  him,  run 
Where  Aillinn  rode  with  waiting  maids 
Who  amid  leafy  lights  and  shades 

19 


Dreamed  of  the  hands  that  would  unlace 

Their  bodices  in  some  dim  place 

When  they  had  come  to  the  marriage  bed; 

And  harpers  pondering  with  bowed  head 

A  music  that  had  thought  enough 

Of  the  ebb  of  all  things  to  make  love 

Grow  gentle  without  sorrowings; 

And  leather-coated  men  with  slings 

Who  peered  about  on  every  side; 

And  amid  leafy  light  he  cried, 

'He  is  well  out  of  wind  and  wave, 

They  have  heaped  the  stones  above  his  grave 

In  Muirthemne  and  over  it 

In  changeless  Ogham  letters  writ 

Baik  that  was  ofRurys  seed. 

But  the  gods  long  ago  decreed 

No  waiting  maid  should  ever  spread 

Baile  and  Aillinn's  marriage  bed, 

For  they  should  clip  and  clip  again 

Where  wild  bees  hive  on  the  Great  Plain. 

Therefore  it  is  but  little  news 

That  put  this  hurry  in  my  shoes.' 

And  hurrying  to  the  south  he  came 
To  that  high  hill  the  herdsmen  name 
The  Hill  Seat  of  Leighin,  because 
Some  god  or  king  had  made  the  laws 

20 


That  held  the  land  together  there. 

In  old  times  among  the  clouds  of  the  air. 

That  old  man  climbed;  the  day  grew  dim; 
Two  swans  came  flying  up  to  him 
Linked  by  a  gold  chain  each  to  each 
And  with  low  murmuring  laughing  speech 
Alighted  on  the  windy  grass. 
They  knew  him:  his  changed  body  was 
Tall,  proud  and  ruddy,  and  light  wings 
Were  hovering  over  the  harp  strings 
That  Etain,  Midhir's  wife,  had  wove 
In  the  hid  place,  being  crazed  by  love. 

What  shall  I  call  them  ?  fish  that  swim 
Scale  rubbing  scale  where  light  is  dim 
By  a  broad  water-lily  leaf; 
Or  mice  in  the  one  wheaten  sheaf 
Forgotten  at  the  threshing  place; 
Or  birds  lost  in  the  one  clear  space 
Of  morning  light  in  a  dim  sky ; 
Or  it  may  be,  the  eyelids  of  one  eye 
Or  the  door  pillars  of  one  house. 
Or  two  sweet  blossoming  apple  boughs 
That  have  one  shadow  on  the  ground; 
Or  the  two  strings  that  made  one  sound 
Where  that  wise  harper's  finger  ran; 

21 


For  this  young  girl  and  this  young  man 
Have  happiness  without  an  end 
Because  they  have  made  so  good  a  friend. 
They  know  all  wonders,  for  they  pass 
The  towery  gates  of  Gorias 
And  Findrias  and  Falias 
And  long-forgotten  Murias, 
Among  the  giant  kings  whose  hoard 
Cauldron  and  spear  and  stone  and  sword 
Was  robbed  before  Earth  gave  the  wheat; 
Wandering  from  broken  street  to  street 
They  come  where  some  huge  watcher  is 
And  tremble  with  their  love  and  kiss, 

They  know  undying  things,  for  they 
Wander  where  earth  withers  away. 
Though  nothing  troubles  the  great  streams 
But  light  from  the  pale  stars,  and  gleams 
From  the  holy  orchards,  where  there  is  none 
But  fruit  that  is  of  precious  stone, 
Or  apples  of  the  sun  and  moon. 

What  were  our  praise  to  them:  they  eat 
Quiet's  wild  heart,  like  daily  meat. 
Who  when  night  thickens  are  afloat 
On  dappled  skins  in  a  glass  boat 
Far  out  under  a  windless  sky, 

22 


While  over  them  birds  of  Aengus  fly, 
And  over  the  tiller  and  the  prowr 
And  waving  w^hite  w^ings  to  and  fro 
Awaken  wanderings  of  light  air 
To  stir  their  coverlet  and  their  hair. 

And  poets  found,  old  writers  say, 

A  yew  tree  where  his  body  lay, 

But  a  wild  apple  hid  the  grass 

With  its  sweet  blossom  where  hers  was; 

And  being  in  good  heart,  because 

A  better  time  had  come  again 

After  the  deaths  of  many  men, 

And  that  long  fighting  at  the  ford, 

They  wrote  on  tablets  of  thin  board. 

Made  of  the  apple  and  the  yew. 

All  the  love  stories  that  they  knew. 

Let  rush  and  bird  cry  out  their  Jill 
Of  the  harper  s  daughter  if  they  will^ 
Beloved,  lam  not  afraid  of  her 
She  is  not  wiser  nor  lovelier. 
And  you  are  more  high  of  heart  than  she 
For  all  her  wanderings  over- sea; 
But  Td  have  bird  and  rush  forget 
Those  other  two,  for  never  yet 
Has  lover  lived  but  longed  to  wive 
Like  them  that  are  no  more  alive, 

23 


THE  GREEN  HELMET 

1904-191 1 


THE  MASK 
*Put  off  that  mask  of  burning  gold 
With  emerald  eyes.' 
*0  no,  my  dear,  you  make  so  bold 
To  find  if  hearts  be  wild  and  wise, 
And  yet  not  cold.* 

*I  would  but  find  what's  there  to  find, 
Love  or  deceit.' 

*It  was  the  mask  engaged  your  mind, 
And  after  set  your  heart  to  beat. 
Not  what's  behind.' 

*But  lest  you  are  my  enemy, 
I  must  enquire.' 
*0  no,  my  dear,  let  all  that  be. 
What  matter,  so  there  is  but  fire 
In  you,  in  me  ?' 


HIS  DREAM 
I  swayed  upon  the  gaudy  stern 
The  butt  end  of  a  steering  oar, 
And  everywhere  that  I  could  turn 
Men  ran  upon  the  shore. 

24 


And  though  I  would  have  hushed  the  crowd 
There  was  no  mother's  son  but  said, 
'What  is  the  figure  in  a  shroud 
Upon  a  gaudy  bed  ?' 

And  fishes  bubbling  to  the  brim 
Cried  out  upon  that  thing  beneath. 
It  had  such  dignity  of  limb, 
By  the  sweet  name  of  Death. 

Though  I'd  my  finger  on  my  lip. 
What  could  I  but  take  up  the  song  ? 
And  fish  and  crowd  and  gaudy  ship 
Cried  out  the  whole  night  long. 

Crying  amid  the  glittering  sea. 
Naming  it  with  ecstatic  breath. 
Because  it  had  such  dignity 
By  the  sweet  name  of  Death. 

A  WOMAN  HOMER  SUNG 

If  any  man  drew  near 

When  I  was  young, 

I  thought,  'He  holds  her  dear,' 

And  shook  with  hate  and  fear. 

But  oh,  't  was  bitter  wrong 

If  he  could  pass  her  by 

With  an  indifferent  eye.    ^^  ^^^.^j  ^^,^^ 

25 


Whereon  I  wrote  and  wrought, 
And  now,  being  gray, 
I  dream  that  I  have  brought 
To  such  a  pitch  my  thought 
That  coming  time  can  say, 
*He  shadowed  in  a  glass 
What  thing  her  body  was.* 

For  she  had  fiery  blood 
When  I  was  young, 
And  trod  so  sweetly  proud 
As  't  were  upon  a  cloud, 
A  woman  Homer  sung. 
That  life  and  letters  seem 
But  an  heroic  dream. 

PEACE 
Ah,  but  Time  has  touched  a  form 
That  could  show  what  Homer's  age 
Bred  to  be  a  hero's  wage. 

'Were  not  all  her  life  but  storm,  '^^^^  ^  '^^^  jf^ 

Would  not  painters  paint  a  form 
Of  such  noble  lines'  I  said. 
'Such  a  delicate  high  head, 
So  much  sternness  and  such  charm, 
Till  they  had  changed  us  to  like  strength  ?* 
Ah,  but  peace  that  comes  at  length, 
Came  when  Time  had  touched  her  form. 

26 


THE  CONSOLATION 

I  had  this  thought  awhile  ago, 
'My  darling  cannot  understand 
What  I  have  done,  or  what  would  do 
In  this  blind  bitter  land.' 

And  I  grew  weary  of  the  sun 
Until  my  thoughts  cleared  up  again, 
Remembering  that  the  best  I  have  done 
Was  done  to  make  it  plain; 

That  every  year  I  have  cried,  'At  length 
My  darling  understands  it  all, 
Because  I  have  come  into  my  strength, 
And  words  obey  my  call.' 

That  had  she  done  so  who  can  say 
What  would  have  shaken  from  the  sieve  ? 
I  might  have  thrown  poor  words  away 
And  been  content  to  live. 


NO  SECOND  TROY 

Why  should  I  blame  her  that  she  filled  my  days 
With  misery,  or  that  she  would  of  late 
Have  taught  to  ignorant  men  most  violent  ways, 
Or  hurled  the  little  streets  upon  the  great, 

27 


Had  they  but  courage  equal  to  desire  ? 

What  could  have  made  her  peaceful  with  a  mind 

That  nobleness  made  simple  as  a  fire, 

With  beauty  like  a  tightened  bow,  a  kind 

That  is  not  natural  in  an  age  like  this. 

Being  high  and  solitary  and  most  stern  ? 

Why,  what  could  she  have  done  being  what  she  is? 

Was  there  another  Troy  for  her  to  burn  ? 

RECONCILIATION 

Some  may  have  blamed  you  that  you  took  away 

The  verses  that  could  move  them  on  the  day 

When,  the  ears  being  deafened,  the  sight  of  the  eyes  blind 

With  lightning  you  went  from  me,  and  I  could  find 

Nothing  to  make  a  song  about  but  kings, 

Helmets,  and  swords,  and  half-forgotten  things 

That  were  like  memories  of  you —  but  now 

We'll  out,  for  the  world  lives  as  long  ago; 

And  while  we're  in  our  laughing,  weeping  fit, 

Hurl  helmets,  crowns,  and  swords  into  the  pit. 

But,  dear,  cling  close  to  me;  since  you  were  gone. 

My  barren  thoughts  have  chilled  me  to  the  bone. 

KING  AND  NO  KING 

'Would  it  were  anything  but  merely  voice  !' 
The  No  King  cried  who  after  that  was  King, 
Because  he  had  not  heard  of  anything 
That  balanced  with  a  word  is  more  than  noise; 

28 


Yet  Old  Romance  being  kind,  let  him  prevail 

Somewhere  or  somehow  that  I  have  forgot, 

Though  he'd  but  cannon —  Whereas  we  that  had  thought 

To  have  lit  upon  as  clean  and  sweet  a  talc 

Have  been  defeated  by  that  pledge  you  gave 

In  momentary  anger  long  ago; 

And  I  that  have  not  your  faith,  how  shall  I  know 

That  in  the  blinding  light  beyond  the  grave 

We'll  find  so  good  a  thing  as  that  we  have  lost  f 

The  hourly  kindness,  the  day's  common  speech. 

The  habitual  content  of  each  with  each 

When  neither  soul  nor  body  has  been  crossed. 

AGAINST  UNWORTHY  PRAISE 

O  heart,  be  at  peace,  because 
Nor  knave  nor  dolt  can  break 
What 's  not  for  their  applause. 
Being  for  a  woman's  sake. 
Enough  if  the  work  has  seemed. 
So  did  she  your  strength  renew, 
A  dream  that  a  lion  had  dreamed 
Till  the  wilderness  cried  aloud, 
A  secret  between  you  two. 
Between  the  proud  and  the  proud. 

What,  still  you  would  have  their  praise  ! 
But  here's  a  haughtier  text, 

29 


The  labyrinth  of  her  days 
That  her  own  strangeness  perplexed; 
And  how  what  her  dreaming  gave 
Earned  slander,  ingratitude, 
From  self-same  dolt  and  knave; 
Aye,  and  worse  wrong  than  these. 
Yet  she,  singing  upon  her  road, 
Half  lion,  half  child,  is  at  peace. 


Here  ends  'A  Selection  from  the  Love 
Poetry  of  William  Butler  Yeats  1 890- 
1 9 1 1 .'  Printed  and  published  by  Eliz- 
abeth C.  Yeats  at  The  Cuala  Press, 
Churchtown,  Dundrum,  in  the 
County  of  Dublin,  Ireland. 
Finished  in  the  last  week  of 
May,  in  the  year  nine- 
teen hundred  and 
thirteen.