Poets with whom I learned my trade, |
Companions of the Cheshire Cheese, |
Heres an old story Ive re-
made, |
Imagining twould better please |
Your ears than stories now in fashion, |
Though you may think I
waste my breath |
Pretending that there can be passion |
That has more life in it than death, |
And though
at bottling of your wine |
Old wholesome Goban had no say; |
The morals yours because its mine. |
|
|
|
|
When
cups went round at close of day |
Is not that how good stories run? |
The gods were sitting at the board |
In their great house at Slievenamon. |
They sang a drowsy song, or snored, |
For all were full of wine and
meat. |
The smoky torches made a glare |
On metal Goban d hammered at, |
On old deep silver rolling
there |
Or on some still unemptied cup |
That he, when frenzy stirred his thews, |
Had hammered out on
mountain top |
To hold the sacred stuff he brews |
That only gods may buy of him. |
|
|
|
|
Now from that juice
that made them wise |
All those had lifted up the dim |
Imaginations of their eyes, |
For one that was like
woman made |
Before their sleepy eyelids ran |
And trembling with her passion said, |
Come out and dig
for a dead man, |
Whos burrowing somewhere in the ground, |
And mock him to his face and then |
Hollo
him on with horse and hound, |
For he is the worst of all dead men. |
|
|
|
|
We should be dazed and terror-
struck, |
If we but saw in dreams that room, |
Those wine-drenched eyes, and curse our luck |
That emptied
all our days to come. |
I knew a woman none could please, |
Because she dreamed when but a child |
Of
men and women made like these; |
And after, when her blood ran wild, |
Had ravelled her own story out, |
And said, In two or in three years |
I needs must marry some poor lout, |
And having said it, burst in tears. |
|
|
|
|
Since, tavern comrades, you have died, |
Maybe your images have stood, |
Mere bone and muscle thrown
aside, |
Before that roomful or as good. |
You had to face your ends when young |
Twas wine or women,
or some curse |
But never made a poorer song |
That you might have a heavier purse, |
Nor gave loud
service to a cause |
That you might have a troop of friends. |
You kept the Muses sterner laws, |
And unrepenting
faced your ends, |
And therefore earned the rightand yet |
Dowson and Johnson most I praise |
To troop
with those the worlds forgot, |
And copy their proud steady gaze. |
|
|
|
|
The Danish troop was driven out |
Between
the dawn and dusk, she said; |
Although the event was long in doubt, |
Although the King of Irelands dead |
And half the kings, before sundown |
All was accomplished. |
|
|
|
|
When this day |
Murrough, the King of Irelands
son, |
Foot after foot was giving way, |
He and his best troops back to back |
Had perished there, but the
Danes ran, |
Stricken with panic from the attack, |
The shouting of an unseen man; |
And being thankful
Murrough found, |
Led by a footsole dipped in blood |
That had made prints upon the ground, |
Where by
old thorn-trees that man stood; |
And though when he gazed here and there, |
He had but gazed on thorn-
trees, spoke, |
Who is the friend that seems but air |
And yet could give so fine a stroke? |
Thereon a young
man met his eye, |
Who said, Because she held me in |
Her love, and would not have me die, |
Rock-nurtured
Aoife took a pin, |
And pushing it into my shirt, |
Promised that for a pins sake, |
No man should see to do
me hurt; |
But there its gone; I will not take |
The fortune that had been my shame |
Seeing, Kings son,
what wounds you have. |
Twas roundly spoke, but when night came |
He had betrayed me to his grave, |
For he and the Kings son were dead. |
Id promised him two hundred years, |
And when for all Id done
or said |
And these immortal eyes shed tears |
He claimed his countrys need was most, |
Id saved his
life, yet for the sake |
Of a new friend he has turned a ghost. |
What does he care if my heart break? |
I
call for spade and horse and hound |
That we may harry him. Thereon |
She cast herself upon the ground |
And rent her clothes and made her moan: |
Why are they faithless when their might |
Is from the holy
shades that rove |
The grey rock and the windy light? |
Why should the faithfullest heart most love |
The
bitter sweetness of false faces? |
Why must the lasting love what passes, |
Why are the gods by men betrayed? |
|
|
|
|
But thereon every god stood up |
With a slow smile and without sound, |
And stretching forth his arm and
cup |
To where she moaned upon the ground, |
Suddenly drenched her to the skin; |
And she with Gobans
wine adrip, |
No more remembering what had been, |
Stared at the gods with laughing lip. |
|
|
|
|
I have kept
my faith, though faith was tried, |
To that rock-born, rock-wandering foot, |
And the worlds altered since
you died, |
And I am in no good repute |
With the loud host before the sea, |
That think sword-strokes were
better meant |
Than lovers musiclet that be, |
So that the wandering foots content. |