A cursing rogue with a merry face, |
A bundle of rags upon a crutch, |
Stumbled upon that windy place |
Called Cruachan,1 and it was as much |
As the one sturdy leg could do |
To keep him upright while he
cursed. |
He had counted, where long years ago |
Queen Maeves nine Maines had been nursed, |
A pair
of lapwings, one old sheep, |
And not a house to the plains edge, |
When close to his right hand a heap |
Of grey stones and a rocky ledge |
Reminded him that he could make, |
If he but shifted a few stones, |
A
shelter till the daylight broke. |
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But while he fumbled with the stones |
They toppled over; Were it not |
I have
a lucky wooden shin |
I had been hurt; and toppling brought |
Before his eyes, where stones had been, |
A
dark deep hollow in the rock. |
He gave a gasp and thought to have fled, |
Being certain it was no right
rock |
Because an ancient history said |
Hell Mouth lay open near that place, |
And yet stood still, because
inside |
A great lad with a beery face |
Had tucked himself away beside |
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A ladle and a tub of beer, |
And
snored, no phantom by his look. |
So with a laugh at his own fear |
He crawled into that pleasant nook. |
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Night grows uneasy near the dawn |
Till even I sleep light; but who |
Has tired of his own company? |
What
one of Maeves nine brawling sons |
Sick of his grave has wakened me? |
But let him keep his grave for
once |
That I may find the sleep I have lost. |
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What care I if you sleep or wake? |
But Ill have no man call
me ghost. |
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Say what you please, but from daybreak |
Ill sleep another century. |
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And I will talk before I
sleep |
And drink before I talk. |
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And he |
Had dipped the wooden ladle deep |
Into the sleepers tub of beer |
Had not the sleeper started up. |
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Before you have dipped it in the beer |
I dragged from Gobans mountain-
top |
Ill have assurance that you are able |
To value beer; no half-legged fool |
Shall dip his nose into my
ladle |
Merely for stumbling on this hole |
In the bad hour before the dawn. |
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Why, beer is only beer. |
But
say |
Ill sleep until the winters gone, |
Or maybe to Midsummer Day, |
And drink, and you will sleep that
length. |
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Id like to sleep till winters gone |
Or till the sun is in his strength. |
This blast has chilled me to
the bone. |
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I had no better plan at first. |
I thought to wait for that or this; |
Maybe the weather was accursed |
Or I had no woman there to kiss; |
So slept for half a year or so; |
But year by year I found that less |
Gave
me such pleasure Id forgo |
Even a half-hours nothingness, |
And when at one years end I found |
I had
not waked a single minute, |
I chose this burrow under ground. |
Ill sleep away all time within it: |
My sleep
were now nine centuries |
But for those mornings when I find |
The lapwing at their foolish cries |
And the
sheep bleating at the wind |
As when I also played the fool. |
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The beggar in a rage began |
Upon his hunkers
in the hole, |
Its plain that you are no right man |
To mock at everything I love |
As if it were not worth the
doing. |
Id have a merry life enough |
If a good Easter wind were blowing, |
And though the winter wind
is bad |
I should not be too down in the mouth |
For anything you did or said |
If but this wind were in the
south. |
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You cry aloud, O would twere spring |
Or that the wind would shift a point, |
And do not know that
you would bring, |
If time were suppler in the joint, |
Neither the spring nor the south wind |
But the hour
when you shall pass away |
And leave no smoking wick behind, |
For all life longs for the Last Day |
And
theres no man but cocks his ear |
To know when Michaels trumpet cries |
That flesh and bone may disappear, |
And souls as if they were but sighs, |
And there be nothing but God left; |
But I alone being blessèd keep |
Like some old rabbit to my cleft |
And wait Him in a drunken sleep. |
He dipped his ladle in the tub |
And
drank and yawned and stretched him out, |
The other shouted, You would rob |
My life of every pleasant
thought |
And every comfortable thing, |
And so take that and that. Thereon |
He gave him a great pummelling, |
But might have pummelled at a stone |
For all the sleeper knew or cared; |
And after heaped up stone on
stone, |
And then, grown weary, prayed and cursed |
And heaped up stone on stone again, |
And prayed
and cursed and cursed and fled |
From Maeve and all that juggling plain, |
Nor gave God thanks till overhead |
The clouds were brightening with the dawn. |