The Double Vision of Michael Robartes
On the grey rock of Cashel the minds eye | Has called up the cold spirits that are born | When the old
moon is vanished from the sky | And the new still hides her horn. | | | | | Under blank eyes and fingers never still | The particular is pounded till it is man. | When had I my own will? | O not since life began. | | | | | Constrained,
arraigned, baffled, bent and unbent | By these wire-jointed jaws and limbs of wood, | Themselves obedient, | Knowing not evil and good; | | | | | Obedient to some hidden magical breath. | They do not even feel, so abstract
are they, | So dead beyond our death, | Triumph that we obey. | | | | | On the grey rock of Cashel I suddenly
saw | A Sphinx with woman breast and lion paw, | A Buddha, hand at rest, | Hand lifted up that blest; | | | | | And
right between these two a girl at play | That, it may be, had danced her life away, | For now being dead
it seemed | That she of dancing dreamed. | | | | | Although I saw it all in the minds eye | There can be nothing
solider till I die; | I saw by the moons light | Now at its fifteenth night. | | | | | One lashed her tail; her eyes lit by
the moon | Gazed upon all things known, all things unknown, | In triumph of intellect | With motionless head
erect. | | | | | That others moonlit eyeballs never moved, | Being fixed on all things loved, all things unloved, | Yet
little peace he had, | For those that love are sad. | | | | | O little did they care who danced between, | And little
she by whom her dance was seen | So she had outdanced thought. | Body perfection brought, | | | | | For what
but eye and ear silence the mind | With the minute particulars of mankind? | Mind moved yet seemed to
stop | As twere a spinning-top. | | | | | In contemplation had those three so wrought | Upon a moment, and so
stretched it out | That they, time overthrown, | Were dead yet flesh and bone. | | | | | I knew that I had seen,
had seen at last | That girl my unremembering nights hold fast | Or else my dreams that fly | If I should rub
an eye, | | | | | And yet in flying fling into my meat | A crazy juice that makes the pulses beat | As though I had
been undone | By Homers Paragon | | | | | Who never gave the burning town a thought; | To such a pitch of folly
I am brought, | Being caught between the pull | Of the dark moon and the full, | | | | | The commonness of thought
and images | That have the frenzy of our western seas. | Thereon I made my moan, | And after kissed a
stone, | | | | | And after that arranged it in a song | Seeing that I, ignorant for so long, | Had been rewarded thus | In Cormacs ruined house. |
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By PanEris
using Melati.
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