And climbing stiffly up the steep incline
Found high above each little cloistered field,
Above the sombre autumn woods of pine—
Where gentle skies are clear and crystalline—
The place remote from dense and foolish towns;
And there, where all the winds are sharp with brine,
I heard the sheep bells ringing on the Downs.
Emblazoned o’er with heraldry divine.
I suddenly saw, as though with eyes unsealed,
A portent sent me for an awful sign,
A fairy sea whereon the cold stars shine;
And standing on the sward of withered browns,
Burnt by the noontide and cropped close and fine,
I heard the sheep bells ringing on the Downs.
And tingled through the steeple of my spine;
My soul was filled with loveliness and healed.
I know how joy and anguish intertwine—
But this shall greatly comfort me as wine,
Good wine, comforts a man and sweetly drowns
The many sorrows of this heart of mine—
I heard the sheep bells ringing on the Downs.
L’Envoi
When you’re dead mutton I will weave you crowns
Of living laurel—if on you I dine—
I heard the sheep bells ringing on the Downs!
BALLADE OF A FEROCIOUS CATHOLIC
A final reckoning I’m glad to say:
Some people end discussion with their boot;
Others, the prigs, will simply walk away.
But I, within a world of rank decay,
Can face its treasons with a flaming hope,
Undaunted by faith’s foemen in array—
I drain a mighty tankard to the Pope!
But wander in a fog of words astray.
They have no rigid creed one can confute,
No hearty dogmas riotous and gay,
But feebly mutter through thin lips and grey
Things foully fashioned out of sin and soap;—
But I, until my body rests in clay,
I drain a mighty tankard to the Pope!
The modernists on some convenient day;
Pull out eugenists by their noxious root;
The welfare-worker chattering like a jay
I’d publicly and pitilessly slay
With blunderbuss or guillotine or rope,
Burn at the stake, or boil in oil, or flay—
I drain a mighty tankard to the Pope.
L’Envoi
Is over many who in darkness grope:
But as for me, I go another way—
I drain a mighty tankard to the Pope!
DAWN
Thy tender loveliness, O Morning, break;
Beheld the solemn gladness thou dost spill
On eyes not yet awake.
Wild passions sleeping like oblivious kings?
The broad day comes and thou dost speed away
Westward on swift wide wings!
SUNSET
Cruel and tender, rude and beautiful,
Looking through windows in a young child’s eyes,
Stealing as soft as shadows in a pool,
Falling a sudden arrow of dismay,
Blown on a bugle with an iron note:
The slow and gentle progress of decay,
The taking of a strong man by the throat.
Of lusty Summer burn to hectic red.
But ah! that splendid death untouched by grief:
The sun with glad and golden-visaged head
Superbly standing on his deadly pyre,
And sinking in a sea of jewelled fire!
PEACE
By sleep and custom and tranquillity
Have never found
That peace which is a riven mystery
The calm that doth this stream, these orchards bless,
Breathe but the air
Of unimpassioned pagan quietness....
Pain burns about your head, an aureole,
Who hold in state
The utter joy which wounds and heals the soul.
With dumb, glad lips, and bear to worlds apart
The peace of God
Which passeth all understanding in your heart.
CARRION
Of war forget their doom; the work is done—
Strong men, uncounted corpses heaped in mounds,
Are rotting in the sun.
With piteous faces in the bloodied mire;
But where are now their generous charities?
Their laughter, their desire?
Lived joy and sorrow, tenderness and pain,
Hope, ardours, passions brave and beautiful
Among these thousands slain!
Of mating birds in thicket and in brake;
They wondering saw night’s jewelled curtain fall
And all the pale stars wake....
Strewn broadcast out upon the trampled sod—
These temples of the Holy Ghost—O hark!—
These images of God!
Houses to hold their Sacramental Lord:
Swiftly and terribly to harvest them
Swept the relentless sword!
Some symbol of the Eternal Sacrificed,
Some pardon to the hearts of those who live—
Dying the death of Christ!
Feast of the Epiphany,
January 6th, 1917.
THE BUILDING OF THE CITY
Boanerges, the thunder’s son,
Who lay in tenderness upon His breast—
Now that my days are done,
Would tell my children e’er I go
Of Him I saw with head and hair as white
As white wool—white as snow.
The burnished feet, the eyes of flame,
The seven stars bright with awful mystery,
And the Ineffable Name!
The vials of the wrath of God,
Beheld a greater thing: the Lamb’s pure Bride,
The golden floors she trod.
And how Euphrates flowed with blood—
Ah, but His mercy through the wide world sown,
The tree with healing bud!
The glad new song that never tires,
A Lamb as it had been slain in sacrifice
Enthroned amid the choirs.
And ravens plucked the eyes of kings,
God’s own strange peace shall come upon the soul
On gentle, dove-like wings.
God’s city cometh from above,
Built by the sword of Michael and his might,
But founded in God’s love.
EDEN RE-OPENED
Among the rapt seraphic brows,
And God’s heart heavy grew thereat,
At man’s long absence from His house.
A strange and secret word is said,
And straightway hath an angel flown,
On wings of feathered sunlight sped,
Through space to where the world shone red.
To the hoar watchers of the spheres,
But ashy cold to man’s dim sight,
And filled with sins and woes and fears
And the waste weariness of years.
No light upon the jewelled sea;
The sky hung sullenly as brass,
And men went groping tortuously.)
Broke his dread sword upon his knees,
And opened wide the fields where wait
The loveless unremembered trees,
The sealed and silent mysteries.
And his heart woke again, as when
Adam found Eve in Paradise;
And joy was made complete ... and then
God entered in and spoke with men.
THE HOLY SPRING
The dancing sunny hours,
The ancient Earth is young again
With growing grass and warm white rain
And hedgerows full of flowers.
The glory of their bud,
And scattered on each hawthorn spray
The snow-white and the crimson may—
The may as red as blood.
Like fallen heavens lie,
And daffodils and daffodils
Upon a thousand little hills
Are waving to the sky.
Has burst its wintry tomb,
And on each burdened orchard tree
Which stood an austere calvary
The apple blossom bloom.
The marvel of the sod.
Oh, joy has rent its chrysalis
To flash its jewelled wings, and is
A dream of beauty and of bliss—
The loveliness of God.
VIATICUM
When death hath filled my heart with dread affright,
But when in gathered dark I meet aghast
The mimic death that falls on me at night.
The valley of the shadow, breast the Styx,
With shrouded soul and body stiff in bed ...
And no companion from the welcome pyx!
The phantoms of the Pit oblivion brings—
My will surrendered, mind unapt for snares,
Eyes blinded by the evil, shuddering wings,
For priestly offices, ’mid censers swung,
And with anointed thumb and finger hold
The symbolled Godhead to my eager tongue?
Peace on my eyelids, goodness that shall keep
My wandering feet, and at my side a friend
Through all the winding caverns of my sleep.
PUNISHMENT
Is laid upon my bleeding shoulders?
What scourge, O God,
Makes known my shame to all beholders?
Crashes Thy wrath like shuddering thunders?
. . . . .
Before my eyes
Thou dost display the wonder of wonders!
To one whom sin should bind in prison,
Hath Mercy sent
Word of the crucified arisen!
Exacted—past my reeling reason!—
Which lays on me
Love—as a whip fit for my Treason!
AFTER COMMUNION
O Word made flesh! My burning soul by Thine
Caught mystically in a living mesh!
Now is the royal banquet, now the wine,
The body broken by the courteous Host
Who is my humble Guest—a Guest adored—
Though once I spat upon, scourged at the post,
Hounded to Calvary and slew my Lord!
Wash, wash, dear Crucified, my Pilate hand!
Rejected Stone, be Thou my corner-stone!
Like Mary at the cross’s foot I stand;
Like Magdalene upon my sins I grieve;
Like Thomas do I touch Thee and believe.
THE UNIVERSAL MOTHER
Can tell thy humble ways,
The hidden paths on which thy white feet went
Through all thy lonely days?
To grace and beauty grew,
Or in what fires was tempered the keen sword
That pierced thy bosom through?
Our souls’ strange bread and wine,
The gathered meanings of thy starry lands
Where mystic roses shine.
Her towers far and faint,
Did we not know thy sorrowful innocence,
Or soldier, singer, saint,
Their full hearts’ burdenings
To those dear eyes before which Gabriel
Bent low with folded wings.
That crushed the serpent’s head,
How mighty in thy hand hath been the steel
That dyed thy bosom red.
Where earth’s wild colours run,
As God hath crowned thee with the stars of night
And clothed thee with the sun.
His difficult road hath kept
Shall think of thee whose body cloistered Him
When in thy womb He slept.
To share thy joy with them,
And fill them with thy magnitude and mirth
In many a Bethlehem.
THE BOASTER
If one by one
Orion and the Pleiades Crash and Crumble;
The lordly sun
Gone down in doom,
Wandering unregarded through the cosmos,
None giving him room.
Boastingly cry,
“Go wreck the world, its towering hills and waters!
But I, even I,
With weeds to rot,
Still keep my soul unshaken by the ruin
That harms me not!
Did cringe and cower
Before my foes, but who can ever rob me
Of one great hour?”
About my head
The tiny flowers flapped in the breeze like banners
Of royal red.
Were cloven apart,
When love stood in your eyes and shone and trembled
Within your heart.
UNWED
By love’s great conquest and its great surrender,
Bearing my soul along, unwed, unwed;
(Your darling hands’ caresses swift and tender
Lacking upon my head, upon my lips
Your lips); and in my heart love unfulfilled,
And in my eyes a blind apocalypse,
Bereft of all the glory I have willed;
Triumphant for brief memories, but tragic
Because of those large hopes that fail and break
Beneath Fate’s wizard-wand of cruel magic—
But ah, Fate could not touch me if I stood
Completed by your love’s beatitude!
WED
In unison with your footfall.
I know that in your heart you keep
The secret of the woodland’s sleep.
Sweet sister!—on the road half way,
And she has laid upon your hair
The coloured coronal you wear.
Flutter about the head I love,
And on your bosom doth repose
The beauty of the Mystic Rose,
A dark and fearful ecstasy;
For in the house of joy you bless
Unworthiness with holiness.
ENGLAND
I
Like granite towers that crumble into dust,
So pass the emblems of thine empery.
But O immortal Mother and august,
Ardours of English saint and bard and king
Blend simply with thy soul, even as their bones
Mingle with English soil. Their spirits sing
A great song lordly as is a loud wind’s tones.
Decayed by gold and ease and loathly pride,
We had forgot our greatness and become
Huckstering empire-builders, and denied
The excellent name of freedom ... till the drum
Woke glory such as met the eyes of Drake,
Or Alfred when he saw the heathen break!
II
That robs our brave adventures? In the shame
Spoiling our splendours? In the sacrifice
Of tears we wrung from Ireland? Nay, thy name
Is written secretly in kindliness
Upon the patient faces of the poor,
In that good anger wherewith thou didst bless
Our hearts, when beat upon the shaking door
Strong hands of hell.... Whether before the flood
We sink, or out of agonies reborn
Learn once again the meaning of our blood,
Laughter and liberty—a sacred scorn
Is ours irrevocably since we stood
And heard the barbarians’ guns across the morn.
LYRIC LOVE
To read your spirit through;
To see the starlight on your face,
Upon your hair the dew;
The shining wealth they hold;
To find in dim and dreamy lands
That tender dusks enfold
The hidden wells of joy,
The secrets that were unrevealed
To one who was a boy.
Will fruits of solace fall,
When I have learned through many Springs,
Mighty and mystical,
Love in the leafy grove,
As in my lyric heart your words
Bestir a lyric love.
The truth of fairy tales,
And greet romance with gay surprise
In woods of nightingales.
In songs which I have sung
The meanings of the end of age—
The rapture of the young!
February 11th, 1918.
DRUMS OF DEFEAT
THE FOOL
A million jeering lips and eyes—
And in the sight of all men born
The wildest of earth’s madmen dies!
To-day is numbered with the dead;
To-morrow crows and evil birds
Shall pluck those strange eyes from his head!
Are scattered (fool beyond belief!),
All blown away like thistledown,
Except a harlot and a thief.
(He that would neither strive nor cry)
Or thunder through the Seven Seas?
Or shake the stars down from the sky?
Become unconquerable swords,
That Caiaphas must tremblingly
Kneel with the world’s imperial lords
Before this crazy carpenter—
This body writhing on a rod—
And worship in that bloody hair
The dreadful foolishness of God?
A million jeering lips and eyes—
And in the sight of all men born
The wildest of earth’s madmen dies!
DON QUIXOTE
And honourable the skies,
When he rides singing as he comes
With solemn, dreamy eyes—
Of swinging of the splendid swords,
And crashing of the nether lords,
When Hell makes onslaught with its hordes
In desperate emprise.
The champion of the world,
For whom great soldans live again
With Moorish beards curled—
But all their spears shall not avail
With one who weareth magic mail,
This hero of an epic tale
And his brave gauntlet hurled!
Across the quiet fields,
Herald and trumpeter, alarms
Of bowmen and of shields;
When doubt that twists and is afraid
Is shattered in the last crusade,
Where flaunts the plume and falls the blade
The cavalier wields.
No liegemen gather now,
Or flowered dames to grant applause,
Yet on his naked brow
The victor’s laurels interwreath;
But he no dower can bequeath
But sword snapped short and empty sheath
And errantry and vow!
No man alive can stand,
Nor any giant drive him hence
With sling or club or brand—
For where his angry bugle blows
There fall unconquerable foes;
Of mighty men of war none knows
To stay his witless hand.
IRELAND
The Mystic Rose, the Holy Tree,
Immortal courage in your eyes,
And pain and liberty.
The trampled plumes, the shattered drum,
The swords of your lost battlefields
To hopeless battles come.
Their shameful rout, their fallen kings,
Yet shall the strong, victorious foe
Not understand these things:
The merry road your rabble trod,
The awful laughter they shall take
Before the throne of God.
IN MEMORIAM
Patrick Henry Pearse
Executed May 3rd, 1916
R.I.P.
You stood erect beneath the sullen sky,
A heart which held its peace and noble pain,
A brave and gentle eye!
Your fledgling dreams on broken wings are dashed—
For suddenly a tragic sword was swung
And ten true rifles crashed.
Be this high word of praise and sorrow said:
He lived with honour all his lovely days,
And is immortal, dead!
MATER DESOLATA
To Margaret Pearse
The anguish, and the laden heart that broke
Its vase of burning tears, the voiceless cry,—
And then the horror of that blinding stroke!
To you all this—and yet to you much more.
God pressed into the chalice of your pain
A starry triumph, when the sons you bore
Were written on the roll of Ireland’s slain.
Let no man touch your glorious heritage,
Or pluck one pang of sorrow from your heart,
Or stain with any pity the bright page
Emblazoning the holy martyrs’ part.
Ride as a queen your splendid destiny,
Since death is swallowed up in victory!
THE STIRRUP CUP
Where we never may drink together again.
While the stars are lost in the slate-cold sky
Let us drink good ale before we die
In the wind and bitter rain!
Then once again, man, in good-fellowship!
Though hunted and outlawed and fugitive
We shall drink together again if we live—
Set the tankard to your lip!
See the clouds rift and disrobe the moon!
And a blood-red streak in the sullen skies
And—Honour and death and adventure’s eyes—
Now spurs—for they’ll be here soon!
THE ENSIGN
Beams out a round benignant moon
Upon the village and the bridge
Through which the slumberous waters croon.
And, clad in ghostly mysteries,
The church tower glimmers on the hill
Among the sad, abiding trees;
Sleeps each small house, so still and white—
From all the noise and blood of war,
O God, how far removed to-night!
How many drew this air for breath;
Here lived and loved ... and now they see
The terrible, swift shape of death.
The tender beauty of these lands,
Still sheds a peace upon their eyes,
And binds their hearts and nerves their hands.
This valley in the moonlight furled,
Have heard immortal trumpets blow,
And shake the pillars of the world!