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- COOLE PARK AND BALLYLEE,
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- I MEDITATE upon a swallow's flight,
- Upon a aged woman and her house,
- A sycamore and lime-tree lost in night
- Although that western cloud is luminous,
- Great works constructed there in nature's spite
- For scholars and for poets after us,
- Thoughts long knitted into a single thought,
- A dance-like glory that those walls begot.
- There Hyde before he had beaten into prose
- That noble blade the Muses buckled on,
- There one that ruffled in a manly pose
- For all his timid heart, there that slow man,
- That meditative man, John Synge, and those
- Impetuous men, Shawe-Taylor and Hugh Lane,
- Found pride established in humility,
- A scene well Set and excellent company.
- They came like swallows and like swallows went,
- And yet a woman's powerful character
- Could keep a Swallow to its first intent;
- And half a dozen in formation there,
- That seemed to whirl upon a compass-point,
- Found certainty upon the dreaming air,
- The intellectual sweetness of those lines
- That cut through time or cross it withershins.
- Here, traveller, scholar, poet, take your stand
- When all those rooms and passages are gone,
- When nettles wave upon a shapeless mound
- And saplings root among the broken stone,
- And dedicate -- eyes bent upon the ground,
- Back turned upon the brightness of the sun
- And all the sensuality of the shade --
- A moment's memory to that laurelled head.
- UNDER my window-ledge the waters race,
- Otters below and moor-hens on the top,
- Run for a mile undimmed in Heaven's face
- Then darkening through "dark' Raftery's "cellar' drop,
- Run underground, rise in a rocky place
- In Coole demesne, and there to finish up
- Spread to a lake and drop into a hole.
- What's water but the generated soul?
- Upon the border of that lake's a wood
- Now all dry sticks under a wintry sun,
- And in a copse of beeches there I stood,
- For Nature's pulled her tragic buskin on
- And all the rant's a mirror of my mood:
- At sudden thunder of the mounting swan
- I turned about and looked where branches break
- The glittering reaches of the flooded lake.
- Another emblem there! That stormy white
- But seems a concentration of the sky;
- And, like the soul, it sails into the sight
- And in the morning's gone, no man knows why;
- And is so lovely that it sets to right
- What knowledge or its lack had set awry,
- So atrogantly pure, a child might think
- It can be murdered with a spot of ink.
- Sound of a stick upon the floor, a sound
- From somebody that toils from chair to chair;
- Beloved books that famous hands have bound,
- Old marble heads, old pictures everywhere;
- Great rooms where travelled men and children found
- Content or joy; a last inheritor
- Where none has reigned that lacked a name and fame
- Or out of folly into folly came.
- A spot whereon the founders lived and died
- Seemed once more dear than life; ancestral trees,
- Or gardens rich in memory glorified
- Marriages, alliances and families,
- And every bride's ambition satisfied.
- Where fashion or mere fantasy decrees
- We shift about -- all that great glory spent --
- Like some poor Arab tribesman and his tent.
- We were the last romantics -- chose for theme
- Traditional sanctity and loveliness;
- Whatever's written in what poets name
- The book of the people; whatever most can bless
- The mind of man or elevate a rhyme;
- But all is changed, that high horse riderless,
- Though mounted in that saddle Homer rode
- Where the swan drifts upon a darkening flood.
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