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- A DRAMATIC POEM
- <1The deck of an ancient ship. At the right of the stage is the mast,
- with a large square sail hiding a great deal of the sky and sea
- on that side. The tiller is at the left of the stage; it is a long oar
- coming through an opening in the bulwark. The deck rises in a
- series of steps hehind the tiller, and the stern of the ship curves
- overhead. When the play opens there are four persons upon the
- deck. Aibric stands by the tiller. Forgael sleeps upon the raised
- portion of the deck towards the front of the stage. Two Sailors
- are standing near to the mast, on which a harp is hanging.>1
- i{First Sailor.} Has he not led us into these waste seas
- For long enough?
- i{Second Sailor.} Aye, long and long enough.
- i{First Sailor.} We have not come upon a shore or ship
- These dozen weeks.
- i{Sccond Sailor.} And I had thought to make
- A good round Sum upon this cruise, and turn --
- For I am getting on in life -- to something
- That has less ups and downs than robbery.
- i{First Sailor.} I am so tired of being bachelor
- I could give all my heart to that Red Moll
- That had but the one eye.
- i{Second Sailor.} Can no bewitchment
- Transform these rascal billows into women
- That I may drown myself?
- i{First Sailor.} Better steer home,
- Whether he will or no; and better still
- To take him while he sleeps and carry him
- And drop him from the gunnel.
- i{Second Sailor.} I dare not do it.
- Were't not that there is magic in his harp,
- I would be of your mind; but when he plays it
- Strange creatures flutter up before one's eyes,
- Or cry about one's ears.
- i{First Sailor.} Nothing to fear.
- i{Second Sailor.} Do you remember when we sank that
- galley
- At the full moon?
- i{First Sailor.} He played all through the night.
- i{Second Sailor.} Until the moon had set; and when I looked
- Where the dead drifted, I could see a bird
- Like a grey gull upon the breast of each.
- While I was looking they rose hurriedly,
- And after circling with strange cries awhile
- Flew westward; and many a time since then
- I've heard a rustling overhead in the wind.
- i{First Sailor.} I saw them on that night as well as you.
- But when I had eaten and drunk myself asleep
- My courage came again.
- i{Second Sailor.} But that's not all.
- The other night, while he was playing it,
- A beautiful young man and girl came up
- In a white breaking wave; they had the look
- Of those that are alive for ever and ever.
- i{First Sailor.} I saw them, too, one night. Forgael was
- playing,
- And they were listening ther& beyond the sail.
- He could not see them, but I held out my hands
- To grasp the woman.
- i{Second Sailor.} You have dared to touch her?
- i{First Sailor.} O she was but a shadow, and slipped from
- me.
- i{Second Sailor.} But were you not afraid?
- i{First Sailor.} Why should I fear?
- i{Second Sailor.} "Twas Aengus and Edain, the wandering
- lovers,
- To whom all lovers pray.
- i{First Sailor.} But what of that?
- A shadow does not carry sword or spear.
- i{Second Sailor.} My mother told me that there is not one
- Of the Ever-living half so dangerous
- As that wild Aengus. Long before her day
- He carried Edain off from a king's house,
- And hid her among fruits of jewel-stone
- And in a tower of glass, and from that day
- Has hated every man that's not in love,
- And has been dangerous to him.
- i{First Sailor.} I have heard
- He does not hate seafarers as he hates
- Peaceable men that shut the wind away,
- And keep to the one weary marriage-bed.
- i{Second Sailor.} I think that he has Forgael in his net,
- And drags him through the sea,
- i{First Sailor} Well, net or none,
- I'd drown him while we have the chance to do it.
- i{Second Sailor.} It's certain I'd sleep easier o' nights
- If he were dead; but who will be our captain,
- Judge of the stars, and find a course for us?
- i{First Sailor.} I've thought of that. We must have Aibric
- with us,
- For he can judge the stars as well as Forgael.
- i{[Going towards Aibric.]}
- Become our captain, Aibric. I am resolved
- To make an end of Forgael while he sleeps.
- There's not a man but will be glad of it
- When it is over, nor one to grumble at us.
- i{Aibric.} You have taken pay and made your bargain for it.
- i{First Sailor.} What good is there in this hard way of
- living,
- Unless we drain more flagons in a year
- And kiss more lips than lasting peaceable men
- In their long lives? Will you be of our troop
- And take the captain's share of everything
- And bring us into populous seas again?
- i{Aibric.} Be of your troop! Aibric be one of you
- And Forgael in the other scale! kill Forgael,
- And he my master from my childhood up!
- If you will draw that sword out of its scabbard
- I'll give my answer.
- i{First Sailor.} You have awakened him.
- i{[To Second Sailor.]}
- We'd better go, for we have lost this chance.
- i{[They go out.]}
- i{Forgael.} Have the birds passed us? I could hear your
- voice,
- But there were others.
- i{Aibric.} I have seen nothing pass.
- i{Forgael.} You're certain of it? I never wake from sleep
- But that I am afraid they may have passed,
- For they're my only pilots. If I lost them
- Straying too far into the north or south,
- I'd never come upon the happiness
- That has been promised me. I have not seen them
- These many days; and yet there must be many
- Dying at every moment in the world,
- And flying towards their peace.
- i{Aibric.} Put by these thoughts,
- And listen to me for a while. The sailors
- Are plotting for your death.
- i{Forgael.} Have I not given
- More riches than they ever hoped to find?
- And now they will not follow, while I seek
- The only riches that have hit my fancy.
- i{Aibric.} What riches can you find in this waste sea
- Where no ship sails, where nothing that's alive
- Has ever come but those man-headed birds,
- Knowing it for the world's end?
- i{Forgael.} Where the world ends
- The mind is made unchanging, for it finds
- Miracle, ecstasy, the impossible hope,
- The flagstone under all, the fire of fires,
- The roots of the world.
- i{Aibric.} Shadows before now
- Have driven travellers mad for their own sport.
- i{Forgael.} Do you, too, doubt me? Have you joined their
- plot?
- i{Aibric.} No, no, do not say that. You know right well
- That I will never lift a hand against you.
- i{Forgael.} Why should you be more faithful than the rest,
- Being as doubtful?
- i{Aibric.} I have called you master
- Too many years to lift a hand against you.
- i{Forgael.} Maybe it is but natural to doubt me.
- You've never known, I'd lay a wager on it,
- A melancholy that a cup of wine,
- A lucky battle, or a woman's kiss
- Could not amend.
- i{Aibric.} I have good spirits enough.
- i{Forgael.} If you will give me all your mind awhile --
- All, all, the very bottom of the bowl --
- I'll show you that I am made differently,
- That nothing can amend it but these waters,
- Where I am rid of life -- the events of the world --
- What do you call it? -- that old promise-breaker,
- The cozening fortune-teller that comes whispering,
- "You will have all you have wished for when you have
- earned
- Land for your children or money in a pot.-
- And when we have it we are no happier,
- Because of that old draught under the door,
- Or creaky shoes. And at the end of all
- How are we better off than Seaghan the fool,
- That never did a hand's turn? Aibric! Aibric!
- We have fallen in the dreams the Ever-living
- Breathe on the burnished mirror of the world
- And then smooth out with ivory hands and sigh,
- And find their laughter sweeter to the taste
- For that brief sighing.
- i{Aibric.} If you had loved some woman --
- i{Forgael.} You say that also? You have heard the voices,
- For that is what they say -- all, all the shadows --
- Aengus and Edain, those passionate wanderers,
- And all the others; but it must be love
- As they have known it. Now the secret's out;
- For it is love that I am seeking for,
- But of a beautiful, unheard-of kind
- That is not in the world.
- i{Aibric.} And yet the world
- Has beautiful women to please every man.
- i{Forgael.} But he that gets their love after the fashion
- "Loves in brief longing and deceiving hope
- And bodily tenderness, and finds that even
- The bed of love, that in the imagination
- Had seemed to be the giver of all peace,
- Is no more than a wine-cup in the tasting,
- And as soon finished.
- i{Aibric.} All that ever loved
- Have loved that way -- there is no other way.
- i{Forgael.} Yet never have two lovers kissed but they
- believed there was some other near at hand,
- And almost wept because they could not find it.
- i{Aibric.} When they have twenty years; in middle life
- They take a kiss for what a kiss is worth,
- And let the dream go by.
- i{Forgael.} It's not a dream,
- But the reality that makes our passion
- As a lamp shadow -- no -- no lamp, the sun.
- What the world's million lips are thirsting for
- Must be substantial somewhere.
- i{Aibric.} I have heard the Druids
- Mutter such things as they awake from trance.
- It may be that the Ever-living know it --
- No mortal can.
- i{Forgael.} Yes; if they give us help.
- i{Aibric.} They are besotting you as they besot
- The crazy herdsman that will tell his fellows
- That he has been all night upon the hills,
- Riding to hurley, or in the battle-host
- With the Ever-living.
- i{Forgael.} What if he speak the truth,
- And for a dozen hours have been a part
- Of that more powerful life?
- i{Aibric,} His wife knows better.
- Has she not seen him lying like a log,
- Or fumbling in a dream about the house?
- And if she hear him mutter of wild riders,
- She knows that it was but the cart-horse coughing
- That set him to the fancy.
- i{Forgael.} All would be well
- Could we but give us wholly to the dreams,
- And get into their world that to the sense
- Is shadow, and not linger wretchedly
- Among substantial things; for it is dreams
- That lift us to the flowing, changing world
- That the heart longs for. What is love itself,
- Even though it be the lightest of light love,
- But dreams that hurry from beyond the world
- To make low laughter more than meat and drink,
- Though it but set us sighing? Fellow-wanderer,
- Could we but mix ourselves into a dream,
- Not in its image on the mirror!
- i{Aibric.} While
- We're in the body that's impossible.
- i{Forgael.} And yet I cannot think they're leading me
- To death; for they that promised to me love
- As those that can outlive the moon have known it, '
- Had the world's total life gathered up, it seemed,
- Into their shining limbs -- I've had great teachers.
- Aengus and Edain ran up out of the wave --
- You'd never doubt that it was life they promised
- Had you looked on them face to face as I did,
- With so red lips, and running on such feet,
- And having such wide-open, shining eyes.
- i{Aibric.} It's certain they are leading you to death.
- None but the dead, or those that never lived,
- Can know that ecstasy. Forgael! Forgael!
- They have made you follow the man-headed birds,
- And you have told me that their journey lies
- Towards the country of the dead.
- i{Forgael.} What matter
- If I am going to my death? -- for there,
- Or somewhere, I shall find the love they have
- promised.
- That much is certain. I shall find a woman.
- One of the Ever-living, as I think --
- One of the Laughing People -- and she and I
- Shall light upon a place in the world's core,
- Where passion grows to be a changeless thing,
- Like charmed apples made of chrysoprase,
- Or chrysoberyl, or beryl, or chrysclite;
- And there, in juggleries of sight and sense,
- Become one movement, energy, delight,
- Until the overburthened moon is dead.
- i{[A number of Sailors entcr hurriedly.]}
- i{First Sailor.} Look there! there in the mist! a ship of spice!
- And we are almost on her!
- i{Second Sailor.} We had not known
- But for the ambergris and sandalwood.
-
- i{First Sailor.} NO; but opoponax and cinnamon.
- i{Forgael [taking the tiller from Aibric].} The Ever-living have
- kept my bargain for me,
- And paid you on the nail.
- i{Aibric.} Take up that rope
- To make her fast while we are plundering her.
- i{First Sailor.} There is a king and queen upon her deck,
- And where there is one woman there'll be others.
- i{Aibric.} Speak lower, or they'll hear.
- i{First Sailor.} They cannot hear;
- They are too busy with each other. Look!
- He has stooped down and kissed her on the lips.
- i{Second Sailor.} When she finds out we have better men
- aboard
- She may not be too sorry in the end.
- i{First Sailor.} She will be like a wild cat; for these queens
- Care more about the kegs of silver and gold
- And the high fame that come to them in marriage,
- Than a strong body and a ready hand.
- i{Second Sailor.} There's nobody is natural but a robber,
- And that is why the world totters about
- Upon its bandy legs.
- i{Aibric.} Run at them now,
- And overpower the crew while yet asleep!
- [The i{Sailors go out.]}
- <1[Voices and thc clashing of swords are heard from the
- other ship, which cannot be seen because of the sail.]
- i{A Voice.} Armed men have come upon us! O I am slain!
- i{Another Voice.} Wake all below!
- i{Another Voice.} Why have you broken our sleep?
- i{First Voice.} Armed men have come upon us! O I am
- slain!
- i{Forgael [who has remained at the tiller].} There! there they
- come! Gull, gannet, or diver,
- But with a man's head, or a fair woman's,
- They hover over the masthead awhile
- To wait their Fiends; but when their friends have
- come
- They'll fly upon that secret way of theirs.
- One -- and one -- a couple -- five together;
- And I will hear them talking in a minute.
- Yes, voices! but I do not catch the words.
- Now I can hear. There's one of them that says,
- "How light we are, now we are changed to birds!'
- Another answers, "Maybe we shall find
- Our heart's desire now that we are so light.'
- And then one asks another how he died,
- And says, "A sword-blade pierced me in my sleep.-
- And now they all wheel suddenly and fly
- To the other side, and higher in the air.
- And now a laggard with a woman's head
- dGmes crying, "I have run upon the sword.
- I have fled to my beloved in the air,
- In the waste of the high air, that we may wander
- Among the windy meadows of the dawn.'
- But why are they still waiting? why are they
- Circling and circling over the masthead?
- What power that is more mighty than desire
- To hurry to their hidden happiness
- Withholds them now? Have the Ever-living Ones
- A meaning in that circling overhead?
- But what's the meaning? i{[He cries out.]} Why do you
- linger there?
- Why linger? Run to your desire,
- Are you not happy winged bodies now?
- i{[His voice sinks again.]}
- Being too busy in the air and the high air,
- They cannot hear my voice; but what's the meaning?
- <1[The Sailors have returned. Dectora is with them.]
- Forgael [turning and seeing her].>1 Why are you standing
- with your eyes upon me?
- You are not the world's core. O no, no, no!
- That cannot be the meaning of the birds.
- You are not its core. My teeth are in the world,
- But have not bitten yet.
- i{Dectora.} I am a queen,
- And ask for satisfaction upon these
- Who have slain my husband and laid hands upon me.
- i{[Breaking loose from the Sailors who are holding her.]}
- Let go my hands!
- i{Forgael.} Why do you cast a shadow?
- Where do you come from? Who brought you to this
- place?
- They would not send me one that casts a shadow.
- i{Dectora.} Would that the storm that overthrew my ships,
- And drowned the treasures of nine conquered nations,
- And blew me hither to my lasting sorrow,
- Had drowned me also. But, being yet alive,
- I ask a fitting punishment for all
- That raised their hands against him.
- i{Forgael.} There are some
- That weigh and measure all in these waste seas --
- They that have all the wisdom that's in life,
- And all that prophesying images
- Made of dim gold rave out in secret tombs;
- They have it that the plans of kings and queens
- But laughter and tears -- laughter, laughter, and tears;
- That every man should carry his own soul
- Upon his shoulders.
- i{Dectora.} You've nothing but wild words,
- And I would know if you will give me vengeance.
- i{Forgael.} When she finds out I will not let her go --
- When she knows that.
- i{Dectora.} What is it that you are muttering --
- That you'll not let me go? I am a queen.
- i{Forgael.} Although you are more beautiful than any,
- I almost long that it were possible;
- But if I were to put you on that ship,
- With sailors that were sworn to do your will,
- And you had spread a sail for home, a wind
- Would rise of a sudden, or a wave so huge
- It had washed among the stars and put them out,
- And beat the bulwark of your ship on mine,
- Until you stood before me on the deck --
- As now.
- i{Dectora.} Does wandering in these desolate seas
- And listening to the cry of wind and wave
- Bring madness?
- i{Forgael.} Queen, I am not mad.
- i{Dectora.} Yet say
- That unimaginable storms of wind and wave
- Would rise against me.
- i{Forgael.} No, I am not mad --
- If it be not that hearing messages
- From lasting watchers, that outlive the moon,
- At the most quiet midnight is to be stricken.
- i{Dectora.} And did those watchers bid you take me
- captive?
- i{Forgael.} Both you and I are taken in the net.
- It was their hands that plucked the winds awake
- And blew you hither; and their mouths have
- promised
- I shall have love in their immortal fashion;
- And for this end they gave me my old harp
- That is more mighty than the sun and moon,
- Or than the shivering casting-net of the stars,
- That none might take you from me.
- <1Dectora [first trembling back from the mast where the harp is,
- and then laughing].>1 For a moment
- Your raving of a message and a harp
- More mighty than the stars half troubled me,
- But all that's raving. Who is there can compel
- The daughter and the granddaughter of kings
- To be his bedfellow?
- i{Forgael.} Until your lips
- Have called me their beloved, I'll not kiss them.
- i{Dectora.} My husband and miy king died at my feet,
- And yet you talk of love.
- i{Forgael.} The movement of time
- Is shaken in these seas, and what one does
- One moment has no might upon the moment
- That follows after.
- i{Dectora.} I understand you now.
- You have a Druid craft of wicked sound
- Wrung from the cold women of the sea --
- A magic that can call a demon up,
- Until my body give you kiss for kiss.
- i{Forgael.} Your soul shall give the kiss.
- i{Dectora.} I am not afraid,
- While there's a rope to run into a noose
- Or wave to drown. But I have done with words,
- And I would have you look into my face
- And know that it is fearless.
- i{Forgael.} Do what you will,
- For neither I nor you can break a mesh
- Of the great golden net that is about us.
- i{Dectora.} There's nothing in the world that's worth a
- fear.
- <1[She passes Forgael and stands for a moment looking into
- his face.]>1
- I have good reason for that thought.
- i{[She runs suddenly on to the raiscd part of the poop.]}
- And now
- I can put fear away as a queen should.
- <1[She mounts on to the hulwark and turns towards
- Forgael.]>1
- Fool, fool! Although you have looked into my face
- You do not see my purpose. I shall have gone
- Before a hand can touch me.
- i{Forgael [folding his arms].} My hands are still;
- The Ever-living hold us. Do what you will,
- You cannot leap out of the golden net.
- i{First Sailor.} No need to drown, for, if you will pardon
- us
- And measure out a course and bring us home,
- We'll put this man to death.
- i{Dectora.} I promise it.
- i{First Sailor.} There is none to take his side.
- i{Aibric.} I am on his side,
- I'll strike a blow for him to give him time
- To cast his dreams away.
- <1[Aibric goes in front of Forgael with drawn sword. For-
- gael takes the harp.]>1
- i{First Sailor.} No other'll do it.
- <1[The Sailors throw Aibric on one side. He falls and lies
- upon the deck. They lift their swords to strike Forgael,>1
- <1who is about to play the harp. The stage begins to
- darken. The Sailors hesitate in fear.]
- Second Sailor.>1 He has put a sudden darkness over the
- moon.
- i{Dectora.} Nine swords with handles of rhinoceros horn
- To him that strikes him first!
- i{First Sailor.} I will strike him first.
- <1[He goes close up to Forgael with his sword lifted.]
- [Shrinking back.] He has caught the crescent moon out
- of the sky,
- And carries it between us.
- i{Second Sailor.} Holy fire
- To burn us to the marrow if we strike.
- i{Dectora.} I'll give a golden galley full of fruit,
- That has the heady flavour of new wine,
- To him that wounds him to the death.
- i{First Sailor.} I'll do it.
- For all his spells will vanish when he dies,
- Having their life in him.
- i{Second Sailor.} Though it be the moon
- That he is holding up between us there,
- I will strike at him.
- i{The Others.} And I! And I! And I!
- i{[Forgael plays the harp.]}
- i{First Sailor [falling into a dream suddenly.} But you were
- saying there is somebody
- Upon that other ship we are to wake.
- You did not know what brought him to his end,
- But it was sudden.
- i{Second Sailor.} You are in the right;
- I had forgotten that we must go wake him.
- i{Dectora.} He has flung a Druid spell upon the air,
- And set you dreaming.
- i{Second Sailor.} How can we have a wake
- When we have neither brown nor yellow ale?
- i{First Sailor.} I saw a flagon of brown ale aboard her.
- i{Third Sailor.} How can we raise the keen that do not
- know
- What name to call him by?
- i{First Sailor.} Come to his ship.
- His name will come into our thoughts in a minute.
- I know that he died a thousand years ago,
- And has not yet been waked.
- i{Second Sailor [beginning to keen].} Ohone! O! O! O!
- The yew-bough has been broken into two,
- And all the birds are scattered.
- i{All the Sailors.} O! O! O! O!
- i{[They go out keening.]}
- i{Dectora.} Protect me now, gods that my people swear by.
- <1[Aibric has risen from the deck where he had fallen. He
- has begun looking for his sword as if in a dream.]>1
- i{Aibric.} Where is my sword that fell out of my hand
- When I first heard the news? Ah, there it is!
- <1[He goes dreamily towards the sword, but Dectora runs at
- it and takes it up before he can reach it.]>1
- i{Aibric [sleepily].} Queen, give it me.
- i{Dectora.} No, I have need of it.
- i{Aibric.} Why do you need a sword? But you may keep it.
- Now that he's dead I have no need of it,
- For everything is gone.
- i{A Sailor [calling from the other ship].} Come hither, Aibric,
- And tell me who it is that we are waking.
- i{Aibric [half to Dectora, half to himself].} What name had
- that dead king? Arthur of Britain?
- No, no -- not Arthur. I remember now.
- It was golden-armed Iollan, and he died
- Broken-hearted, having lost his queen
- Through wicked spells. That is not all the tale,
- For he was killed. O! O! O! O! O! O!
- For golden-armed Iollan has been killed.
- <1[He goes out.]
- [While he has been speaking, and through part of what
- follows, one hears the wailing of the Sailors from the
- other ship. Dectora stands with the sword lifted in
- front of Forgael.]>1
- i{Dectora.} I will end all your magic on the instant.
- <1[Her voice hecomes dreamy, and she lowers the sword
- slowly, and finally lets it fall. She spreads out her hair.
- She takes off her crown and lays it upon the deck.]>1
- This sword is to lie beside him in the grave.
- It was in all his battles. I will spread my hair,
- And wring my hands, and wail him bitterly,
- For I have heard that he was proud and laughing,
- Blue-eyed, and a quick runner on bare feet,
- And that he died a thousand years ago.
- O; O! O! O!
- i{[Forgael changes the tune.]}
- But no, that is not it.
- They killed him at my feet. O! O! O! O!
- For golden-armed Iollan that I loved-
- But what is it that made me say I loved him?
- It was that harper put it in my thoughts,
- But it is true. Why did they run upon him,
- And beat the golden helmet with their swords?
- i{Forgael.} Do you not know me, lady? I am he
- That you are weeping for.
- i{Dectora.} No, for he is dcad.
- O! O! O! O! for golden-armed Iollan.
- i{Forgael.} It was so given out, but I will prove
- That the grave-diggers in a dreamy frenzy
- Have buried nothing but my golden arms.
- Listen to that low-laughing string of the moon
- And you will recollect my face and voice,
- For you have listened to me playing it
- These thousand years.
- <1[He starts up, listening to the birds. The harp slips from
- his hands, and remains leaning against the bulwarks
- behind him.]>1
- What are the birds at there?
- Why are they all a-flutter of a sudden?
- What are you calling out above the mast?
- If railing and reproach and mockery
- Because I have awakened her to love
- By magic strings, I'll make this answer to it:
- Being driven on by voices and by dreams
- That were clear messages from the Ever-living,
- I have done right. What could I but obey?
- And yet you make a clamour of reproach.
- i{Dcctora [laughing].} Why, it's a wonder out of reckoning
- That I should keen him from the full of the moon
- To the horn, and he be hale and hearty.
- i{Forgael.} How have I wronged her now that she is merry?
- But no, no, no! your cry is not against me.
- You know the counsels of the Ever-living,
- And all that tossing of your wings is joy,
- And all that murmuring's but a marriage-song;
- But if it be reproach, I answer this:
- There is not one among you that made love
- by any other means. You call it passion,
- Consideration, generosity;
- But it was all deceit, and flattery
- To win a woman in her own despite,
- For love is war, and there is hatred in it;
- And if you say that she came willingly --
- i{Dectora.} Why do you turn away and hide your face,
- That I would look upon for ever?
- i{Forgael.} My grief!
- i{Dectora.} Have I not loved you for a thousand years?
- i{Forgael.} I never have been golden-armed Iollan.
- i{Vectora.} I do not understand. I know your face
- Better than my own hands.
- i{Forgael.} I have deceived you
- Out of all reckoning.
- i{Tectora.} Is it not tme
- That you were born a thousand years ago,
- In islands where the children of Aengus wind
- In happy dances under a windy moon,
- And that you'll bring me there?
- i{Forgael.} I have deceived you;
- I have deceived you utterly.
- i{Dectora.} How can that be?
- Is it that though your eyes are full of love
- Some other woman has a claim on you,
- And I've but half!
- i{Forgael.} O no!
- i{Dectora.} And if there is,
- If there be half a hundred more, what matter?
- I'll never give another thought to it;
- No, no, nor half a thought; but do not speak.
- Women are hard and proud and stubborn-hearted,
- Their heads being turned with praise and flattery;
- And that is why their lovers are afraid
- To tell them a plain story.
- i{Forgael.} That's not the story;
- But I have done so great a wrong against you,
- There is no measure that it would not burst.
- I will confess it all.
- i{Dectora.} What do I care,
- Now that my body has begun to dream,
- And you have grown to be a burning sod
- In the imagination and intellect?
- If something that's most fabulous were true --
- If you had taken me by magic spells,
- And killed a lover or husband at my feet --
- I would not let you speak, for I would know
- That it was yesterday and not to-day
- I loved him; I would cover up my ears,
- As I am doing now. i{[A pause.]} Why do you weep?
- i{Forgael.} I weep because I've nothing for your eyes
- But desolate waters and a battered ship.
- i{Dectora.} O why do you not lift your eyes to mine?
- i{Forgael.} I weep -- I weep because bare night's above,
- And not a roof of ivory and gold.
- i{Dectora.} I would grow jealous of the ivory roof,
- And strike the golden pillars with my hands.
- I would that there was nothing in the world
- But my beloved -- that night and day had perished,
- And all that is and all that is to be,
- All that is not the meeting of our lips.
- i{Forgael.} You turn away. Why do you turn away?
- Am I to fear the waves, or is the moon
- My enemy?
- i{Dectora.} I looked upon the moon,
- Longing to knead and pull it into shape
- That I might lay it on your head as a crown.
- But now it is your thoughts that wander away,
- For you are looking at the sea. Do you not know
- How great a wrong it is to let one's thought
- Wander a moment when one is in love?
- <1[He has moved away. She follows him. He is looking out
- over the sea, shading his eyes.]>1
- Why are you looking at the sea?
- i{Forgael.} Look there!
- i{Dectora.} What is there but a troop of ash-grey birds
- That fly into the west?
- i{Forgael.} But listen, listen!
- i{Dectora.} What is there but the crying of the birds?
- i{Forgael.} If you'll but listen closely to that crying
- You'll hear them calling out to one another
- With human voices
- i{Dectora.} O, I can hear them now.
- What are they? Unto what country do they fly?
- i{Forgael.} To unimaginable happiness.
- They have been circling over our heads in the air,
- But now that they have taken to the road
- We have to follow, for they are our pilots;
- And though they're but the colour of grey ash,
- They're crying out, could you but hear their words,
- "There is a country at the end of the world
- Where no child's born but to outlive the moon.'
- <1[The Sailors comc in with Aibric. They are in great
- excitement.]>1
- i{First Sailor.} The hold is full of treasure.
- i{Second Sailor.} Full to the hatches.
- i{First Sailor.} Treasure on treasure.
- i{Third Sailor.} Boxes of precious spice.
- i{First Sailor.} Ivory images with amethyst eyes.
- i{Third Sailor.} Dragons with eyes of ruby.
- i{First Sailor.} The whole ship
- Flashes as if it were a net of herrings.
- i{Third Sailor.} Let's home; I'd give some rubies to a
- woman.
- i{Second Sailor.} There's somebody I'd give the amethyst
- eyes to.
- i{Aibric [silencing thcm with agesture].} We would return to
- our own country, Forgael,
- For we have found a treasure that's so great
- Imagination cannot reckon it.
- And having lit upon this woman there,
- What more have you to look for on the seas?
- i{Forgael.} I cannot -- I am going on to the end.
- As for this woman, I think she is coming with me.
- i{Aibric.} The Ever-living have made you mad; but no,
- It was this woman in her woman's vengeance
- That drove you to it, and I fool enough
- To fancy that she'd bring you home again.
- 'Twas you that egged him to it, for you know
- That he is being driven to his death.
- i{Dectora.} That is not true, for he has promised me
- An unimaginable happiness.
- i{Aibric.} And if that happiness be more than dreams,
- More than the froth, the feather, the dust-whirl,
- The crazy nothing that I think it is,
- It shall be in the country of the dead,
- If there be such a country.
- i{Dectora.} No, not there,
- But in some island where the life of the world
- Leaps upward, as if all the streams o' the world
- Had run into one fountain.
- i{Aibric.} Speak to him.
- He knows that he is taking you to death;
- Speak -- he will not deny it.
- i{Dectora.} Is that true?
- i{Forgael.} I do not know for certain, but I know.
- That I have the best of pilots.
- i{Aibric.} Shadows, illusions,
- That the Shape-changers, the Ever-laughing Ones,
- The Immortal Mockers have cast into his mind,
- Or called before his eyes.
- i{Dectora.} O carry me
- To some sure country, some familia'r place.
- Have we not everything that life can give
- In having one another?
- i{Forgael.} How could I rest
- If I refused the messengers and pilots
- With all those sights and all that crying out?
- i{Dectora.} But I will cover up your eyes and ear?,
- That you may never hear the cry of the birds,
- Or look upon them.
- i{Forgael.} Were they but lowlier
- I'd do your will, but they are too high -- too high.
- i{Dectora.} Being too high, their heady prophecies
- But harry us with hopes that come to nothing,
- Because we are not proud, imperishable,
- Alone and winged.
- i{Forgael.} Our love shall be like theirs
- When we have put their changeless image on.
- i{Dectora.} I am a woman, I die at every breath.
- i{Aibric.} Let the birds scatter, for the tree is broken,
- And there's no help in words. i{[To the Sailors.]}
- To the other ship,
- And I will follow you and cut the rope
- When I have said farewell to this man here,
- For neither I nor any living man
- Will look upon his face again.
- i{[The Sailors go out.]}
- i{Forgael [to Dectora],} Go with him,
- For he will shelter you and bring you home.
- i{Aibric [taking Forgael's hand].} I'll do it for his sake.
- i{Dectora.} No. Take this sword
- And cut the rope, for I go on with Forgael.
- i{Aibric [half falling into the keen].} The yew-bough has been
- broken into two,
- And all the birds are scattered -- O! O! O!
- Farewell! farewell! i{[He goes out.]}
- i{Dectora.} The sword is in the rope --
- The rope's in two -- it falls into the sea,
- It whirls into the foam. O ancient worm,
- Dragon that loved the world and held us to it,
- You are broken, you are broken. The world drifts
- away,
- And I am left alone with my beloved,
- Who cannot put me from his sight for ever.
- We are alone for ever, and I laugh,
- Forgael, because you cannot put me from you.
- The mist has covered the heavens, and you and I
- Shall be alone for ever. We two -- this crown --
- I half remember. It has been in my dreams.
- Bend lower, O king, that I may crown you with it.
- O flower of the branch, 0 bird among the leaves,
- O silver fish that my two hands have taken
- Out of the running stream, O morning star
- Trembling in the blue heavens like a white fawn
- Upon the misty border of the wood,
- Bend lower, that I may cover you with my hair,
- For we will gaze upon this world no longer.
- i{Forgael [gathering Dectora's hair about him].} Beloved, hav-
- ing dragged the net about us,
- And knitted mesh to mesh, we grow immortal;
- And that old harp awakens of itself
- To cry aloud to the grey birds, and dreams,
- That have had dreams for father, live in us.
-