perns =B4 uosePH marq LUIlKeTT 1 THE POEMS OF JOSEPH MARY PLUNKETT The Frontispiece is from a Memory Drawing by Mrs. Joseph Plunkett , . . » « , . • » • * • • t » ' » -• » • • • * • • ^ce ^Cc-tv-^,^^ "ii6 The Poems of Joseph Mary Plunkett New York Frederick A. Stokes Company Publishers Printed by The Educational Company of Ireland at The Talbot Press 89 Talbot St.. Dublin CONTENTS Foreword OCCULTA Seals of Thunder Invocation Daybreak The vSplendour of God The Living Temple Initiation Aaron In the Wilderness Arbor Vitae La Pucelle Occulta Heaven in Hell Your vSongs The Vigil of Love The Lions The Worm Joseph The White Feather Your Fear The Mask No Song The Cloud Moriturus Te Salutat The Dark Way Toihthe The Living Wire Die Taube The Spark PACB vii. 1 2 3 4 8 8 9 10 11 13 15 16 23 24 26 27 28 29 31 33 34 35 36 38 39 40 42 07 4S9 Vi. CONTKNTS EARLIER AND LATER POEMS PAGK The New Judas 49 I see His Blood upon the Rose 50 The Stars sang in God's Garden 51 I saw the Sun at Midnight 52 It is her Voice who dwells within the Emerald Wall and Sapphire House of Flame 53 A Wave of the Sea 54 White Waves on the Water 55 This Heritage to the Race of Kings 56 1841-1891 57 1867 58 To CAicilin tii htlAllAch<^in — The Little Black Ro.se shall be Red at last 59 Nomina Sunt Consequentia Rerum 61 My Lady has the Grace of Death 62 Lovely Heart 63 1 love you with my every Breath 64 O Bright ! thy Stateliness and Grace 65 -White Dove of the Wild Dark Eyes 66 My Soul is Sick with Longing 67 When all the Stars become a Memory 6^) Your Pride 70 If I should need to tear aside 71 When I am Dead 72 The Claim that has the Canker on the Rose 73 Your Fault 74 There is no Deed I would not dare 76 New Love 78 Before the Glory of your Love 79 To Grace — On the morning of her christening, April 7th, 1916 80 Prothalamion 81 See the Crocus' Golden Cup 82 Signs and Wonders 83 Obscurity and Poktry 85 FOREWORD Joseph Pi^unkett was the son of Count and Countess Plunkett, and was born in Dublin in November, 1887. He attended the CathoUc University School and Belvedere College, but his wide reading did more to educate him than any schools. He followed the two years Philosophy course at Stony hurst College when he was eighteen. This made a strong impression on him. He kept up the study of Scholastic Philosophy and was very much influenced by mystical contemplation " or loving inclination towards God." The books that were his most constant companions were St. John of the Cross, St. Teresa, St. Francis, and John Tauler. Their mark on his poetry is very plain, though, as his short article on Obscurity and Poetry will show, he would apply the term " mystic " to but a very small part of his own verse. He showed me two or three poems that he called mystic, but I cannot find these now and must presume them destroyed. Of course he employed the symbolism of the mystics broadcast. He was obliged by ill-health to spend a great deal of his short life in inactivity and to winter abroad. He and his mother spent a winter •''vii. viii. FOREWORD travelling in Itaty, Sicily and Malta, where he had a good friend, and another winter was spent in Algiers with a sister, where he studied the Arabic Hterature and language, enlarging his range of images by what he found there, though it is curious that the only poem which is purely Arabic in imagery is the short poem, " It is her voice that dwells within the emerald walls and sapphire house of flame,""' which he wrote before he went to Algiers. I also think it possible that the queer, flamboyant and melodramatic happenings which there came his way may have coloured that part of his verse which is more unrestrained and violent than the rest, for instance some of the sonnets in " Occulta." Before he went to Algiers he had met Thomas MacDonagh — who was teaching at St. Enda's School, Rathfarnham, which he had helped P. H. Pearse to start. My brother wanted someone to teach him Irish for the matriculation of the National University and Thomas MacDonagh taught him for some time, and when he discovered my brother was a poet I think there was more poetry than pedagogy in their relationsliip. " The Circle and the Sword " was published in 1 91 1, the year my brother was in Algiers. Thomas MacDonagh made the selection himself from my brother's poems, and saw the book through the press. TiUe from " The Mistress of Vision, " by Francis Thompson. FOREWORD IX Although there are a good many immature and defective poems in it it is rather remarkable for a first book. The lyric, " White Dove of the Wild Dark Byes " would be difficult to surpass on its own ground ; the sonnet " I saw the sun at midnight, rising red," the poems " 1867," " I see his blood upon the rose," " My soul is sick with longing," and " The stars sang in God's garden " are all above the level of first books. I have included these and a few others which I thought worthy in this book, as I know he wished only these few to be considered as part of his mature work. When he returned from Algiers he had a house of his own in Donnybrook, where we kept house together for two and a half years. With the exception of P. H. Pearse and Thomas MacDonagh he had few other literary friends in Dublin up to the time he became interested in the Irish Review. This was started by Professor Houston in 191 1, in association with James Stephens, Thomas MacDonagh and Padraic Colum. Mr. Houston edited it himself for some time and Padraic Colum was editor in 1912-13. Two poems of my brother's were printed in it ; he got to know the people who were associated with it very well, and in June, 1 913, he became editor himself. Any cause he was interested in was discussed in the Review ; for instance, the men's case in the strike of summer, 1913, and the Volunteer move- CD 316) 2A X FOREWORD ment from November of the same year to the date of the seizure of a large number of copies of the Review by the pohce in London in Novem- ber, 1914. Joseph Campbell, Conal O'Riordan, James Cousins, Lord Dunsany, Darrell Figgis, Arthur Griffith, Mary Hay den, W. M. Letts, Susan Mitchell, Seumas O'SuUivan, M. A. Rathkyle, Frederick Ryan, Sheehy Skeffington, Jack Morrow, John Mac Neill, Peter Mac Brien — these, with Thomas Mac Donagh, James Stephens, Padraic Colum, P. H. Pearse, Edward Marty n, and David Houston are the names of the goodly company who were constant contributors to the Review. Sir Roger Casement, who was my brother's in- timate friend, had written articles for the Review when Padraic Colum was editor, and continued to write in prose and verse for my brother. The Review was not in good financial condition when it came into his hands, and as he had not sufiicient capital to put it properly on its feet, he just kept it going in the same way as he found it until the police seizure in London, which I have mentioned, made the loss too great for it to be carried on any longer. From the time we were in Donnybrook, Thomas MacDonagh and my brother lived and worked in close relationship. Apart from the Review they criticised everything each of them wrote in the most vigorous way, and to them criticism was an exact science. My brother published Thomas FOREWORD XI MacDonagh's " Lyrical Poems," and they were both keenly interested in the printing and form of the book. He also published P. H. Pearse's " Suantraidhe agus Goltraidhe." The Irish Theatre was started in 1914 by a part- nership consisting of Edward Martyn, Thomas MacDonagh and my brother. Its purpose, as opposed to the purpose of the Abbey Theatre, was to produce Irish plays other than peasant plays, plays in Irish, and foreign masterpieces. They played periodically in Hardwicke Street, and produced plays by Edward Martyn, Eimar O'Dufiy, John MacDonagh, Tchekoff, etc., and have been on the whole very successful in carrying out their objects. Towards the last six months my brother disagreed with the other directors for not abiding by the spirit of the agreement and definitely dissociated himself from the Theatre on the production of Strindberg's " Easter." The Irish Theatre is still in existence and is being carried on by Mr. Martyn and Mr. John MacDonagh. The first section of this volume — " Occulta " — was to have been my brother's next book. He arranged it himself in the order in which it now stands, wherein the sequence of thought is unbroken. I have gathered together in the second part his later verse and those earlier poems which he would have considered worthy of republication, including those from the " Circle and the Sword." Many of his poems have been Xll FOREWORD destroyed, or at any rate are irrecoverable, and these poems of the second section are fragmentary and disconnected — but I have not included in this book anything I think he thought second rate, and have omitted a fairly long poem that I am sure he intended to be left out. He had outgrown all tours de force, all false standards, and gone to the desperate simplicity which is so hard to reach. He wrote verse with difficulty, but, once written, rarely made any alteration. In this he differed in an extraordinary degree from Thomas Mac- Donagh, who suffered in equal measure from a too great facility in verse writing, and would alter a completed poem repeatedly till he was satisfied that it approximated to the poem of his imagina- tion. The poems in this book have an appearance of ease, but they were written after the author had mastered his medium and the very labour that went to their making has but made them flow more evenly and contributed to the effect. He did not consider the versifying, but the thought expressed, to be of importance, and did not put much value on his best lyrics, as e.g., the poem called " O Lovely Heart ! " Though my brother and Thomas MacDonagh differed widely in their methods of writing, their critical standards and judgments were alike. In the article " Obscurity and Poetry, " reprinted here, there is a great likeness to the character of FOREWORD XIU Thomas MacDonagh's last book, both in the matter, that is in the aspects of the subject discussed, and the curiously painstaking method of discussion, due, I believe, to the fact that they were dealing with what was to them an exact science for which they had no exact terms. Their spoken criticism also had the same char- acteristics — both of them as quick, to construct as to destroy, to praise as to blame, not sparing in either, though Thomas MacDonagh was the more severe of the two. There are a few verses which, while out of place in the text, I do not care to omit, and there is one ballad, better than either of these which follow, that it is perhaps too soon to publish. The ballad of the " Foot and Mouth " is an extremely good imitation of the old topical ballad, with all its beautiful badnesses. It is sung to " The Groves of Blarney." As I walked over to Magheraroarty On a summer's evening not long ago, I met a maiden most sadly weeping, Her cheeks down streaming with the signs of woe. I asked what ailed her, as sure became me In manner decent with never a smile She said I'll tell thee, O youthful stranger. What is my danger at the present time. XVI FOREWORD One last fragment, written for his sister Moya, in Algiers, in 191 1, where sounds like this occurred so often that they were part of the place : MURDER The clatter of blades and the clear Cold shiver of steel in the night — Blood spurts in the strange moonlight — The pattering footsteps of fear, A little thud and a sigh — The babbling whispers are still. Clouds come over the hill Silence comes over the sky. Geraldine Pi.une:ett. ^oth June, 191 6. OCCULTA JOSEPH M. PLUNKETT These were written between Nov., 1911. and July, 1915 To THE LADY ELECT This Book is Dedicated for by the greatness of the beauty and of the creature the creator of them may be seen so as to be known THEREBY SaP. XIII. 5. MOREOVER, BY MEANS OF HER I SHALL HAVE IMMORTALITY AND SHALL LEAVE BEHIND ME AN EVERLASTING MEMORY TO THOSE THAT COME AFTER ME Sap. VIII. 13, . • • % » » > ■> SEALS OF THUNDER They say I sing in secrets — they have ears But do not hear ; have eyes but do not see Truth's naked beauty is her panoply. Their eyes are bhnded with its splendid spears. With shadowy symbols fitted to their fears Now will I clothe a visible mystery, Yet none shall understand the prophecy Save you, nor pay the tribute of their tears. But you will understand me, for I speak First to your heart, then to your soul in song Spreading its golden pennons for the strong, Smiting like sunrise on the snowy peak Of glory — and to you the stars belong And all the glowing splendours that I seek. INVOCATION Sing all ye mouths of music, sing her praise All stars and birds and flowers, all lovely- things Living in Earth and Heaven, Eyes and Wings Of Cherubim and Seraphim that raise Vision and Love Eternal ; all her ways Fill with your music, let no wind that sings Of sorrow wither Joy's young blossom- ings : Prepare her paths against the fateful days When she shall need flower-lamps before her feet And herald-birds and all the stars to hold Her heart upon the difficult laughter- sweet Blood-salt and sorrow-bitter ways of gold That she must tread, until her heart un- fold Its quivering pinions for the Paraclete. DAYBREAK As blazes forth through clouds the morn- ing sun So shines your soul, and I must veil my sight Lest it be stricken to eternal night By too much seeing ere my song be done, And I must sing your body's clouds that run To hide you with their crimson, green and white At sunset dawn and noon — and then the flight Of stars that chant your praise in unison. But I beneath the planetary choir Still as a stone lie dumbly, till the dark Lifts its broad wings — then swift as you draw nigher I raise Memnonian song, and all must hark, For you have flung a brand and fixed a spark Deep in the stone, of your immortal fire. THE SPLENDOUR OF GOD The drunken stars stagger across the sky, The moon wavers and sways Hke a wind- blown bud, Beneath my feet the earth hke drifting scud Lapses and shdes, wallows and shoots on high ; Immovable things start suddenly flying by, The city shakes and quavers, a city of mud And ooze — a brawling cataract is my blood Of molten metal and fire — like God am L When God crushes his passion-fruit for our thirst And the universe totters — I have burst the grape Of the world, and let its powerful blood escape 4 THE SPLENDOUR OF GOD 5 Untasted — crying whether my vision durst See God's high glory in a girFs soft shape — God ! Is my worship blessed or accurst ? (D 316) THE LIVING TEMPLE O Covenant ! O Temple ! O frail pride Of God's high glory 1 Set your snowy feet On the Red Mountain, while the pinions beat Of proximate apocalypse. Uncried Halloos of havoc, prophecies denied Fulfilment till the Dawn of Wonder, fleet In songs precursive down the glittering street Where dripped the blood from wounded brows and side. And you must walk the mountain tops where rode Gabriel, Raphael, Michael, when the stars Fell from their places, and where Satan strode 6 THE LIVING TEMPLE 7 To make his leap. Now bend the crack- ing spars Athwart the mast of the world — and five deep scars From that strong Cross call you to their abode. INITIATION Our lips can only stammer, yet we chant High things of God. We do not hope to praise The splendour and the glory of his ways Nor light up Heaven with our low de- scant : But we will follow thee, his hierophant Filling with secret canticles the days To shadow forth in symbols for their gaze What crowns and thrones await his mili- tant. For all his beauty showered on the earth Is summed in thee, O thou most perfect flower ; His dew has filled thy chalice, and his power Blows forth the fragrance of thy mystic worth : White blossom of his Tree, behold the hour ! Fear not ! thy fruit is Love's most lovely birth. AARON I am the Seer : for in you I see The fair unfolding of a secret flower, The pomp and pageant of eternal power, The crown and pride of your high destiny. I am the Prophet : this your prophecy — Your deeds and Heaven's fill the echoing hour. The Splendour of all splendours for your dower Is given, a witness of the things to be. I am the Poet, but I cannot sing Of your dear worth, or mortal or divine ; No music hidden in any song of mine Can give you praise ; yet the trimmed rod I bring To you, O Temple, asking, for a sign. That in the morn it may be blossoming. IN THE WILDERNESS Gaunt windy moons bedraggled in the dusk Have drifted by and withered in their shame. The once-proud Thunder-Terror, fallen tame. Noses for truffles with unwhetted tusk ; A sickening scent of civet and of musk Has clogged the nostrils of the Hound of Fame — But flickering stars are blown to vivid flame When leaps your beauty from its blazing husk. Blossom of burning solitude ! High things Are lit with splendour — Love your glim- mering ray Smites them to glory — below them and away A little song floats upward on the wings Of daring, and the thunders of the Day Clamour to God the messages it brings. 10 ARBOR VITAE Beside the golden gate there grows a tree Whose heavy fruit gives entrance to the ways Of Wonder, and the leaves thereof are days Of desolation — nights of agony The buds and blossom for the fruits to be : Rooted in terror the dead trunk decays, The burdened branches drooping to the clays y Clammy with blood of crushed humanity. But lo the fruit ! Sweet-bitter, red and white. Better than wine — better than timely death When surfeited with sorrow — Lo the bright 11 1.2 ARBOR VITAE Mansions beyond the gate ! And Love, thy breath Fanning our flaming hearts where entereth Thy Song of Songs with Love's tumul- tuous hght. LA PUCELLE She walks the azure meadows where the stars Shed glowing petals on her moon-white feet, The planets sing to see her, and to greet Her, nebulae unfold like nenuphars. No dread eclipse the morn of Heaven mars But fades before her fearing, lest she meet With darkness, while the reckless comets beat A path of gold with flickering scimitars. The battle-ranks of Heaven are march- ing past Squadron by squadron, battalion, and brigade, Both horse and foot — Soundless their swift parade, 13 14 LA PUCELLE Silent till she appears — then quick they cast Upon the wind the banner of the Maid And Heaven rocks with Gabriers trum- pet-blast. OCCULTA Crowns and imperial purple, thrones of gold, Onyx and sard and blazing diadems, Lazuli and hyacinth and powerful gems Undreamt of even in Babylon of old May for a price be given, bought and sold. Bartered for silver as was Bethlehem's — And yet a Splendour lives that price contemns Since Five loud Tongues a deeper worth have told. Braver is she than ruby, far more wise Even than burning sapphire, than emerald Anchored more strongly to impalpable skies — Upon a diamond pinnacle enwalled The banners blaze, and " Victor '' she is called, Youthful, with laughter in her twiht eyes. 15 HEAVEN IN HELL If the dread all-seeing stars Ringed Saturn and ruddy Mars And their companions all the seven, That play before the lord of heaven, Each blossoming nebula and all The constellations, were to fall Low at my feet and worship me, Endow me with all sovranty Of their wide kingdom of the blue — Yet I would not believe that you Could love me — If besides the nine Encircling legions all-divine Should, chanting, teach me that my worth Outshone the souls of men on earth And seraphs in Heaven, and as well That glittering demons deep in Hell Fled at my frown, obeyed my word — If every flower and beast and bird In God's great earth and splendid sea Should live and love and fight for me 16 HEAVEN IN HELL I7 And my sweet singing and sad art — Yet could I not conceive your heart Stooping to mine, nor your wild eyes Unveiling their deep ecstasies, Your tenebrous hair sweep near my lips, Your eyelids bring your soul eclipse For fear that I should be made blind By love's bright image in your mind. You are the Standard of high Heaven, The Banner brave towards which I've striven To force my way — To seize and hold The citadel of the city of gold I must attain the Flag of love Blazoned with the eternal Dove. Once Immortality, a babe, Played with the Future's astrolabe And marked a destiny thereon More splendid than the morning sun Leaping to glory from the earth : More wondrous than the wonder-birth Of the white moon from darkest rock ; More strange than should the sun un- lock His leashes and let slip the stars ; l8 HEAVEN IN HELL More desperate than the clanging wars Twixt Hell and Heaven ; still more great Than any favourable fate ; But beyond all things beautiful, Beyond Mortality's foot-rule Of loveliness, and little words — Sometimes, at twilit eve, when birds Lapse from dream-silence into song, Sometimes when Thunder's rolling note Reverberates from his iron throat, They speak of such high mysteries But no one can interpret these — All of this dim and deep design If I should choose, its crown were mine To win or lose by my sole hand And heart. I chose, and joined the band Of Heaven's adventurers that seek To cHmb the never-conquered peak In solitude by their sole might. In the dark innocence of night I fought unknown inhuman foes And left them in their battle-throes. Hacked a way through them and ad- vanced To where the stars of morning danced HEAVEN IN HELL I9 In your high honour, there I stood To see you, till the morning-flood Burst from the sky — but your sunrise Striking my unaccustomed eyes Smote them to darkness, and I turned And stumbled towards the night. There burned In heart and eyes a drunken flame That sang and clamoured out your name And woke a madness in my head. The enemies I had left for dead Surrounded me with gibbering cries And mocked me for my blinded eyes. I curst them till they rose in rage And flung me down a battle-gage To fight them on the floors of Hell Where solely they're assailable. I took the challenge straightaway And leaped — and that was yesterday Or was last year, but every hour For weary years to break their power Still must I fight, but now a gleam Of hope comes to me like a dream, To-day, though dimly, I do see. My vision has come back to me. And I have learnt in deepest Hell 20 HEAVEN IN HELL Of Heavenly mysteries to tell, I with terror-twisted eyes Have watched you play in Paradise, Tortured and torn by demons seven Have kept my heart's gaze fixed on Heaven, Save when the smoky mists of blood Have blinded me with their fell flood. My desert heart all desolate Lit with the mirage of your hate I searched, my vision held above. For green oasis of your love. My heart's dry desert, hot and wide, Bounded by flames on every side, So dim and old no song can tell. Covers the tombs where dead kings dwell : Now demons dance upon their tombs. Shut with the seals of lasting dooms, For them until the world be riven No hope of Hell, no fear of Heaven. But I, alas ! am torn between The things unseen and the things seen, I alone of the souls I know In Hell and Heaven am high and low, High in Heaven and low in Hell : HEAVEN IN HELL 2T From pit and peak inaccessible To all but Satan and seraphim My song gains power and grows more grim. Only the straining of my vision Toward the playing-fields elysian Where you with starry comrades fling Your fervours over eye and wing, With deep and happy subtlety Flavouring the wine-bag of the bee ; Thrones, principalities and powers Showering with Eden-flowers ; With Michael's sword and RaphaeFs lute Slaying and singing, making bruit Of lovely laughter with your lips Sounding as where the honey drips At reaping-time by rippling brooks Twining between the barley-stooks ; Only your shape that holds my sight, Your ways that fill it with dehght. Your steps that blossom where you've^ trod, Your laughter like the breath of God, And all the braveries that extol The liying sword that is your soul : (D316) C 22 HEAVEN IN HELL Only your passion-haunted eyes Interpreting your mysteries : These are to me and my desire For pillar of cloud and pillar of fire, A gleam and gloom of heaven, in hell A high continuous miracle. YOUR SONGS If I have you then I have everything In One, and that One nothing of them all Nor all compounded, and within the wall Beneath the tower I wait to hear you sing : Love breathing low above the breast of Spring, Pressing her heart with baby heart and small From baby lips love-syllables lets fall And strokes with gentle hand her quiver " ing wing. You come rejoicing all the wilderness, Filling with praise the land to joy un- known, Fresh from that garden whose perfumes have blown Down through the valley of the cyp- resses — O heart, you know not your own loveli- ness. Nor these your songs, for they are yours alone. 23 THE VIGIL OF LOVE Illa cantat : nos tacemus : quando ver venit meum ? Quando fiam uti chelidon, ut tacere DESINAM ? PeRDIDI MuSAM TACENDO, NEC ME Phgebus respicit. Sic Amyclas, cum tacerent, perdidit silentium. Cras amet qui nunquam amavit : QUIQUE amavit CRAS AMET. She sings, but we are silent : when shall Spring Of mine come to me ? I as the swallow make Me vocal, and this desolate silence break ? The Muse has left me for I cannot sing ; Nor does Apollo now his splendour bring To aid my vision, blinded for her sake— Thus mute Amyclas would not silence wake And perished in the shadow of its wing. 24 THE VIGIL OF LOVE 25 The wings of the imperishable Dove Unfold for flight, and we shall cease from sorrow ; Song shall the beauty of dead Silence borrow When lips once mute now raise this chant above : Love to the loveless shall be given to- morrow, To-morrow for the lover shall be love. THE LIONS Her hair's the canopy of heaven, Her eyes the pools of heahng are, Her words wild prophecies whose seven Thunders resound from star to star. Her hands and feet are jewels fine Wrought for the edifice of all grace, Her breath inebriates like wine — The blinding beauty of her face Is lovelier than the primal light And holds her lover's pride apart To tame the lions of the night That range the wilderness of his heart. 2C THE WORM JOSEPH (I am a worm and no man — David) The worm is clad in plated mail And rides upon the envious Earth His power prevails and shall prevail When Death gleans in the fields of Birth, He sips the purple wine of kings From burnished skulls and bumper hearts, Of fat and famine years he sings And fills his granaries from the marts. His brethren that have sold his name, Denied him to his ancient Sire, Shall seek him when they feel his fame Shall find him when they fear his fire. But you, O Benjamin, beloved, Dove-like and young, with him shall sup And then departing unreproved Bear with you his divining cup. 27 THE WHITE FEATHER I've watched with Death a dreadful year Nor flinched until you plucked apart A feather from the wings of Fear — Your innocence has stabbed my heart. I took your terrible trust to keep, Deep in my heart it flames and sears, And what I've sown I dare not reap For bitterness of blinding tears. I have not scattered starry seed On windy ridges of the skies But I have ploughed my heart indeed And sown the secrets of your eyes. And now I cannot reap the grain Growing above that stony sod Because a shining plume lies plain Fallen from following wings of God. 28 YOUR FEAR 1 try to blame When from your eyes the battle-flame Leaps : when cleaves my speech the spear For fear lest I should speak your name : Your name that's known But to your heart, your fear has flown To mine : youVe heard not any bird, No wings have stirred save yours alone. Alone your wings Have fluttered : half-forgotten things Come crowding home into your heart, Filling your heart with other Springs, Springs when you've sung Your secret name with happy tongue Loudly and innocent as the flowers Through hours of laughter proudly young. 29 30 YOUR FEAR Young is the year And other wings are waking : near Your heart my name is knocking loud, Ah, be not proud ! You need not fear. Fearing lest I Should wrest your secret from on high You will not listen to my name, I cannot blame you though I try. THE MASK What have I dared to claim That you should thus deny ? If I have used your name My songs to beautify Mine is the greater fame. And I have ever sought But to proclaim your praise, I have regarded naught When wandering by your ways But truth, my only thought. What favour did I ask That might constrain your heart Or heavier make your task ? But now that you depart Wearing a dreadful mask. And those accusing eyes As still as death and cold Making my soul surmise My song grown overbold And all my words unwise — 31 32 THE MASK Now is my claim from thence That you should hear your heart's Pleading in my defence Before your praise departs And all your grace goes hence. NO SONG I loose the secrets of my soul And mint my heart to heavy words Lest you should need to ask a dole Of singing from the winds and birds — - You will not heed nor bear my soul. I coin again a greater sum Of silence, and you will not heed : The fallow spaces call you ''Come, The season's ripe to sow the seed '' — ^ Both I and these are better dumb. I have no way to make you hear, No song will echo in your heart ; Now must I with the fading year Fade. Without meeting we must part — ^ No song nor silence you will hear. 33 THE CLOUD (O cloud well appointed ! — Blake) I do not know how you can shun His sight who sees himself a clod Whose blindness still outstares the sun And gazes on the hidden God. I do not know how you can hate A heart so set about with fire, A sword so linked with heavy fate And broken with unknown desire. I see your eyes with glory blaze And splendour bind your dusky hair, And ever through the nights and days My soul must struggle with despair. Your beauty must forever be My cloud of anguish, and your breath Raise sorrow like the surging sea Around the windy wastes of death. 34 MORITURUS TE SALUTAT These words that may not reach your heart Are wrong from mine in bitter pain, You, reading, but despise their art That is not art but blood — in vain The blood is ebbing from my heart. The passions of my toitured mind Trouble but lightly your calm soul — No ugliness besets the blind — A shadow on darkness is the whole Of my misfortune in your mind. And yet I love you that you say You will not love me — truth is hard, 'Twere so much easier to give way And stay the death-stroke, my reward — Courage, brave heart ! 'tis Love you slay. 35 THE DARK WAY Rougher than Death the road I choose Yet shall my feet not walk astray, Though dark, my way I shall not lose For this way is the darkest way. Set but a limit to the loss And something shall at last abide The blood-stained beams that form the cross The thorns that crown the crucified ; But who shall lose all things in One,- Shut out from heaven and the pit Shall lose the darkness and the sun The finite and the infinite ; And who shall see in one small flower The chariots and the thrones of might Shall be in peril from that hour Of blindness and the endless night ; 36 THE DARK WAY 37 And who shall hear in one short name Apocalyptic thunders seven His heart shall flicker like a flame 'Twixt hell's gates and the gates of heaven. For I have seen your body's grace, The miracle of the flowering rod, And in the beauty of your face The glory of the face of God, And I have heard the thunderous roll Clamour from heights of prophecy Your splendid name, and from my soul Uprose the clouds of minstrelsy. Now I have chosen in the dark The desolate way to walk alone Yet strive to keep alive one spark Of your known grace and grace unknown.- And when I leave you lest my love Should seal your spirit's ark with clay. Spread your bright wings, O shining: dove, — But my way is the darkest way. (1)316) D TOIHTHE No hungry star ascendant at my birth Foretold the famine that consumes my days, No flaming sword prohibited the ways Of vision where I parch through beauty's dearth, Alas ! no flower of heaven or of earth Yields loveliness to fill your meed of praise, Within my heart no spark divine betrays The power to tell of your immortal worth. You say you are unworthy — how can I Fend from your truth the self -destroying dart ? Within my shield of vision is no part Of mirrored certitude you can deny ; You are what God has made you — and my heart, And in this faith at least Fll live and die. 38 THE LIVING WIRE I thought Vd never hear your tongue Again in this dead world of shame As once when heart and world were young And then — you spoke my name. The barriers of space were spread Widely between us, when a shaft Of driven lightning broke their dread, Leaping — and you had laughed. The harp-strings in the house of gold Vibrate when chants the heavenly choir, My heart bound to your heart you hold With love — and a living wire. We are not separate, we two, (Alas, not one) beneath our feet The blessed earth binds me to you. The stones upon the street. The very stones cry out : No more Seek separate paths, each step youVe trod Brings you but nearer than before Home to your heart — and God. 39 DIE TAUBE To-day when I beheld you all alone And might have stayed to speak, the watchful love Leapt up within my heart, — then quick to prove New strength, the fruit of sorrow you have sown Sank in my stormy bosom like a stone Nor dared to rise on flaming plumes above Passionless winds, till you, O shining dove Far from the range of wounding words had flown. Far have you flown, and blows of battle cease To drape the skies in tapestries of blood, Now sinks within my heart the heaving flood 40 DIE TAUBE 41 And Love's long-fluttering pinions I release, Bidding them not return till blooms the bud On olive branch, borne by the bird of peace. THE SPARK Because I used to shun Death and the mouth of hell And count my battle won If I should see the sun The blood and smoke dispel. Because I used to pray That living I might see The dawning light of day Set me upon my way And from my fetters free, Because I used to seek Your answer to my prayer And that your soul should speak For strengthening of the weak To struggle with despair, Now I have seen my shame That I should thus deny My soul's divinest flame, Now shall I shout your name. Now shall I seek to die 42 THE SPARK 45 By any hands but these In battle or in flood, On any lands or seas, No more shall I share ease, No more shall I spare blood When I have need to fight For heaven or for your heart, Against the powers of light Or darkness I shall smite Until their might depart, Because I know the spark Of God has no eclipse. Now Death and I embark And sail into the dark With laughter on our lips. EARLIER AND LATER POEMS JOSEPH M. PLUNKETT To HIS GODSON DONAGH MACDONAGH THE NEW JUDAS Thee, Christ, I sought to sell all day And hurried to the mart to hold A hundred heavy coins of gold And lo ! they would not pay. But " thirty pieces of silver *' cried (Thine ancient price), and I agreed. Six for each of the wounds that bleed In hands and feet and side. '' Including cross and crown " we priced, Is now their claim and I refuse, I will not bargain all to lose, I will not sell Thee, Christ ! 49 I SEE HIS BLOOD UPON THE ROSE I see his blood upon the rose And in the stars the glory of his eyes, His body gleams amid eternal snows, His tears fall from the skies. I see his face in every flower ; The thunder and the singing of the birds Are but his voice — and carven by his power Rocks are his written words. All pathways by his feet are worn. His strong heart stirs the ever-beating sea, His crown of thorns is twined with every thorn, His cross is every tree. 50 THE STARS SANG IN GOD'S GARDEN The stars sang in God's garden ; The stars are the birds of God ; The night-time is God's harvest, Its fruits are the words of God. God ploughed His fields at morning, God sowed His seed at noon, God reaped and gathered in His corn With the rising of the moon. The sun rose up at midnight, The sun rose red as blood, It showed the Reaper, the dead Christ, Upon His cross of wood. For many live that one may die. And one must die that many live — The stars are silent in the sky Lest my poor songs be fugitive. 51 I SAW THE SUN AT MIDNIGHT I saw the Sun at midnight, rising red, Deep-hued yet glowing, heavy with the stain Of blood-compassion, and I saw It gain Swiftly in size and growing till It spread Over the stars ; the heavens bowed their head As from Its heart slow dripped a crimson rain, Then a great tremor shook It, as of pain — The night fell, moaning, as It hung there dead. O Sun, O Christ, O bleeding Heart of flame ! Thou givest Thine agony as our life's worth. And makest it infinite, lest we have dearth Of rights wherewith to call upon Thy Name ; Thou pawnest Heaven as a pledge for" Earth And for our glory sufferest all shame. 52 IT IS HER VOICE WHO DWELLS WITHIN THE EMERALD WALL AND SAPPHIRE HOUSE OF FLAME : Behold ! a white Hawk tangled in a twisted net of dreams Struggles no more, but lines the cords with feathers from her breast Seeing herself within the mystic circle of my voice, Whereat forthwith its music turns to blades and tongues of fire Rending the bonds and weaving round the Hawk a skein of light Raising the work and the Toiler to the never-ending Day. 53 (D 316) A WAVE OF THE SEA I am a wave of the sea And the foam of the wave And the wind of the foam And the wings of the wind. My soul's in the salt of the sea In the weight of the wave In the bubbles of foam In the ways of the wind. My gift is the depth of the sea The strength of the wave The lightness of foam The speed of the wind. 54 WHITE WAVES ON THE WATER White waves on the water, Gold leaves on the tree. As Mananan's daughter Arose froip her sea. The bud and the blossom. The fruit of the foam From Ocean's dark bosom Arose, from the home. She came at your calling, O winds of the world, When the ripe fruit was falling And the flowers unfurled. She came at your crying O creatures of earth. And the sound of your sighing Made music and mirth. She came at your keening O dreamers of doom, And your sleep had new dreaming And splendour and bloom. 55 THIS HERITAGE TO THE RACE OF KINGS This heritage to the race of kings Their children and their children's seed Have wrought their prophecies in deed Of terrible and splendid things. The hands that fought, the hearts that broke In old immortal tragedies, These have not failed beneath the skies, Their children's heads refuse the yoke. And still their hands shall guard the sod That holds their father's funeral urn, Still shall their hearts volcanic burn With anger of the sons of God. No alien sword shall earn as wage The entail of their blood and tears, No shameful price for peaceful years Shall ever part this heritage. 56 1841 — iSqi The wind rose, the sea rose A wave rose on the sea, It sang the mournful singing Of a sad centenary ; It sang the song of an old man Whose heart had died of grief. Whose soul had dried and withered At the falling of the leaf. It sang the song of a young man Whose heart had died of pain When Spring was black and withered And the winter come again. The wind rose, the sea rose A wave rose on the sea Swelled with the mournful singing Of a sad centenary. 57 i867 All our best ye have branded When the people were choosing them. When 'twas Death they demanded Ye laughed ! Ye were losing them. But the blood that ye spilt in the night Crieth loudly to God, And their name hath the strength and the night Of a sword for the sod. In the days of our doom and our dread Ye were cruel and callous, Grim Death with our fighters ye fed Through the jaws of the gallows ; But a blasting and blight was the fee For which ye had bartered them, And we smite with the sword that from ye We had gained when ye martyred them 1 58 TO cAicTUn riT tiullAcru\in The Little Black Rose shall be Red AT Last Because we share our sorrows and our joys And all your dear and intimate thoughts are mine We shall not fear the trumpets and the noise Of battle, for we know our dreams divine, And when my heart is pillowed on your heart And ebb and flowing of their passionate flood Shall beat in concord love through every part Of brain and body — when at last the blood O'er leaps the final barrier to find Only one source wherein to spend its strength 59 6o THE LITTLE BLACK ROSE And we two lovers, long but one in mind And soul, are made one only flesh at length ; Praise God if this my blood fulfils the doom When you, dark rose, shall redden into bloom. NOMINA SUNT CONSEQUENTIA RERUM I felt within my heart awake and glow A spirit of Love's excellence that slept, Then I beheld Love as from afar he stept So joyful that his face I scarce could know. He said : Now think all honour me to show And through each word of his Love's laughter crept ; Then as my lord awhile his splendour kept, Gazing there whence he came, where he would go, Nuala and Columba did I see Come towards the place where I was lingering, One marvel first, the other following, And, even as retelleth memory. Love said : That one who follows this our Spring Hath Love for name, so like is she to me. {From the Vita Nuova of Dante, translated) 61 MY LADY HAS THE GRACE OF DEATH My lady has the grace of Death Whose charity is quick to save, Her heart is broad as heaven's breath. Deep as the grave. She found me fainting by the way And fed me from her babeless breast Then played with me as children play, Rocked me to rest. When soon I rose and cried to heaven Moaning for sins I could not weep, She told me of her sorrows seven Kissed me to sleep. And when the morn rose bright and ruddy And sweet birds sang on the branch above She took my sword from her side all bloody And died for love. 62 O LOVELY HEART O lovely heart ! O Love No more be sorrowful Blue are the skies above The Sprmg is beautiful And all the flowers Are blest w4th gentle showers. Although the morning skies Are heavy now with rain And your incredulous eyes Are wondering at your pain. Let them but w^eep. And after give them sleep. O sorrowful ! O heart Whose joy is difficult Though we two are apart — Know you shall yet exult xA.nd all the years Be fresher for your tears. 63 I LOVE YOU WITH MY EVERY BREATH ■ I love you with my every breath, I make you songs hke thunder birds, Give you my Hfe — you give me death And stab me with your dreadful words. You laid my head against your heart Last night, my lips upon your breast And now you say that we must part For fear your heart should be oppressed : You cannot go against the world For my sake only — thus your phrase. But I — God's beauty is unfurled In your gold hair, and in your gaze The wisdom of God's bride — each soul That shares his love, and yours and mine, Two lovers share your aureole And one is mortal, one divine : One came on earth that you might know His love for you — that you deny, Now you give me this equal blow : One died for you, and one will die. 64 O BRIGHT ! THY STATELINESS AND GRACE O Bright ! thy statehness and grace Thy bearing and thy dignity Bring intuition of the place That still is native unto thee. Solely thy native airs delight Can still thy silences embalm, Solely thy native leven smite Through thunders of unbroken calm, A twyfold presence is and seems To emanate from thine atmosphere, Clothed in reality and dreams It is in heaven, and it is here. The forms of love enfolding thee To flowers of earth and heaven belong, Whose roots take hold in mystery Too deep for song, too deep for song. 65 WHITE DOVE OF THE WILD DARK EYES AVhite Dove of the wild dark eyes Faint silver flutes are calling From the night where the star-mists rise And fire-flies falling Tremble in starry wise, Is it you they are calling ? White Dove of the beating heart Shrill golden reeds are thrilling In the woods where the shadows start, While moonbeams, filling With dreams the floweret's heart Its dreams are thrilling. While Dove of the folded wings, Soft purple night is crying With the voice of fairy things For you, lest dying They miss your flashing wings, Your splendorous flying. 66 MY SOUL IS SICK WITH LONGING «> My soul is sick with longing, shaken with loss, Yea, shocked with love lost sudden in a dream, Dream-love dream-taken, swept upon the stream Of dreaming Truth, dreamt true, yet deemed as dross : Dreamt Truth that is to waking Truth a gloss, Dream-love that is to the life of loves that seem To bear the rood of love's eternal theme. The strength that brings to Calvary their cross. I dreamt that love had lit, a burning bird On one green bough of Time, of that dread tree Whereto my soul was crucified : that he 67 68 MY SOUL IS SICK WITH LONGING Sang with a seraph's voice some won- drous word Blotting out pain, but swift the branch I heard Break, withered, and the song ceased suddenly. WHEN ALL THE STARS BECOME A MEMORY When all the stars become a memory Hid in the heart of heaven ; when the sun At last is resting from his weary run Sinking to glorious silence in the sea Of God's own glory : when the immensity Of Nature's universe its fate has won And its reward : when death to death is done And deathless Being's all that is to be— Your praise shall 'scape the grinding of the mills : My songs shall live to drive their blind- ing cars Through fiery apocalypse to Heaven's bars ! When God's loosed might the prophet's word fulfils, My songs shall see the ruin of the hills, My songs shall sing the dirges of the stars. 69 (D 316) YOUR PRIDE I sit and beg beside the gate, I watch and wait to see you pass, You never pass the portals old, That gate of gold like gleaming glass. Yet you have often wandered by, Tve heard you sigh, I've seen you smile, You never smile now as you stray — You can but stay a little while. And now you know your task is hard, You must discard your jewelled gear. You must not fear to crave a dole From any soul that waits you here. And you have still your regal pride And you have sighed that I should see Your gifts to me beside the gate. Your pride, your great humility. 70 IF I SHOULD NEED TO TEAR ASIDE If I should need to tear aside The veils that hide both Heaven and Hell To tell you that a soul had died That once but tried to love you well No breath should blow those veils aside. But if I found your soul could save From heirs deep grave my sinking soul Only if willingly you gave rd take — and then Fd crave the whole Knowing you generous and brave. 71 WHEN I AM DEAD When I am dead let not your murderous tears Deface with their slow dropping my sad tomb Lest your grey head grow greyer for my doom And fill its echoing corridors with fears : Your heart that my stone monument appears While yet I live — O give it not to gloom When I am dead, but let some joy illume The ultimate Victory that stings and sears. Already I can hear the stealthy tread Of sorrow breaking through the hush of day; I have no hope you will avert my dread. Too well I know, that soon am mixed with clay, They mourn the body who the spirit slay And those that stab the living weep the dead. 72 THE CLAIM THAT HAS THE CANKER ON THE ROSE The claim that has the canker on the rose Is mine on you, man's claim on Paradise Hopelessly lost that ceaselessly he sighs And all unmerited God still bestows ; The claim on the invisible wind that blows The flame of charity to enemies Not to the deadliest sinner, God denies — Less claim than this have I on you, God knows. I cannot ask for any thmg from you Because my pride is eaten up with shame That you should think my poverty a claim Upon your charity, knowing it is true That all the glories formerly I knew Shone from the cloudy splendour of your name. 73 YOUR FAULT. It is of 1 er virtues you evade the snare. Then for her faults you'll fall in love with her. — Francis Thompson, Your fault, Lady, is to be Womankind's epitome ; No girl's, but girl essential is your being Could we but see beyond our mortal seeing, Could we but hear beyond our mortal song The song immortal of seraphic throng, Could we but know upon each mortal sign The seal of immortality divine. 'Tis no virtue that you are Virtuous — nor for the star To shine, nor flowers to array Themselves in glory from the clay ; That yours is wisdom old and new For this we praise your God — not you ; Yet there is something we can still Sing in your praise — your wayward will ; Something there is that you may own, Your faults, thank God, are yours alone 74 YOUR FAULT 75 Not heaven's, nor ever may we doubt If these from heaven can shut you out Ourselves shall storm the desperate road And welcome you to your abode. 'Tis for this fault we love you, that your eyes Regard not unattainable Paradise, That not amid the fiery stars you spread The nets of your hair, not ever towards the dead Set your unwavering feet, your gentle words Clothe not in thunders that make mute the birds, Nor yet perplex your pentecostal tongue With songs too crazy to be said or sung. Never make moan of other's joys and fears And see all Nature weeping through your tears, Fly not, Icarian-winged, to the sun Leaving the many to pursue the one. Chasing, yet hooded hawk, a Shining Dove, Nor break your heart about the feet of Love. THERE IS NO DEED I WOULD NOT DARE There is no deed I would not dare, Unloving, but to gain your smile. No shame or sorrow I would not share (Though withering in a wintry while) If I could win your friendship's grace While Time's slow pace is lagging still Though my lost heart should leave no trace Of Love on Heaven's immortal will. There is no death I would not crave If thus I'd save your heart from tears ; To snatch your glory from the grave I'd brave all fates and feel no fears Although my heart be calm and cold And feel no flame nor mirth of Love, Nor buoyed with hope be overbold To seize and hold the shining Dove. But I do love you and I know Nor any deed nor difficult quest To try to compass, that \\'()uld show THERE IS NO DEED I WOULD NOT DARE The fire that burns within my breast ; I cannot draw the dazzhng blade My body sheathes, Love's splendid sword, Lest you be blinded — and dismayed To silence fall my wounded word. If I would do each desperate thing Only to bring you ease or mirth What pinnacle for Love's strong wing Towers above the heights of Earth ? I cannot give your soul belief In the great visions of my heart, I cannot, and it is my grief Do aught to please you — but depart. NEW LOVE The day I knew you loved me we had lain Deep in Coill Doraca down by Gleann na Scath Unknown to each till suddenly I saw You in the shadow, knew oppressive pain Stopping my heart, and there you did remain In dreadful beauty fair without a flaw, Blinding the eyes that yet could not withdraw Till wild between us drove the wind and rain. Breathless we reached the brugh before the west Burst m full fury — then with lightning stroke The tempest in my heart roared up and broke Its barriers, and I swore I would not rest Till that mad heart was worthy of your breast Or dead for 3^ou — and then this love awoke. 78 BEFORE THE GLORY OF YOUR LOVE Before the glory of your love The beauty of the world is bowed In adoration, and to prove Your praises every Truth is proud : Each silent witness testifies Your wonder by its native worth And dumbly its delight denies That your wild music may have birth : Only this madman cannot keep Your peace, but flings his bursting heart Forth to red battle, — while they weep Your music who have held apart. 79 TO GRACE On the Morning of her Christening, April 7th, 1916 The powerful words that from my heart Ahve and throbbing leap and sing Shall bind the dragon's jaws apart Or bring you back a vanished spring ; They shall unseal and seal again The fount of wisdom's awful flow, So this one guerdon they shall gain That your wild beauty still they show. The joy of Spring leaps from your eyes, The strength of dragons in your hair. In your young soul we still surprise The secret wisdom flowing there ; But never word shall speak or sing Inadequate music where abo^'e Your burning heart now spreads its wing In the wild beauty of your Love. 80 PROTHALAMION Now a gentle dusk shall fall Slowly on the world, and all The singing voices softly cease And a silence and great peace Cover all the blushing earth Free from sadness as from mirth While with willing feet but shy She shall tremble and draw nigh To the bridal chamber decked With darkness by the architect Of the seven starry spheres And the pit's eternal fires Of the nine angelic choirs And her happy hopes and fears. Then this magic dusk of even Shall give way before the night — Close the curtains of delight ! Silence is the only song That can speak such mysteries As to earth and heaven belong When one flesh has compassed these. 81 SEE THE CROCUS' GOLDEN CUP See the crocus' golden cup Like a warrior leaping up At the summons of the spring, " Guard turn out ! " for welcoming Of the new elected year. The blackbird now with psalter clear Sings the ritual of the day And the lark with bugle gay Blows reveille to the morn, Earth and heaven's latest born. 82 SIGNS AND WONDERS The bread is mine Unmixed with leaven And the purple wine Of the Vines of Heaven ; I have asked to see If my love shall be At the Throne of Three With the splendid Seven. To a blinding car Four living creatures Enharnessed are, Whence One whose features Outshine the skies At noon, replies With her burning eyes — The eternal teachers — *' Thy love is a sword In the heart of slaughter. Thy love is a word Of the high-king's daughter, A song that is sung In a mystic tongue, A fountain sprung From the Living Water. 83 84 SIGNS AND WONDERS " And thy love shall stand In the courts of splendour At the King's left hand, Where she shall render The gifts of Love To the throne above, And a shining dove Shall there attend her. *' For thy love is a sign In the Book of Wonder, A mark divine On the seals of thunder That the Spirit's light And the Water's might And the Blood, red-bright Have witnessed under." OBSCURITY x\ND P0E:TRY 85 (D315) G- OBSCURITY AND POETRY.* By Joseph Pi.unkktt There are two kinds of obscurity — the obscurity of Art and the obscurity of Nature. They may be called the obscurity of mist and the obscurity of mystery. They have nothing in common. They are as opposed as the poles. A thing may be hidden by Art in two ways. It may be overlaid with irrelevancies, or its ex- pression may be restrained to the point of poverty. The effect is the same. The essentials are hidden. In Nature also (but by Nature we mean not so much apparent Nature as real Nature) there are two ways by which things may be liidden. They may become so common as not to be regarded, or they may be so uncommon as not to permit regard. They may be as universal as light or as unique as the sun Observation involves com- parison, and that which is entirely universal or absolutely unique — or both — cannot be compared with anything. *From a Critical Not'ce of Verses which appeared in "The Iiish Review," February, 1914, Co lected Potms by Ai,., and Lyrical Poems by Thomas AlacDonegh. 87 (D 316) G2 88 OBSCURITY AND POETRY An artist is one who has the power of unveiling Nature, only to substitute the veils of Art. In- deed it is by imposing the veils of Art that he is enabled to show the real quaUties and relations of things. For the veils of Art need not be obscure. The vision of the artist is of such a kind that it penetrates these veils and thus can view the reah- ties underlying them that otherwise could not be confronted. It is through his Art that the artist sees. The artist's task, however, is to make others see ; for all Art is revelation. This he does chiefly by the great instrument of inspiration, Choice. He chooses the portion or phase of Truth that he is to reveal, and he chooses the veils that he must impose in order to make that Truth visible. Here it is that the artist is liable to obscurity. He is apt to lose the consciousness of his purpose of revelation to others in the overwhelming devotion that the vision requires. Then it is that the quaHty of his inspiration decides the nature of the obscurity that is certain to result. If this vision be powerful and his inspiration deep he will choose to scale the topless peaks of beauty and attempt to set down the splendour of the spreading plains of Truth. He will fail to clothe his vision with the necessary veils. His work will have the obscurity of Nature. If, on the other hand, his inspiration be more subtle and superficial, running hither and thither in intricate mazes of wonder, he will OBSCURITY AND POETRY 89 multiply veils on detailed portions of his subject, adding one to another according as the various points of view and possible relations of parts come within his cognizance. His work will have the obscurity of Art. As the principle of all Art can be exempUfied in the production of any Art, and as poetry is the most satisfying of all the Arts, better examples could not be chosen to demonstrate the obscuri- ties of Mist and Mystery than two poets in whose works these opposite tendencies exist. It so hap- pens that something of one of each of these ten- dencies to obscurity may be observed in two books of poems that have just been issued. M. has followed the two Arts of painting and poetry, and in both of these has manifested the rhythmic creation of beauty. If sometimes we have been in doubt as to which of these arts we ought to attribute some of his work, our confusion is not an arraignment of his methods, but rather an assertion that by means of the two arts sprung from the same necessity, and appealing to like faculties of appreciation he has contrived to satis f y us of their unity and origin and essential identity of purpose. Though many have remarked on the unusual similarity of ^.'s poetry and his painting — a similarity which leaves his poetry easily the superior from the point of view of craft, as it never has the faulty draughtsmanship nor the glaring crudities of colour occasionally visible in his go OBSCURITY AND POETRY pictures — none seem to have mentioned the out- standing difference always and everj^where observ- able on comparison of these two media of ex- pression. It is simply this, that one is never in doubt as to what is on the canvas, but one is very frequently in doubt as to what is included in M.'s poems. Now let us be very careful and very clear. One might say, " We know that there is on the canvas a certain amount of paint, and in the poems a certain number of syllables." But we know much more of what is on the canvas. We may not know the ulterior meaning of the picture, if it have one ; we may not know whether the figures wading in the light-flooded sea are illusions of flesh and blood or reahties of the spirit ; we may not know the secrets of the symbols, but we do know the symbols. But in the poems we sometimes know nothing more than the suite of the syllables. We taste the honey of their sound, but we get no milk of their meaning. They may call up flashes of colour and shape, but these always fade and pass. And burning multitudes pour through my heart too bright, too blind. Too swift and hurried in their flight to leave their tale behind. (The Winds of Angus). We do not know these symbols — if they are symbols. We could not be trusted to recognise OBSCURITY AND POETRY 9I them again. This may be due in some measure to our hmitations, but it is these limitations that the artist must take into account. We have, however, some reason to beHeve that much of ^.'s obscurity is deHberate, or at least conscious. For when he is roused to rage he becomes cold and clear. When he wishes to express anger or disgust towards men and conditions, all his immutable immensities go by the board. He ceases to be the prophet of pantheism, seeing the universal in the smallest of things and the immortality of Nothing- ness at the end of all. He denies the kingship of the beggar and the divinity of the worm. He becomes Nietzschean in his contempt for humiHty : He does not love the bended knees The soul made worm-Hke in his sight. (Faith) . He asks with the Old Aristocrat : How came this pigmy rabble spun, After the gods and kings of old ? {The Iron Age), He feels the reaHty and hates the oppression of death : The worship of the dead is not A worship that our hearts allow. {On behalf of some Irishmen not followers of Tradition) 92 OBSCURITY AND POETRY The portion of Truth that he will have is that which seems to be cut off from the body of Truth, and then he prefers to hold it as a heresy — -which is the last cold profanity of Pride : No blazoned banner we unfold — One charge alone we give to youth Against the sceptred myth to hold The golden heresy of Truth. (Ibid). With the withdrawal of his superimposed beauties of imagery, his obscurity vanishes and his meaning stands clearly forth, freed from the mist of his Art. As this is the first issue of Thomas MacDonagh's Lyrical Poems, it is primarily necessary to tell something of its quaHty. There is a quiet depth of meaning and a calm splendour of expression throughout the great poems in this book that unquestionably raise them to the region of essen- tial poetry. Tried b3^ any of the touchstones of criticism, clarity, lyrical beauty, perfection of imagery, effortless rapture, sympathy of human feeling, profundity of Vision — ever3rwhere we catch the gUnt of perfect gold. Witness this passage from The Golden Joy : It is the Spring and these the songs of Spring, Songs of the rathe rose and the lily's hope — For now the Poet hears the lily call OBSCURITY AND POETRY 93 That came to Christ from beauty's natural shrine And, through his hps, soared sacred out and up Into the space beyond of hoHness, The aether of the rapture of High God. Oh ! it steals to us like the breath of dawn That fills the pipes of Nature with sweet sounds. Steals low and swells anon into chant To throb and triumph through the heart of Spring With the clear canticle of Love that hails The orient Epiphany of Joy. And now the poet heart is calling too And called aloud by every voice divine Behind our wall out through the lattices.* Now is the season of the Golden Joy, Now is the season of the birth of Love — The perfect passion of the heart of God, The rapture of the beauty of the world, The rapture of eternity of bliss ! For all our Winters pass and all rains go, And all the flowers of Joy appear again. And spring is green with figs more beautiful And sweet with odours of the mystic Tree That droops its branches over Heaven and Earth, Scattering flowers and fruit and passionate wine Down into all the places of the sun. And into all the nether places dim Fragrant with ecstasy of Joy and Peace. And who will steep his senses in the flowers And who will feed his spirit on the fruit And who will fill his veins with the great wine 94 OBSCURITY AND POETRY Shall see no Winters and shall feel no rains But Joy perpetual in the Land of God. In his essay on Coleridge, Francis Thompson says ; " There is not one great poet who has escaped the charge of obscurity, fantasticalness, or affectation of utterance," but we may ask, Is there one great poet who has not deserved the charge of obscurity ? If we limit the charge to that kind of obscurity that we have called the obscurity of Nature or of Mystery, then to our knowledge there is none. Certainly is some of his poems Mr. MacDonagh deserves the charge. Much of The Book of Images is difficult if not impossible to interpret, but the Vision is not less clear for that, and the one thing that we must insist on is clarity of Vision. Without clarity of Vision there can be no certainty of inspiration. It is only in utterance that the great poet is obscure. And it is only in utterance that Mr. MacDonagh is obscure. That is not because he does not speak plainly, it is because he speaks too plainly to be understood. Nor is it because all utterance is inadequate. It is not that his words do not mean enough. It is that they mean too much. When he says : The phases of the might Of God in mortal sight I saw, in God's forethought Fashioned and wrought. OBSCURITY AND POETRY 95 Now wrought in spirit and clay, In rare and common day, And shown in symbol and sign Of power divine, he is claiming inspiration and prophecy as it is claimed in the Book of Wisdom. He is like Blake, holding infinity in the palm of his hand. He is stating his Vision of all Being in eight short lines. He makes a verse of the Universe. He fills all the heavens with a syllable and with a word holds the gates of hell. His is the true dominion of the mystic. In his symbolism Mr. MacDonagh shows the same power : The flowers of heaven and earth. The moons of death and birth. The seasons of the soul, are three clear images which illustrate and illu- minate the obscurity of his form and the precision and plenitude of his meaning. And indeed the first of these serves to remind us of the essential teaching of all the great mystical poets from Solomon to Francis Thompson — the doctrine that binds M. and Thomas MacDonagh in the same service of beauty, the creed subscribed to by' all who have experienced the divine vision ; for the flowers of heaven and earth are the same flowers. THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW AN INITIAL FINE OF 25 CENTS WILL BE ASSESSED FOR FAILURE TO RETURN THIS BOOK ON THE DATE DUE. THE PENALTY WILL INCREASE TO SO CENTS ON THE FOURTH DAY AND TO $1.00 ON THE SEVENTH DAY OVERDUE. f^n V5 ^^* / c» 1 non \^ih\( 2 1939 /^^--«^r-o ^iOfif'Sff., ' i ij MAY 7 1984 mmm •«w29-8^ \ m m \m LD21-100rn-7,'33 y UNIVERSITY OF CAUFORNIA LIBRARY