The Complete Works. William Butler Yeats

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The Complete Works - William Butler Yeats

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then turns towards the peasants.

      CATHLEEN.

      Take up the money; and now come with me.

      When we are far from this polluted place

      I will give everybody money enough.

      [She goes out, the peasants crowding round her and kissing her dress. ALEEL and the TWO MERCHANTS are left alone.

      SECOND MERCHANT.

      Now are our days of heavy labour done.

      FIRST MERCHANT.

      We have a precious jewel for Satan’s crown.

      SECOND MERCHANT.

      We must away, and wait until she dies,

      Sitting above her tower as two gray owls,

      Watching as many years as may be, guarding

      Our precious jewel; waiting to seize her soul.

      FIRST MERCHANT.

      We need but hover over her head in the air,

      For she has only minutes: when she came

      I saw the dimness of the tomb in her,

      And marked her walking as with leaden shoes

      And looking on the ground as though the worms

      Were calling her, and when she wrote her name

      Her heart began to break. Hush! hush! I hear

      The brazen door of Hell move on its hinges,

      And the eternal revelry float hither

      To hearten us.

      SECOND MERCHANT.

      Leap, feathered, on the air

      And meet them with her soul caught in your claws.

      [They rush out. ALEEL crawls into the middle of the room. The twilight has fallen and gradually darkens as the scene goes on. There is a distant muttering of thunder and a sound of rising storm.

      ALEEL.

      The brazen door stands wide, and Balor comes

      Borne in his heavy car, and demons have lifted

      The age-weary eyelids from the eyes that of old

      Turned gods to stone; Barach the traitor comes;

      And the lascivious race, Cailitin,

      That cast a druid weakness and decay

      Over Sualtam’s and old Dectora’s child;

      And that great king Hell first took hold upon

      When he killed Naisi and broke Deirdre’s heart;

      And all their heads are twisted to one side,

      For when they lived they warred on beauty and peace

      With obstinate, crafty, sidelong bitterness.

      [OONA enters, but remains standing by the door. ALEEL half rises, leaning upon one arm and one knee.]

      Crouch down, old heron, out of the blind storm.

      OONA.

      Where is the Countess Cathleen? All this day

      She has been pale and weakly: when her hand

      Touched mine over the spindle her hand trembled,

      And now I do not know where she has gone.

      ALEEL.

      Cathleen has chosen other friends than us,

      And they are rising through the hollow world.

      [He points downwards.

      First, Orchil, her pale beautiful head alive,

      Her body shadowy as vapour drifting

      Under the dawn, for she who awoke desire

      Has but a heart of blood when others die;

      About her is a vapoury multitude

      Of women, alluring devils with soft laughter;

      Behind her a host heat of the blood made sin,

      But all the little pink-white nails have grown

      To be great talons.

      [He seizes OONA and drags her into the middle of the room and points downwards with vehement gestures. The wind roars.]

      They begin a song

      And there is still some music on their tongues.

      OONA.

      [Casting herself face downwards on the floor.]

      O maker of all, protect her from the demons,

      And if a soul must needs be lost, take mine.

      [ALEEL kneels beside her, but does not seem to hear her words; he is gazing down as if through the earth. The peasants return. They carry the COUNTESS CATHLEEN and lay her upon the ground before OONA and ALEEL. She lies there as if dead.]

      O that so many pitchers of rough clay

      Should prosper and the porcelain break in two!

      [She kisses the hands of the COUNTESS CATHLEEN.

      A PEASANT.

      We were under the tree where the path turns

      When she grew pale as death and fainted away,

      And while we bore her hither, cloudy gusts

      Blackened the world and shook us on our feet:

      Draw the great bolt, for no man has beheld

      So black, bitter, blinding, and sudden a storm.

      [One who is near the door draws the bolt.

      OONA.

      Hush, hush, she has awakened from her swoon.

      CATHLEEN.

      O hold me, and hold me tightly, for the storm

      Is dragging me away!

      [OONA

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