The slender Hazels ask’d the Yew like night
      Beside the river-green of Lisnacaun
      “Who is this woman beautiful as light
      Sitting in dolour on thy branchéd lawn;
      With sun-red hair, entangled as with flight,
      Sheening the knees up to her bosom drawn?
      What horses mud-besprent so thirstily
      Bellying the hush pools with their nostrils wide?”
      And the Yew old as the long mountain-side
      Answer’d, “I saw her hither with Clan Usnach ride.”
     
    
      “Come, love, and climb with me Findruim’s woods
      Alone,” Naois pray’d. Through broom and bent
      Strown with swift-travelling shadows of their moods,
      Leaving below the camp’s thin cries, they went.
      32And never a tress, escaping from her snoods,
      Made the brown river with a kiss content,
      So safe he raised up Deirdre through the ford.
      Thanks, piteous Gods, that no fore-boding gave,
      He should so bear her after to the grave,
      Breasting the druid ice, breasting the phantom wave.
     
    
      “O, bear me on,” she breathed, “for ever so!”
      And light as notes the Achill shepherd plays
      On his twin pipes they wanton’d, light and slow,
      Up the broad valley. Birds sail’d from the haze
      Far up, where darkling copses over-grow
      Scarps of the gray cliff from his river’d base.
      Diaphaneity, the spirit’s beauty,
      Along the dimnéd coombes did float and reign,
      And many a mountain’s scarry flank was plain
      Through nets of youngling gold betrimm’d with rain.
     
    
      But when an upward space of grass—so free—
      So endless—beckon’d to the realms of wind
      Deirdre broke from his side, and airily
      Fled up the slopes, flinging disdains behind,
      33And paused, and round a little vivid tree
      The wolf-skins from her neck began to bind.
      Naois watch’d below this incantation;
      Then upward on his javelin’s length he swung
      To catch some old crone’s ditty freshly sung,
      Bidding that shoot be wise, for yet ’twas young.
     
    
      With gaze in gaze, thus ever up and on
      Roved they unwitting of the world out-roll’d,
      Their ears dinn’d by the breeze’s clarion
      That quicks the blood while yet the cheek is cold;
      Great whitenesses rose past them—brooks ran down—
      And step by step Findruim bare and bold
      Uplifted. So a swimmer is uplifted
      Horsed on a streaming shoulder of the Sea—
      Our hasty master, who to such as we
      Tosses some glittering hour of mastery.
     
    
      They heard out of the zenith swoop and sting
      Feathery voices, keen and soft and light:
      34“Mate ye as eagles mate, that on the wing
      Grapple—heaven-high—hell-deep, for yours is flight!
      Souls like the granite candles of a king
      Flaming unshook amid the noise of night
      What of pursuit, that you to-day shouldst fear it?”
      Pursuit they reck’d not, save of wind that pours
      Surging and urging on to other shores
      Over the restless forest of a thousand doors.
     
    
      “Deirdre,” he cried, “the blowing of thy hair
      Is of the clouds that everlasting stream
      Forth from the castles of those islands rare
      Black in the ragged-misted ocean’s gleam
      And glimpsed by Iceland galleys as they fare
      Northward!” But in her bosom’s open seam
      She set the powder’d yew-sprig silently;
      “Speak not of me nor give my beauty praise,
      Whose beauty is to follow in thy ways
      So that my days be number’d with thy days.”
     
    
      35In the high pastures of that boundless place
      Their feet wist not if they should soar or run
      They turned, at earth astonish’d, face to face
      Deeming unearthly blessedness begun.
      And slow, mid nests of running larks, they pace
      Drinking from the recesses of the sun
      Tremble of those wings that beat light into music.
      There the world’s ends lay open: open wide
      The body’s windows. What shall them divide
      Who have walk’d once that country side by side?
     
    
      She mused, “O why doth happiness too much
      Fountains of blood and spirit seem to fill?
      The woods, over-flowing, cannot bear that such
      An hour should be so sweet and yet be still:
      Even the low-tangled bushes at a touch
      Break into wars of gleemen, thrill on thrill.
      O son of Usnach, bring me not thy glories!
      Bring me defeats and shames and secret woe;
      36That where no brother goeth I may go
      And kneel to wash thy wounds in caverns bleak and low!”
     
    
      “Here, up in sight of the far shine of sea,
      (He sang) once after hunting, by the fire
      I knelt, and kindling brushwood raised up thee,
      Deirdre, nor wist the star of my desire
      Should ever walk Findruim’s head with me
      Far from a king’s loud house and soft attire.
      Fain would I thatch us here a booth of hazels,
      Thatch it with drift and snow of sea-gulls’ wings:
      And thy horn’d harp should wonder to its strings
      What spoil is it to-night Naois brings?”
     
    
      “Listen,” quoth he, when scarce those words were gone
      (A neck of the bare down it was, a ledge
      Of wind-sleek turf, the lovers roam’d upon
      And sent young rabbits scuttling to the edge
      Of underwoods beneath) “I think that yon
      Some beast—haply a stag—takes harbourage.”
      37And Deirdre at a word come back from regions
      Of bliss too close to pain, snatch’d with no fear
      Out of his hand the battle-haunted spear
      And, questing swiftly down the pasture sheer,
     
    
      Enter’d the yew’s black vault: therein profound
      Green-litten air, and there as seeking fresh
      Enemies, one haunch crush’d against the ground
      The grey boar slew’d, tusking the tender flesh
      Of shoots, his ravage-whetted bulk around:
      But when his ear across the straggling mesh
      Of feather’d sticks report of Deirdre found
      He quiver’d, snorted; from his jaws like wine
      Foam dripp’d; along the horror of his spine
      The bristles grew up like a ridge of pine.
     
    
      Mortals, the maiden deem’d that guise a mask—
      Believed that in that beast sate to ensnare
      He of the red eye—little need to ask
      The druid-wrinkled hide, the sluttish hair:
      This was to escape—how vain poor passion’s task!—
      Connachar of the illimitable lair!
      38He crash’d at her; she heaved the point embrown’d
      In blood of dragons. Heavily the boar
      Grazed by the iron, reel’d, leapt, charged once more
      And thrice in passage her frail vesture tore.
     
    
      As when a herd-boy lying on the scar
      (Who pipes to flocks below him on the steep
      Melodies like their neckbells, scattering far,
      Cool as the running water, soft as sleep)
      Hurls out a flint from peril to debar
      And from the boulder’d chasm recall his sheep—
      So with a knife Naois leapt and struck.
      Strange, in the very fury of a stride
      The grey beast like a phantom from his side
      Plunged without scathe to thickets undescried.
     
    
      Naois sheathed his iron with no stain
      And laugh’d “This shall be praised in revels mad
      Around Lug’s peak, when women scatter grain
      Upon the warriors. Why shouldst thou be sad
      39Pale victory?” But she, “Ah, thus again
      Ere night do I imperil thee, and add
      Burden to burden.” And he strove to lead her
      From grief, and said “What, bride! thy raiment torn?”
      “Content thee, O content thee, man of scorn,
      I’ll brooch it with no jewel but a thorn!”
     
    
      They seek down through the Wood of Awe that hems
      Findruim, like the throng about his grave,
      Dusk with the swarth locks of ten thousand stems
      In naked poise. These make no rustle save
      Some pine-cone dropt, or murmur that condemns
      Murmur; bedumb’d with moss that giant nave.
      But let Findruim shake out overhead
      His old sea-sigh, and when it doth arrive
      At once their tawny boles become alive
      With flames that come and go, and they revive
     
    
      The north’s Fomorian roar.—“I am enthrall’d,”
      He said, “as by the blueness of a ray
      40That, dropping through this presence sombre-wall’d
      Burns low about the image of a spray—
      Of some poor beech-spray witch’d to emerald.
      Wilt thou not dance, daughter of heaven, to-day
      Free, at last free? For here no moody raindrop
      Can reach thee, nor betrayer overpeer;
      And none the self-delightful measure hear
      That thy soul moves to, quit of mortal ear.”
     
    
      Full loth she pleads, yet cannot him resist
      And on the enmosséd lights begins to dance.
      Away, away, far-floating like a mist,
      To fade into some leafy brilliance;
      Then, smiling to the inward melodist,
      Over the printless turf with slow advance
      Of showery footsteps, makes she infinite
      That crowded glen. But quick, possess’d by strange
      Rapture, wider than dreams her motions range
      Till to a span the forests shrink and change.
     
    
      41And in her eyes and glimmering arms she brings
      Hither all promise,—all the unlook’d-for boon
      Of rain-bow’d life—all rare and speechless things
      That shine and swell under the brimming Moon.
      Who shall pluck tympans? For what need of strings
      To waft her blood who is herself the tune—
      Herself the warm and breathing melody?
      Art come from the Land of the Ever-Young? O stay!
      For his heart, after thee rising away,
      Falls dark and spirit-faint back to the clay.
     
    
      Griefs, like the yellow leaves by winter curl’d,
      Rise after her—long-buried pangs arouse—
      About that bosom the grey forests whirl’d,
      And tempests with her beauty might espouse,—
      She rose with the green waters of the world
      And the winds heaved with her their depth of boughs.
      Then vague again as blows the beanfield’s odour
      On the dark lap of air she chose to sink,
      42As, winnowing with plumes, to the river-brink
      The pigeons from the cliff come down to drink.
     
    
      Sudden distraught, shading her eyes, she ceased,
      Listening, like bride whom cunning faery strain
      Forth from the trumpet-bruited spousal feast
      Steals. But she beckon’d soon, and quick with pain
      He ran, he craved at those white feet the least
      Pardon; nor, till he felt her hand again
      Descend flake-soft, durst spy that she was weeping
      Or kneel with burning murmurs to atone.
      For sleep she wept. Long fasting had they gone
      And ridden from the breaking of the dawn.
     
    
      It chanced that waters, nigh to that selve grove,
      From Sleep’s own lake as from a cauldron pass;
      He led towards their sound his weary love
      And lay before her in the fresh of grass
      Resting—the white cirque of the cliffs above—
      Against a sun-abandon’d stem there was.
      43Spray from the strings of water spilling over
      The weir of rock, their fever’d cheeks bewet;
      And to its sound a voiceless bread they ate,
      And drank the troth that is unbroken yet.
     
    
      Out in the mere—brown—unbesilver’d now
      By finest skimming of the elfin breeze—
      An isle was moor’d, with rushes at its prow
      And fraught with haze of deeply-mirror’d trees;
      And knowing Deirdre still was mindful how
      The boar yet lived, that she might sleep at ease
      Naois swore to harbour on that islet.
      Nine strides he waded in, on footings nine
      Deep, deeper yet, until his basnet’s shine
      Sank to the cold lips of the lake divine.
     
    
      Divine; for once the sunk stones of that way
      Approach’d the pool-god, and the outermost
      Had been the black slab whereon druids slay
      With stoop and mutter to the water’s ghost,
      Though since to glut some whim malign the fay
      Had swell’d over the flags. Of all the host
      44Few save Naois, and at sore adventure
      Had ta’en this pass. But who would not have press’d
      Through straits by the chill-finger’d fiend possess’d
      To bear unto that isle Deirdre to rest?
     
    
      “Seal up thy sight; my shield of iron rims
      Unhook; cast in this shatter’d helm for spoil.”
      ’Twas done, and then with rush of cleaving limbs
      He swam and bore her out with happy toil
      Secret and fierce as the flat otter swims
      Out of the whistling reeds as if through oil.
      And Deirdre, whiter than the wave-swan floating,
      Smiled that he suffer’d her no stroke to urge.
      At length they reach the gnarl’d and ivied verge
      And from the shallows to the sun emerge.
     
    
      She spreads her wolf-skins on the rock that glows
      And sun-tears wrings out of the heavy strands
      Of corded hair. He, watching to the close,
      Sees not the white silk tissue as she stands
      45Clinging bedull’d to the clear limbs of rose.
      She turn’d and to him stretch’d misdoubting hands:
      “Tell me, ere thou dissolve, O wordless watcher,
      Am I that Deirdre that would sit and spin
      Beside Keshcorran? Dost thou love me? Then
      I touch thee. For I, too, have love within.”
     
    
      O sacred cry! Again, again the first
      Love-cry! How the steep woods thirst for thy voice,
      O never-dying one! That voice, like the outburst
      And gush of a young spring’s delicious noise
      Driven from the ancient heights whereon ’twas nursed!
      Yet, as death’s heart is silent, so is joy’s.
      His mouth spake not; for, as in dusk Glen Treithim
      Smelters of bubbling gold brook not to breathe
      Reek of the colour’d fumes whose hissings wreathe
      The brim, he choked at his own spirit’s seethe.
     
    
      46Sternly he looked on her and strangely said
      “What touch is thine? It hath unearthly powers.
      I think thou art the woman Cairbre made
      Out of the dazzle and the wind of flowers.
      Behold, the flame-like children of the shade,
      The buds, about thee rise like servitors!
      It seems I had not lipp’d the cup of living
      Till thou didst stretch it out. Vaguely I felt
      Irreparable waste. Why hast thou dwell’d
      Near me on earth so long, yet unbeheld?”
     
    
      Chanters! The Night brings nigh the deeps far off,
      But Twilight shows the distance of the Near;
      And with a million dawns that pierce above
      Mixes the soul of suns that disappear,
      To make man’s eyes approach the eyes of love
      In simpleness, in mystery and fear.
      All blooms both bright and pale are in her gardens,
      All chords both shrill and deep under her hand
      Who, sounding forth the richness of the land,
      Estrangeth all, that we may understand.
     
    
      47So still it was, they heard in the evening skies
      Creak as of eagles’ wing-feathers afar
      Coasting the grey cliffs. On him slowly rise,
      As to Cuchullain came his signal star,
      Out of the sheeted rivers, Deirdre’s eyes.
      And who look’d in them well was girt for war;
      Seeing in that gaze all who for love had perish’d:
      The queens calamitous unbow’d at last—
      The supreme fighters that alone stood fast—
      Fealties obscure, unwitness’d, and long past,
     
    
      Cloud over cloud—the host that had attain’d
      By love,—in very essence, force, heat, breath
      Now, now arose in Deirdre’s eyes and deign’d
      Summons to him—“Canst follow us?” it saith—
      Till from that great contagion he hath gain’d
      An outlook like to conquest over death.
      Then he discerns the solemn-rafter’d world
      By this frail brazier’s glowings, wherein blend
      48Coals that no man hath kindled, without end
      Born and re-born, from ashes to ascend.
     
    
      And face to face to him unbared she cleaves
      Woman no more—scarce-breathing—infinite,
      Grave as the fair-brow’d priestess Earth receives
      In all her lochs and plains and invers bright
      And shores wide-trembling where one image heaves,
      Him that is lord of silence and of light.
      Slow the God sigh’d himself from rocks and waters
      But in his soft withdrawals from the air
      No creature in the weightless world was there
      Uttered its being’s secret round the pair.
     
    
      Ah! them had Passion’s self-enshrouding arm
      Taken, as a green fury of ocean takes,
      Through the dense thickets smitten with alarm
      To the islet’s trancéd core. And Deirdre wakes,
      Lifting hot lids that shut against the storm,
      Lying on a hillock, amid slender brakes
      49Of grey trees, to the babble of enchantments
      From mouths of chill-born flowers. The place was new
      To rapture. Branchéd sunbursts plashing through
      After, had laid the mound with fire and dew.
     
    
      Naois cuts down osiers. Now he seeks
      A narrow grass-plot shorn as if with scythe
      And over two great boulders’ wrinkled cheeks
      Draws down and knots a hull of saplings lithe,
      Well-staunch’d with earthy-odour’d moss and sticks
      Known to the feet of birds. This darkness blithe
      He frames against the stars for forest sleepers.
      The living tide of stars aloft that crept
      Compassion’d far below. No wavelet leapt;
      And deep rest fell upon them there. They slept.
     
    
      Long, long, the melancholy mountains lay
      Aware; mute-rippling shades that isle enwound.
      Naois fell through dreams, like the snapt spray
      That drops from branch to branch,—that stillest sound!—
      50And while from headlands scarce a league away
      The din of the sea-breakers come aground
      Roll’d up the valley, he in vision govern’d
      His ribbéd skiff under Dun Aengus sweeping,
      Triumphing with his love, and leaping, leaping,
      Drew past the ocean-shelves of seals a-sleeping.
     
    
      But over starr’d peat-water, where the flag
      Rustles, and listens for the scud of teal;
      Over coast, forest, and bethunder’d crag
      Night—mother of despairs, who proves the steel
      In men, to see if they be dross and slag
      Or fit with trusts and enemies to deal
      Uneyed, alone—diffusing her wide veils
      Bow’d from the heavens to his exultant ear:
      A questioner awaits thee: rouse! The mere
      Slept on, save for the twilight-footed deer.
     
    
      “Those antler’d shadows of the forest-roof
      Nigh to the shore must be assembled thick,”
      He thought, “and bringing necks round to the hoof
      Or being aslaked and couching, seek to lick
      51The fawns. Some heady bucks engage aloof,
      So sharp across the water comes the click
      Of sparring horns.” But was it a vain terror,
      Son of the sword, or one for courage staunch,
      That the herd, dismay’d, at a bound, with a quivering haunch
      Murmur’d away into night at the crack of a branch?
     
    
      And Deirdre woke. Reverberate from on high
      Amongst the sullen hills, distinct there fell
      A mournful keen, like to the broken cry
      From the house of hostage in some citadel
      Of hostages lifting up their agony
      After the land they must remember well,
      “Deirdre is gone! Gone is the little Deirdre!”
      And she knowing not the voice as voice of man
      Stood up. “Lie still, lest thee the spirit ban
      O vein of life, lie still!” But Deirdre ran
     
    
      Like the moon through brakes, and saw where nought had been
      On the vague shore what seem’d a stone that stood;
      52Faceless, rough-hewn, it forward seem’d to lean
      Like the worn pillar of Cenn Cruaich the God.
      She cried across “If thou with things terrene
      Be number’d, tell me why thy sorrowful blood
      Mourneth, O Cathva, father!” But the stone
      Shiver’d, and broke the staff it lean’d upon,
      Shouting, “What! livst thou yet? Begone, begone!”