Title:   Last Poems

Subject:  

Author:   William Butler Yeats

Keywords:  

Creator:  

PDF Version:   1.2



Contents:

Page No 1

Page No 2

Page No 3

Page No 4

Page No 5

Page No 6

Page No 7

Page No 8

Page No 9

Page No 10

Page No 11

Page No 12

Page No 13

Page No 14

Bookmarks





Page No 1


Last Poems

William Butler Yeats



Top




Page No 2


Table of Contents

Last Poems ...........................................................................................................................................................1

William Butler Yeats...............................................................................................................................1

Under Ben Bulben ....................................................................................................................................1

Three Songs To The One Burden............................................................................................................3

The Black Tower ......................................................................................................................................5

Cuchulain Comforted ...............................................................................................................................6

Three Marching Songs .............................................................................................................................7

In Tara's Halls..........................................................................................................................................9

The Statues .............................................................................................................................................10

News For the Delphic Oracle .................................................................................................................11

I..............................................................................................................................................................11

II .............................................................................................................................................................11

III  ...........................................................................................................................................................12


Last Poems

i



Top




Page No 3


Last Poems

William Butler Yeats

Under Ben Bulben 

Three Songs To The One Burden 

The Black Tower 

Cuchulain Comforted 

Three Marching Songs 

In Tara's Halls 

The Statues 

News For the Delphic Oracle 

I 

II 

III  

Under Ben Bulben

SWEAR by what the sages spoke 

Round the Mareotic Lake 

That the Witch of Atlas knew, 

Spoke and set the cocks acrow. 

Swear by those horsemen, by those women 

Complexion and form prove superhuman, 

That pale, longvisaged company 

That air in immortality 

Completeness of their passions won; 

Now they ride the wintry dawn 

Where Ben Bulben sets the scene. 

Here's the gist of what they mean. 

II 

Many times man lives and dies 

Between his two eternities, 

That of race and that of soul, 

And ancient Ireland knew it all. 

Whether man die in his bed 

Or the rifle knocks him dead, 

A brief parting from those dear 

Is the worst man has to fear. 

Last Poems 1



Top




Page No 4


Though gravediggers' toil is long, 

Sharp their spades, their muscles strong. 

They but thrust their buried men 

Back in the human mind again. 

III 

You that Mitchel's prayer have heard, 

"Send war in our time, O Lord!' 

Know that when all words are said 

And a man is fighting mad, 

Something drops from eyes long blind, 

He completes his partial mind, 

For an instant stands at ease, 

Laughs aloud, his heart at peace. 

Even the wisest man grows tense 

With some sort of violence 

Before he can accomplish fate, 

Know his work or choose his mate. 

IV 

Poet and sculptor, do the work, 

Nor let the modish painter shirk 

What his great forefathers did. 

Bring the soul of man to God, 

Make him fill the cradles right. 

Measurement began our might: 

Forms a stark Egyptian thought, 

Forms that gentler phidias wrought. 

Michael Angelo left a proof 

On the Sistine Chapel roof, 

Where but halfawakened Adam 

Can disturb globetrotting Madam 

Till her bowels are in heat, 

proof that there's a purpose set 

Before the secret working mind: 

Profane perfection of mankind. 

Quattrocento put in paint 

On backgrounds for a God or Saint 

Gardens where a soul's at ease; 

Where everything that meets the eye, 

Flowers and grass and cloudless sky, 

Resemble forms that are or seem 

When sleepers wake and yet still dream. 

And when it's vanished still declare, 

With only bed and bedstead there, 

That heavens had opened. 

Gyres run on; 

When that greater dream had gone 

Calvert and Wilson, Blake and Claude, 


Last Poems

Last Poems 2



Top




Page No 5


Prepared a rest for the people of God, 

Palmer's phrase, but after that 

Confusion fell upon our thought. 

Irish poets, earn your trade, 

Sing whatever is well made, 

Scorn the sort now growing up 

All out of shape from toe to top, 

Their unremembering hearts and heads 

Baseborn products of base beds. 

Sing the peasantry, and then 

Hardriding country gentlemen, 

The holiness of monks, and after 

Porterdrinkers' randy laughter; 

Sing the lords and ladies gay 

That were beaten into the clay 

Through seven heroic centuries; 

Cast your mind on other days 

That we in coming days may be 

Still the indomitable Irishry. 

VI 

Under bare Ben Bulben's head 

In Drumcliff churchyard Yeats is laid. 

An ancestor was rector there 

Long years ago, a church stands near, 

By the road an ancient cross. 

No marble, no conventional phrase; 

On limestone quarried near the spot 

By his command these words are cut: 

Cast a cold eye 

On life, on death. 

Horseman, pass by! 

Three Songs To The One Burden

THE Roaring Tinker if you like, 

But Mannion is my name, 

And I beat up the common sort 

And think it is no shame. 

The common breeds the common, 

A lout begets a lout, 


Last Poems

Three Songs To The One Burden 3



Top




Page No 6


So when I take on half a score 

I knock their heads about. 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 

All Mannions come from Manannan, 

Though rich on every shore 

He never lay behind four walls 

He had such character, 

Nor ever made an iron red 

Nor soldered pot or pan; 

His roaring and his ranting 

Best please a wandering man. 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 

Could Crazy Jane put off old age 

And ranting time renew, 

Could that old god rise up again 

We'd drink a can or two, 

And out and lay our leadership 

On country and on town, 

Throw likely couples into bed 

And knock the others down. 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 

II 

My name is Henry Middleton, 

I have a small demesne, 

A small forgotten house that's set 

On a stormbitten green. 

I scrub its floors and make my bed, 

I cook and change my plate, 

The post and gardenboy alone 

Have keys to my old gate. 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 

Though I have locked my gate on them, 

I pity all the young, 

I know what devil's trade they learn 

From those they live among, 

Their drink, their pitchandtoss by day, 

Their robbery by night; 

The wisdom of the people's gone, 

How can the young go straight? 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 

When every Sunday afternoon 

On the Green Lands I walk 

And wear a coat in fashion. 

Memories of the talk 

Of henwives and of queer old men 

Brace me and make me strong; 

There's not a pilot on the perch 

Knows I have lived so long. 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 


Last Poems

Three Songs To The One Burden 4



Top




Page No 7


III 

Come gather round me, players all: 

Come praise NineteenSixteen, 

Those from the pit and gallery 

Or from the painted scene 

That fought in the Post Office 

Or round the City Hall, 

praise every man that came again, 

Praise every man that fell. 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 

Who was the first man shot that day? 

The player Connolly, 

Close to the City Hall he died; 

Catriage and voice had he; 

He lacked those years that go with skill, 

But later might have been 

A famous, a brilliant figure 

Before the painted scene. 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 

Some had no thought of victory 

But had gone out to die 

That Ireland's mind be greater, 

Her heart mount up on high; 

And yet who knows what's yet to come? 

For patrick pearse had said 

That in every generation 

Must Ireland's blood be shed. 

From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen. 

The Black Tower

SAY that the men of the old black tower, 

Though they but feed as the goatherd feeds, 

Their money spent, their wine gone sour, 

Lack nothing that a soldier needs, 

That all are oathbound men: 

Those banners come not in. 

There in the tomb stand the dead upright, 

But winds come up from the shore: 

They shake when the winds roar, 

Old bones upon the mountain shake. 


Last Poems

The Black Tower 5



Top




Page No 8


Those banners come to bribe or threaten, 

Or whisper that a man's a fool 

Who, when his own right king's forgotten, 

Cares what king sets up his rule. 

If he died long ago 

Why do you dread us so? 

There in the tomb drops the faint moonlight, 

But wind comes up from the shore: 

They shake when the winds roar, 

Old bones upon the mountain shake. 

The tower's old cook that must climb and clamber 

Catching small birds in the dew of the morn 

When we hale men lie stretched in slumber 

Swears that he hears the king's great horn. 

But he's a lying hound: 

Stand we on guard oathbound! 

There in the tomb the dark grows blacker, 

But wind comes up from the shore: 

They shake when the winds roar, 

Old bones upon the mountain shake. 

Cuchulain Comforted

A MAN that had six mortal wounds, a man 

Violent and famous, strode among the dead; 

Eyes stared out of the branches and were gone. 

Then certain Shrouds that muttered head to head 

Came and were gone. He leant upon a tree 

As though to meditate on wounds and blood. 

A Shroud that seemed to have authority 

Among those birdlike things came, and let fall 

A bundle of linen. Shrouds by two and thrce 

Came creeping up because the man was still. 

And thereupon that linencarrier said: 

"Your life can grow much sweeter if you will 


Last Poems

Cuchulain Comforted 6



Top




Page No 9


"Obey our ancient rule and make a shroud; 

Mainly because of what we only know 

The rattle of those arms makes us afraid. 

"We thread the needles' eyes, and all we do 

All must together do.' That done, the man 

Took up the nearest and began to sew. 

"Now must we sing and sing the best we can, 

But first you must be told our character: 

Convicted cowards all, by kindred slain 

"Or driven from home and left to dic in fear.' 

They sang, but had nor human tunes nor words, 

Though all was done in common as before; 

They had changed their throats and had the throats of 

birds. 

Three Marching Songs

REMEMBER all those renowned generations, 

They left their bodies to fatten the wolves, 

They left their homesteads to fatten the foxes, 

Fled to far countries, or sheltered themselves 

In cavern, crevice, or hole, 

Defending Ireland's soul. 

Be still, be still, what can be said? 

My father sang that song, 

But time amends old wrong, 

All that is finished, let it fade. 

Remember all those renowned generations, 

Remember all that have sunk in their blood, 

Remember all that have died on the scaffold, 

Remember all that have fled, that have stood, 

Stood, took death like a tune 

On an old,tambourine. 

Be still, be still, what can be said? 

My father sang that song, 


Last Poems

Three Marching Songs 7



Top




Page No 10


But time amends old wrong, 

And all that's finished, let it fade. 

Fail, and that history turns into rubbish, 

All that great past to a trouble of fools; 

Those that come after shall mock at O'Donnell, 

Mock at the memory of both O'Neills, 

Mock Emmet, mock Parnell, 

All the renown that fell. 

Be still, be still, what can be said? 

My father sang that song, 

but time amends old wrong, 

And all that's finished, let it fade. 

II 

The soldier takes pride in saluting his Captain, 

The devotee proffers a knee to his Lord, 

Some back a mare thrown from a thoroughbred,, 

Troy backed its Helen; Troy died and adored; 

Great nations blossom above; 

A slave bows down to a slave. 

What marches through the mountain pass? 

No, no, my son, not yet; 

That is an airy spot, 

And no man knows what treads the grass. 

We know what rascal might has defiled, 

The lofty innocence that it has slain, 

Were we not born in the peasant's cot 

Where men forgive if the belly gain? 

More dread the life that we live, 

How can the mind forgive? 

What marches down the mountain pass? 

No, no, my son, not yet; 

That is an airy spot, 

And no man knows what treads the grass. 

What if there's nothing up there at the top? 

Where are the captains that govern mankind? 

What tears down a tree that has nothing within it? 

A blast of the wind, O a marching wind, 

March wind, and any old tune. 

March, march, and how does it run? 

What marches down the mountain pass? 

No, no, my son, not yet; 

That is an airy spot, 

And no man knows what treads the grass. 


Last Poems

Three Marching Songs 8



Top




Page No 11


III 

Grandfather sang it under the gallows: 

"Hear, gentlemen, ladies, and all mankind: 

Money is good and a girl might be better, 

But good strong blows are delights to the mind.' 

There, standing on the cart, 

He sang it from his heart. 

Robbers had taken his old tambourine, 

But he took down the moon 

And rattled out a tunc; 

Robbers had taken his old tambourinc. 

"A girl I had, but she followed another, 

Money I had, and it went in the night, 

Strong drink I had, and it brought me to sorrow, 

But a good strong cause and blows are delight.' 

All there caught up the tune: 

"Oh, on, my darling man.' 

Robbers had taken his old tambourine, 

But he took down the moon 

And rattled out a tune; 

Robbers had taken his old tambourine. 

"Money is good and a girl might be better, 

No matter what happens and who takes the fall, 

But a good strong cause'  the rope gave a jerk there, 

No more sang he, for his throat was too small; 

But he kicked before he died, 

He did it out of pride. 

Robbers had taken his old tambourine, 

But he took down the moon 

And rattled out a tune; 

Robbers had taken his old tambourine. 

In Tara's Halls

A MAN I praise that once in Tara's Hals 

Said to the woman on his knees, "Lie still. 

My hundredth year is at an end. I think 


Last Poems

In Tara's Halls 9



Top




Page No 12


That something is about to happen, I think 

That the adventure of old age begins. 

To many women I have said, ""Lie still,'' 

And given everything a woman needs, 

A roof, good clothes, passion, love perhaps, 

But never asked for love; should I ask that, 

I shall be old indeed.' 

Thereon the man 

Went to the Sacred House and stood between 

The golden plough and harrow and spoke aloud 

That all attendants and the casual crowd might hear. 

"God I have loved, but should I ask return 

Of God or woman, the time were come to die.' 

He bade, his hundred and first year at end, 

Diggers and carpenters make grave and coffin; 

Saw that the grave was deep, the coffin sound, 

Summoned the generations of his house, 

Lay in the coffin, stopped his breath and died. 

The Statues

PYTHAGORAS planned it. Why did the people stare? 

His numbers, though they moved or seemed to move 

In marble or in bronze, lacked character. 

But boys and girls, pale from the imagined love 

Of solitary beds, knew what they were, 

That passion could bring character enough, 

And pressed at midnight in some public place 

Live lips upon a plummetmeasured face. 

No! Greater than Pythagoras, for the men 

That with a mallet or a chisel" modelled these 

Calculations that look but casual flesh, put down 

All Asiatic vague immensities, 

And not the banks of oars that swam upon 

The manyheaded foam at Salamis. 

Europe put off that foam when Phidias 

Gave women dreams and dreams their lookingglass. 

One image crossed the manyheaded, sat 

Under the tropic shade, grew round and slow, 

No Hamlet thin from eating flies, a fat 

Dreamer of the Middle Ages. Empty eyeballs knew 


Last Poems

The Statues 10



Top




Page No 13


That knowledge increases unreality, that 

Mirror on mirror mirrored is all the show. 

When gong and conch declare the hour to bless 

Grimalkin crawls to Buddha's emptiness. 

When Pearse summoned Cuchulain to his side. 

What stalked through the post Office? What intellect, 

What calculation, number, measurement, replied? 

We Irish, born into that ancient sect 

But thrown upon this filthy modern tide 

And by its formless spawning fury wrecked, 

Climb to our proper dark, that we may trace 

The lineaments of a plummetmeasured face. 

News For the Delphic Oracle

I

THERE all the golden codgers lay, 

There the silver dew, 

And the great water sighed for love, 

And the wind sighed too. 

Manpicker Niamh leant and sighed 

By Oisin on the grass; 

There sighed amid his choir of love 

Tall pythagoras. 

plotinus came and looked about, 

The saltflakes on his breast, 

And having stretched and yawned awhile 

Lay sighing like the rest. 

II


Last Poems

News For the Delphic Oracle 11



Top




Page No 14


Straddling each a dolphin's back 

And steadied by a fin, 

Those Innocents relive their death, 

Their wounds open again. 

The ecstatic waters laugh because 

Their cries are sweet and strange, 

Through their ancestral patterns dance, 

And the brute dolphins plunge 

Until, in some cliffsheltered bay 

Where wades the choir of love 

Proffering its sacred laurel crowns, 

They pitch their burdens off. 

III

Slim adolescence that a nymph has stripped, 

Peleus on Thetis stares. 

Her limbs are delicate as an eyelid, 

Love has blinded him with tears; 

But Thetis' belly listens. 

Down the mountain walls 

From where pan's cavern is 

Intolerable music falls. 

Foul goathead, brutal arm appear, 

Belly, shoulder, bum, 

Flash fishlike; nymphs and satyrs 

Copulate in the foam. 


Last Poems

III  12



Top





Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. Last Poems, page = 4

   3. William Butler Yeats, page = 4

   4. Under Ben Bulben, page = 4

   5. Three Songs To The One Burden, page = 6

   6. The Black Tower, page = 8

   7. Cuchulain Comforted, page = 9

   8. Three Marching Songs, page = 10

   9. In Tara's Halls, page = 12

   10. The Statues, page = 13

   11. News For the Delphic Oracle, page = 14

   12. I, page = 14

   13. II, page = 14

   14. III , page = 15