<h2><SPAN name="page173"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TIRESIAS</h2>
<h3>PART I</h3>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">It</span> is an hour before
the hour of dawn.<br/>
Set in mine hand my staff and leave me here<br/>
Outside the hollow house that blind men fear,<br/>
More blind than I who live on life withdrawn<br/>
And feel on eyes that see not but foresee<br/>
The shadow of death which clothes Antigone.</p>
<p class="poetry">Here lay her living body that here lies<br/>
Dead, if man living know what thing is death,<br/>
If life be all made up of blood and breath,<br/>
And no sense be save as of ears and eyes.<br/>
But heart there is not, tongue there is not
found,<br/>
To think or sing what verge hath life or bound.</p>
<p class="poetry">In the beginning when the powers that made<br/>
The young child man a little loved him, seeing<br/>
His joy of life and fair face of his being,<br/>
And bland and laughing with the man-child played,<br/>
As friends they saw on our divine one day<br/>
King Cadmus take to queen Harmonia.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page174"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
174</span>The strength of soul that builds up as with hands<br/>
Walls spiritual and towers and towns of thought<br/>
Which only fate, not force, can bring to nought,<br/>
Took then to wife the light of all men’s lands,<br/>
War’s child and love’s, most sweet and
wise and strong,<br/>
Order of things and rule and guiding song.</p>
<p class="poetry">It was long since: yea, even the sun that
saw<br/>
Remembers hardly what was, nor how long.<br/>
And now the wise heart of the worldly song<br/>
Is perished, and the holy hand of law<br/>
Can set no tune on time, nor help again<br/>
The power of thought to build up life for men.</p>
<p class="poetry">Yea, surely are they now transformed or
dead,<br/>
And sleep below this world, where no sun warms,<br/>
Or move about it now in formless forms<br/>
Incognizable, and all their lordship fled;<br/>
And where they stood up singing crawl and hiss,<br/>
With fangs that kill behind their lips that
kiss.</p>
<p class="poetry">Yet though her marriage-garment, seeming
fair,<br/>
Was dyed in sin and woven of jealousy<br/>
To turn their seed to poison, time shall see<br/>
The gods reissue from them, and repair<br/>
Their broken stamp of godhead, and again<br/>
Thought and wise love sing words of law to men.</p>
<p class="poetry">I, Tiresias the prophet, seeing in Thebes<br/>
Much evil, and the misery of men’s hands<br/>
Who sow with fruitless wheat the stones and
sands,<br/>
With fruitful thorns the fallows and warm glebes,<br/>
<SPAN name="page175"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
175</span>Bade their hands hold lest worse hap came to pass;<br/>
But which of you had heed of Tiresias?</p>
<p class="poetry">I am as Time’s self in mine own wearied
mind,<br/>
Whom the strong heavy-footed years have led<br/>
From night to night and dead men unto dead,<br/>
And from the blind hope to the memory blind;<br/>
For each man’s life is woven, as Time’s
life is,<br/>
Of blind young hopes and old blind memories.</p>
<p class="poetry">I am a soul outside of death and birth.<br/>
I see before me and afterward I see,<br/>
O child, O corpse, the live dead face of thee,<br/>
Whose life and death are one thing upon earth<br/>
Where day kills night and night again kills day<br/>
And dies; but where is that Harmonia?</p>
<p class="poetry">O all-beholden light not seen of me,<br/>
Air, and warm winds that under the sun’s
eye<br/>
Stretch your strong wings at morning; and thou,
sky,<br/>
Whose hollow circle engirdling earth and sea<br/>
All night the set stars limit, and all day<br/>
The moving sun remeasures; ye, I say,</p>
<p class="poetry">Ye heights of hills, and thou Dircean spring<br/>
Inviolable, and ye towers that saw cast down<br/>
Seven kings keen-sighted toward your seven-faced
town<br/>
And quenched the red seed of one sightless king;<br/>
And thou, for death less dreadful than for birth,<br/>
Whose wild leaves hide the horror of the earth,</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page176"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
176</span>O mountain whereon gods made chase of kings,<br/>
Cithæron, thou that sawest on Pentheus dead<br/>
Fangs of a mother fasten and wax red<br/>
And satiate with a son thy swollen springs,<br/>
And heardst her cry fright all thine eyries’
nests<br/>
Who gave death suck at sanguine-suckling
breasts;</p>
<p class="poetry">Yea, and a grief more grievous, without
name,<br/>
A curse too grievous for the name of grief,<br/>
Thou sawest, and heardst the rumour scare belief<br/>
Even unto death and madness, when the flame<br/>
Was lit whose ashes dropped about the pyre<br/>
That of two brethren made one sundering fire;</p>
<p class="poetry">O bitter nurse, that on thine hard bare
knees<br/>
Rear’dst for his fate the bloody-footed
child<br/>
Whose hands should be more bloodily defiled<br/>
And the old blind feet walk wearier ways than these,<br/>
Whose seed, brought forth in darkness unto doom,<br/>
Should break as fire out of his mother’s
womb;</p>
<p class="poetry">I bear you witness as ye bear to me,<br/>
Time, day, night, sun, stars, life, death, air, sea,
earth,<br/>
And ye that round the human house of birth<br/>
Watch with veiled heads and weaponed hands, and see<br/>
Good things and evil, strengthless yet and dumb,<br/>
Sit in the clouds with cloudlike hours to come;</p>
<p class="poetry">Ye forces without form and viewless powers<br/>
That have the keys of all our years in hold,<br/>
That prophesy too late with tongues of gold,<br/>
In a strange speech whose words are perished hours,<br/>
<SPAN name="page177"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
177</span>I witness to you what good things ye give<br/>
As ye to me what evil while I live.</p>
<p class="poetry">What should I do to blame you, what to
praise,<br/>
For floral hours and hours funereal?<br/>
What should I do to curse or bless at all<br/>
For winter-woven or summer-coloured days?<br/>
Curse he that will and bless you whoso can,<br/>
I have no common part in you with man.</p>
<p class="poetry">I hear a springing water, whose quick sound<br/>
Makes softer the soft sunless patient air,<br/>
And the wind’s hand is laid on my thin hair<br/>
Light as a lover’s, and the grasses round<br/>
Have odours in them of green bloom and rain<br/>
Sweet as the kiss wherewith sleep kisses pain.</p>
<p class="poetry">I hear the low sound of the spring of time<br/>
Still beating as the low live throb of blood,<br/>
And where its waters gather head and flood<br/>
I hear change moving on them, and the chime<br/>
Across them of reverberate wings of hours<br/>
Sounding, and feel the future air of flowers.</p>
<p class="poetry">The wind of change is soft as snow, and
sweet<br/>
The sense thereof as roses in the sun,<br/>
The faint wind springing with the springs that
run,<br/>
The dim sweet smell of flowering hopes, and heat<br/>
Of unbeholden sunrise; yet how long<br/>
I know not, till the morning put forth song.</p>
<p class="poetry">I prophesy of life, who live with death;<br/>
Of joy, being sad; of sunlight, who am blind;<br/>
Of man, whose ways are alien from mankind<br/>
And his lips are not parted with man’s breath;<br/>
<SPAN name="page178"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
178</span>I am a word out of the speechless years,<br/>
The tongue of time, that no man sleeps who
hears.</p>
<p class="poetry">I stand a shadow across the door of doom,<br/>
Athwart the lintel of death’s house, and
wait;<br/>
Nor quick nor dead, nor flexible by fate,<br/>
Nor quite of earth nor wholly of the tomb;<br/>
A voice, a vision, light as fire or air,<br/>
Driven between days that shall be and that were.</p>
<p class="poetry">I prophesy, with feet upon a grave,<br/>
Of death cast out and life devouring death<br/>
As flame doth wood and stubble with a breath;<br/>
Of freedom, though all manhood were one slave;<br/>
Of truth, though all the world were liar; of
love,<br/>
That time nor hate can raze the witness of.</p>
<p class="poetry">Life that was given for love’s sake and
his law’s<br/>
Their powers have no more power on; they divide<br/>
Spoils wrung from lust or wrath of man or pride,<br/>
And keen oblivion without pity or pause<br/>
Sets them on fire and scatters them on air<br/>
Like ashes shaken from a suppliant’s hair.</p>
<p class="poetry">But life they lay no hand on; life once
given<br/>
No force of theirs hath competence to take;<br/>
Life that was given for some divine thing’s
sake,<br/>
To mix the bitterness of earth with heaven,<br/>
Light with man’s night, and music with his
breath,<br/>
Dies not, but makes its living food of death.</p>
<p class="poetry">I have seen this, who live where men are
not,<br/>
In the high starless air of fruitful night<br/>
On that serenest and obscurest height<br/>
Where dead and unborn things are one in thought<br/>
<SPAN name="page179"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
179</span>And whence the live unconquerable springs<br/>
Feed full of force the torrents of new things.</p>
<p class="poetry">I have seen this, who saw long since, being
man,<br/>
As now I know not if indeed I be,<br/>
The fair bare body of Wisdom, good to see<br/>
And evil, whence my light and night began;<br/>
Light on the goal and darkness on the way,<br/>
Light all through night and darkness all through
day.</p>
<p class="poetry">Mother, that by that Pegasean spring<br/>
Didst fold round in thine arms thy blinded son,<br/>
Weeping “O holiest, what thing hast thou
done,<br/>
What, to my child? woe’s me that see the thing!<br/>
Is this thy love to me-ward, and hereof<br/>
Must I take sample how the gods can love?</p>
<p class="poetry">“O child, thou hast seen indeed, poor
child of mine,<br/>
The breasts and flanks of Pallas bare in sight,<br/>
But never shalt see more the dear sun’s
light;<br/>
O Helicon, how great a pay is thine<br/>
For some poor antelopes and wild-deer dead,<br/>
My child’s eyes hast thou taken in their
stead—”</p>
<p class="poetry">Mother, thou knewest not what she had to
give,<br/>
Thy goddess, though then angered, for mine eyes;<br/>
Fame and foreknowledge, and to be most wise,<br/>
And centuries of high-thoughted life to live,<br/>
And in mine hand this guiding staff to be<br/>
As eyesight to the feet of men that see.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page180"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
180</span>Perchance I shall not die at all, nor pass<br/>
The general door and lintel of men dead;<br/>
Yet even the very tongue of wisdom said<br/>
What grace should come with death to Tiresias,<br/>
What special honour that God’s hand accord<br/>
Who gathers all men’s nations as their
lord.</p>
<p class="poetry">And sometimes when the secret eye of thought<br/>
Is changed with obscuration, and the sense<br/>
Aches with long pain of hollow prescience,<br/>
And fiery foresight with foresuffering bought<br/>
Seems even to infect my spirit and consume,<br/>
Hunger and thirst come on me for the tomb.</p>
<p class="poetry">I could be fain to drink my death and sleep,<br/>
And no more wrapped about with bitter dreams<br/>
Talk with the stars and with the winds and
streams<br/>
And with the inevitable years, and weep;<br/>
For how should he who communes with the years<br/>
Be sometime not a living spring of tears?</p>
<p class="poetry">O child, that guided of thine only will<br/>
Didst set thy maiden foot against the gate<br/>
To strike it open ere thine hour of fate,<br/>
Antigone, men say not thou didst ill,<br/>
For love’s sake and the reverence of his
awe<br/>
Divinely dying, slain by mortal law;</p>
<p class="poetry">For love is awful as immortal death.<br/>
And through thee surely hath thy brother won<br/>
Rest, out of sight of our world-weary sun,<br/>
And in the dead land where ye ghosts draw breath<br/>
A royal place and honour; so wast thou<br/>
Happy, though earth have hold of thee too now.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page181"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
181</span>So hast thou life and name inviolable<br/>
And joy it may be, sacred and severe,<br/>
Joy secret-souled beyond all hope or fear,<br/>
A monumental joy wherein to dwell<br/>
Secluse and silent, a selected state,<br/>
Serene possession of thy proper fate.</p>
<p class="poetry">Thou art not dead as these are dead who live<br/>
Full of blind years, a sorrow-shaken kind,<br/>
Nor as these are am I the prophet blind;<br/>
They have not life that have not heart to give<br/>
Life, nor have eyesight who lack heart to see<br/>
When to be not is better than to be.</p>
<p class="poetry">O ye whom time but bears with for a span,<br/>
How long will ye be blind and dead, how long<br/>
Make your own souls part of your own soul’s
wrong?<br/>
Son of the word of the most high gods, man,<br/>
Why wilt thou make thine hour of light and breath<br/>
Emptier of all but shame than very death?</p>
<p class="poetry">Fool, wilt thou live for ever? though thou
care<br/>
With all thine heart for life to keep it fast,<br/>
Shall not thine hand forego it at the last?<br/>
Lo, thy sure hour shall take thee by the hair<br/>
Sleeping, or when thou knowest not, or wouldst
fly;<br/>
And as men died much mightier shalt thou die.</p>
<p class="poetry">Yea, they are dead, men much more worth than
thou;<br/>
The savour of heroic lives that were,<br/>
Is it not mixed into thy common air?<br/>
The sense of them is shed about thee now:<br/>
Feel not thy brows a wind blowing from far?<br/>
Aches not thy forehead with a future star?</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page182"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
182</span>The light that thou may’st make out of thy
name<br/>
Is in the wind of this same hour that drives,<br/>
Blown within reach but once of all men’s
lives;<br/>
And he that puts forth hand upon the flame<br/>
Shall have it for a garland on his head<br/>
To sign him for a king among the dead.</p>
<p class="poetry">But these men that the lessening years
behold,<br/>
Who sit the most part without flame or crown,<br/>
And brawl and sleep and wear their life-days down<br/>
With joys and griefs ignobler than of old,<br/>
And care not if the better day shall be—<br/>
Are these or art thou dead, Antigone?</p>
<p class="poetry">PART II</p>
<p class="poetry">As when one wakes out of a waning dream<br/>
And sees with instant eyes the naked thought<br/>
Whereof the vision as a web was wrought,<br/>
I saw beneath a heaven of cloud and gleam,<br/>
Ere yet the heart of the young sun waxed brave,<br/>
One like a prophet standing by a grave.</p>
<p class="poetry">In the hoar heaven was hardly beam or
breath,<br/>
And all the coloured hills and fields were grey,<br/>
And the wind wandered seeking for the day,<br/>
And wailed as though he had found her done to death<br/>
And this grey hour had built to bury her<br/>
The hollow twilight for a sepulchre.</p>
<p class="poetry">But in my soul I saw as in a glass<br/>
A pale and living body full of grace<br/>
There lying, and over it the prophet’s face<br/>
Fixed; and the face was not of Tiresias,<br/>
<SPAN name="page183"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
183</span>For such a starry fire was in his eyes<br/>
As though their light it was that made the
skies.</p>
<p class="poetry">Such eyes should God’s have been when
very love<br/>
Looked forth of them and set the sun aflame,<br/>
And such his lips that called the light by name<br/>
And bade the morning forth at sound thereof;<br/>
His face was sad and masterful as fate,<br/>
And like a star’s his look compassionate.</p>
<p class="poetry">Like a star’s gazed on of sad eyes so
long<br/>
It seems to yearn with pity, and all its fire<br/>
As a man’s heart to tremble with desire<br/>
And heave as though the light would bring forth song;<br/>
Yet from his face flashed lightning on the land,<br/>
And like the thunder-bearer’s was his
hand.</p>
<p class="poetry">The steepness of strange stairs had tired his
feet,<br/>
And his lips yet seemed sick of that salt bread<br/>
Wherewith the lips of banishment are fed;<br/>
But nothing was there in the world so sweet<br/>
As the most bitter love, like God’s own
grace,<br/>
Wherewith he gazed on that fair buried face.</p>
<p class="poetry">Grief and glad pride and passion and sharp
shame,<br/>
Wrath and remembrance, faith and hope and hate<br/>
And pitiless pity of days degenerate,<br/>
Were in his eyes as an incorporate flame<br/>
That burned about her, and the heart thereof<br/>
And central flower was very fire of love.</p>
<p class="poetry">But all about her grave wherein she slept<br/>
Were noises of the wild wind-footed years<br/>
Whose footprints flying were full of blood and
tears,<br/>
Shrieks as of Mænads on their hills that leapt<br/>
<SPAN name="page184"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
184</span>And yelled as beasts of ravin, and their meat<br/>
Was the rent flesh of their own sons to eat:</p>
<p class="poetry">And fiery shadows passing with strange
cries,<br/>
And Sphinx-like shapes about the ruined lands,<br/>
And the red reek of parricidal hands<br/>
And intermixture of incestuous eyes,<br/>
And light as of that self-divided flame<br/>
Which made an end of the Cadmean name.</p>
<p class="poetry">And I beheld again, and lo the grave,<br/>
And the bright body laid therein as dead,<br/>
And the same shadow across another head<br/>
That bowed down silent on that sleeping slave<br/>
Who was the lady of empire from her birth<br/>
And light of all the kingdoms of the earth.</p>
<p class="poetry">Within the compass of the watcher’s
hand<br/>
All strengths of other men and divers powers<br/>
Were held at ease and gathered up as flowers;<br/>
His heart was as the heart of his whole land,<br/>
And at his feet as natural servants lay<br/>
Twilight and dawn and night and labouring day.</p>
<p class="poetry">He was most awful of the sons of God.<br/>
Even now men seeing seemed at his lips to see<br/>
The trumpet of the judgment that should be,<br/>
And in his right hand terror for a rod,<br/>
And in the breath that made the mountains bow<br/>
The horned fire of Moses on his brow.</p>
<p class="poetry">The strong wind of the coming of the Lord<br/>
Had blown as flame upon him, and brought down<br/>
On his bare head from heaven fire for a crown,<br/>
And fire was girt upon him as a sword<br/>
<SPAN name="page185"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
185</span>To smite and lighten, and on what ways he trod<br/>
There fell from him the shadow of a God.</p>
<p class="poetry">Pale, with the whole world’s judgment in
his eyes,<br/>
He stood and saw the grief and shame endure<br/>
That he, though highest of angels might not cure,<br/>
And the same sins done under the same skies,<br/>
And the same slaves to the same tyrants thrown,<br/>
And fain he would have slept, and fain been
stone.</p>
<p class="poetry">But with unslumbering eyes he watched the
sleep<br/>
That sealed her sense whose eyes were suns of
old;<br/>
And the night shut and opened, and behold,<br/>
The same grave where those prophets came to weep,<br/>
But she that lay therein had moved and stirred,<br/>
And where those twain had watched her stood a
third.</p>
<p class="poetry">The tripled rhyme that closed in Paradise<br/>
With Love’s name sealing up its starry
speech—<br/>
The tripled might of hand that found in reach<br/>
All crowns beheld far off of all men’s eyes,<br/>
Song, colour, carven wonders of live stone—<br/>
These were not, but the very soul alone.</p>
<p class="poetry">The living spirit, the good gift of grace,<br/>
The faith which takes of its own blood to give<br/>
That the dead veins of buried hope may live,<br/>
Came on her sleeping, face to naked face,<br/>
And from a soul more sweet than all the south<br/>
Breathed love upon her sealed and breathless
mouth.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page186"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
186</span>Between her lips the breath was blown as fire,<br/>
And through her flushed veins leapt the liquid
life,<br/>
And with sore passion and ambiguous strife<br/>
The new birth rent her and the new desire,<br/>
The will to live, the competence to be,<br/>
The sense to hearken and the soul to see.</p>
<p class="poetry">And the third prophet standing by her grave<br/>
Stretched forth his hand and touched her, and her
eyes<br/>
Opened as sudden suns in heaven might rise,<br/>
And her soul caught from his the faith to save;<br/>
Faith above creeds, faith beyond records, born<br/>
Of the pure, naked, fruitful, awful morn.</p>
<p class="poetry">For in the daybreak now that night was dead<br/>
The light, the shadow, the delight, the pain,<br/>
The purpose and the passion of those twain,<br/>
Seemed gathered on that third prophetic head,<br/>
And all their crowns were as one crown, and one<br/>
His face with her face in the living sun.</p>
<p class="poetry">For even with that communion of their eyes<br/>
His whole soul passed into her and made her
strong;<br/>
And all the sounds and shows of shame and wrong,<br/>
The hand that slays, the lip that mocks and lies,<br/>
Temples and thrones that yet men seem to
see—<br/>
Are these dead or art thou dead, Italy?</p>
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