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Padraic Colum - Swift`s PastoralPadraic Colum - Swift`s Pastoral
Work rating: Low


A story that has for its background Saint Patrick`s Purgatory. Characters: JONATHAN SWIFT and ESTHER VANHOMRIGH ESTHER I know the answer: `tis ingenious. I`m tired of your riddles, Doctor Swift. SWIFT Faith, so am I. ESTHER But that`s no reason why you`ll be splenetic. SWIFT Then let us walk. ESTHER But will you talk, too? Oh, is there nothing For you to show your pupil on this highway? SWIFT The road to Dublin, and the road that leads Out of this sunken island. ESTHER I see a Harper: A Harper and a country lout, his fellow, Upon the highway. SWIFT I know the Harper. ESTHER The Doctor knows so much, but what of that? He`ll stay splenetic. SWIFT I have seen this Harper On many a road. I know his name, too I know a story that they tell about him. ESTHER And will it take the pucker off his brow If Cadenus to Vanessa tell the tale? SWIFT God knows it might. His name`s O`Carolan Turlough O`Carolan; and there is a woman To make the story almost pastoral. ESTHER Some Sheelah or some Oonagh, I’ll engage. SWIFT Her name Was Bridget Cruise. She would not wed him, And he wed one who had another name, And made himself a Minstrel, but a Minstrel Of consequence. His playing on the harp Was the one glory that in Ireland stayed After lost battles and old pride cast down. Where he went men would say: "Horses we may not own, nor swords may carry, But Turlough O`Carolan plays upon the harp, And Turlough O`Carolan`s ten fingers bring us Horses and swords, gold, wine, and victory." ESTHER Oh, that is eloquence! SWIFT I know their rhapsodies. But to O`Carolan: He played, and drank full cups; made proper songs In praise of banquets, wine-cups, and young maids Things easily praised. And then when he was old ESTHER How old? SWIFT Two score of years and ten. ESTHER But that`s not old. SWIFT And that`s not old! Good God, how soon we grow Into the Valley of the Shadow of Death! Not into the Valley, Vanessa, mark, of Death, But into the Shadow! Two score years and ten Have we not three score and some more to live? So has the tree that`s withered at the top Dead in the head! Aye, we, Vanessa, grow Into the Shadow, and in the Shadow stay So long! ESTHER I thought the story would divert Cadenus. SWIFT It will, it will, Vanessa. What was I Just saying? ESTHER When he was old. . . . SWIFT And blind did I say he was blind? ESTHER You did not say it. SWIFT He`s blind not book-blind, but stone-blind. He cannot see The wen that makes two heads upon the fellow That goes beside him, hunched up with the harp; He cannot see The Justice to the assizes riding With soldiers all in red to give him state. He cannot see The beggar`s lice and sores. I tell a story : When this O`Carolan was old and blind, As I have said, he made the pilgrimage: `Twas to. ... No, no, `twas not the place That I`m proscribed to, but yet one that`s called Saint Patrick`s Purgatory. `Tis on an island in a lake, a low Island or islet. The water round Is dun, unsunned; there are no meadows near, No willows grow, no lark nor linnet sings; The banks there take a bleakness from the clouds. A fissure in the island leads down to The Purgatory of Souls, their fable says. And now the Harper is but one of those, The countless wretches, who have brought their sores To that low island, and brought darkened spirits Such stream has flowed there for a thousand years. I do not know What length of time the Harper stays, while crowds Are shambling all around him, weeping, praying, Famishing themselves, or drinking the dun water Of the lake for wine; or kneeling, with their knees On sharpened stones; or crowded In narrow, stony cells. ESTHER It is a place Papistical. SWIFT It is a place Most universal. De we not walk Upon a ground that`s drenched with tears, and breathe An air that`s thickened with men`s darkened spirits? Aye, and on an islet, Suffering pain, and hearing cries of wretches: Cut off, remote, banished, alone, tormented! Name the place as you will, or let it be Saint Patrick`s Purgatory. But comes a time the blind man rows to shore From that low island. He touches shore, and cries "Hands for a blind man`s help!" and hands were held him- He touched a hand. Here then`s the pastoral: The hand, the fingers of the hand, the clasp The spirit flowing through he knew them all; He knew all well, and in an instant knew them, And he cried out, "The hand of Bridget Cruise!" Oh, in the midmost of our darkened spirits To touch a hand, and know the truth within it The truth that`s clasped, that holds, the truth that`s all For us for every day we live, the truth! To touch that hand, and then once more to turn To turn around upon the world`s highway, And go alone poor hand, poor hand! But she, This Bridget Cruise, was leaving that dull shore For that low island, and had cares beyond The memory of O`Carolan. Well, they passed, He going and she coming: well, and then He took his harp, and the country lout, his fellow, Went with him, as we see them going now. ESTHER They`ve passed: there`s no one now beside us. And will you take my hand? You used to call me A white witch, but there is no witchery In this plain hand of mine! You`ve told a double story, Doctor Swift.
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