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lies there

       Upon that level place, and for three days

       Stretches and sighs and wets her long pale cheeks.

      CATHLEEN

      So she loves truly.

      ALEEL

      No, but wets her cheeks,

       Lady, because she has forgot his name.

      CATHLEEN

      She'd sleep that trouble away—though it must be

       A heavy trouble to forget his name—

       If she had better sense.

      OONA

      Your own house, lady.

      ALEEL

      She sleeps high up on wintry Knock-na-rea

       In an old cairn of stones; while her poor women

       Must lie and jog in the wave if they would sleep—

       Being water born—yet if she cry their names

       They run up on the land and dance in the moon

       Till they are giddy and would love as men do,

       And be as patient and as pitiful.

       But there is nothing that will stop in their heads

       They've such poor memories, though they weep for it.

       Oh, yes, they weep; that's when the moon is full.

      CATHLEEN

      Is it because they have short memories

       They live so long?

      ALEEL

      What's memory but the ash

       That chokes our fires that have begun to sink?

       And they've a dizzy, everlasting fire.

      OONA

      There is your own house, lady.

      CATHLEEN

      Why, that's true,

       And we'd have passed it without noticing.

      ALEEL

      A curse upon it for a meddlesome house!

       Had it but stayed away I would have known

       What Queen Maeve thinks on when the moon is pinched;

       And whether now—as in the old days—the dancers

       Set their brief love on men.

      OONA

      Rest on my arm.

       These are no thoughts for any Christian ear.

      ALEEL

      I am younger, she would be too heavy for you.

      (He begins taking his lute out of the bag, CATHLEEN, who has turned towards OONA, turns back to him.)

      This hollow box remembers every foot

       That danced upon the level grass of the world,

       And will tell secrets if I whisper to it.

      (Sings.)

      Lift up the white knee;

       Hear what they sing,

       Those young dancers

       That in a ring

       Raved but now

       Of the hearts that brake

       Long, long ago

       For their sake.

      OONA

      New friends are sweet.

      ALEEL

      "But the dance changes.

       Lift up the gown,

       All that sorrow

       Is trodden down."

      OONA

      The empty rattle-pate! Lean on this arm,

       That I can tell you is a christened arm,

       And not like some, if we are to judge by speech.

       But as you please. It is time I was forgot.

       Maybe it is not on this arm you slumbered

       When you were as helpless as a worm.

      ALEEL

      Stay with me till we come to your own house.

      CATHLEEN (sitting down)

      When I am rested I will need no help.

      ALEEL

      I thought to have kept her from remembering

       The evil of the times for full ten minutes;

       But now when seven are out you come between.

      OONA

      Talk on; what does it matter what you say,

       For you have not been christened?

      ALEEL

      Old woman, old woman,

       You robbed her of three minutes peace of mind,

       And though you live unto a hundred years,

       And wash the feet of beggars and give alms,

       And climb Croaghpatrick, you shall not be pardoned.

      OONA

      How does a man who never was baptized

       Know what Heaven pardons?

      ALEEL

      You are a sinful woman.

      OONA

      I care no more than if a pig had grunted.

      (Enter CATHLEEN'S Steward.)

      STEWARD

      I am not to blame, for I had locked the gate,

       The forester's to blame. The men climbed in

       At the east corner where the elm-tree is.

      CATHLEEN

      I do not understand you, who has climbed?

      STEWARD

      Then God be thanked, I am the first to tell you.

       I was afraid some other of the servants—

       Though I've been on the watch—had been the first,

       And mixed up truth and lies, your ladyship.

      CATHLEEN (rising)

      Has some misfortune happened?

      STEWARD

      Yes, indeed.

       The forester that let the branches lie

       Against the wall's to blame for everything,

       For that is how the rogues got into the garden.

      CATHLEEN

      I thought to have escaped misfortune here.

       Has any one been killed?

      STEWARD

      Oh, no, not killed.

       They have stolen half a cart-load of green cabbage.

      CATHLEEN

      But maybe they were starving.

      STEWARD

      That is certain.

       To rob or starve, that was the choice they had.

      CATHLEEN

      A learned theologian has laid down

       That starving men may take


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