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Yeats' The Celtic Twilight
WAR
When there was a rumour of war with France a while ago, I met a poor Sligo
woman, a soldier's widow, that I know, and I read her a sentence out of a letter
I had just had from London: 'The people here are mad for war, but France seems
inclined to take things peacefully,' or some like sentence. Her mind ran a good
deal on war, which she imagined partly from what she had heard from soldiers,
and partly from tradition of the rebellion of ..., but the word London doubled
her interest, for she knew there were a great many people in London, and she
herself had once lived in 'a congested district.' 'There are too many over one
another in London. They are getting tired of the world. It is killed they want
to be. It will be no matter; but sure the French want nothing but peace and
quietness. The people here don't mind the war coming. They could not be worse
than they are. They may as well die soldierly before God. Sure they will get quarters in heaven.' Then she began
to say that it would be a hard thing to see children tossed about on bayonets,
and I knew her mind was running on traditions of the great rebellion. She said
presently, 'I never knew a man that was in a battle that liked to speak of it
after. They'd sooner be throwing hay down from a hayrick.' She told me how she
and her neighbours used to be sitting over the fire when she was a girl, talking
of the war that was coming, and now she was afraid it was coming again, for she
had dreamed that all the bay was 'stranded and covered with seaweed.' I asked
her if it was in the Fenian times that she had been so much afraid of war
coming. But she cried out, 'Never had I such fun and pleasure as in the Fenian
times. I was in a house where some of the officers used to be staying, and in
the daytime I would be walking after the soldiers' band, and at night I'd be
going down to the end of the garden watching a soldier, with his red coat on him,
drilling the Fenians in the field behind the house. One night the boys tied the
liver of an old horse, that had been dead three weeks, to the knocker, and I
found it when I opened the door in the morning.' And presently our talk of war
shifted, as it had a way of doing, to the battle of the Black Pig, which seems
to her a battle between Ireland and England, but to me an Armageddon which shall
quench all things in the Ancestral Darkness again, and from this to sayings
about war and vengeance. 'Do you know,' she said, 'what the curse of the Four
Fathers is? They put the man-child on the spear, and somebody said to them, "You
will be cursed in the fourth generation after you," and that is why disease or
anything always comes in the fourth generation.'
1902.
  
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