THE UNICORN FROM THE STARS
AND OTHER PLAYS
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY NEW YORK . BOSTON . CHICAGO ATLANTA . SAN FRANCISCO
MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED LONDON . BOMBAY . CALCUTTA MELBOURNE
THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD. TORONTO
THE UNICORN FROM THE STARS
AND OTHER PLAYS
BY
WILLIAM B. YEATS
AND
LADY GREGORY
New York THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1908
_All rights reserved_
COPYRIGHT, 1904, 1908, BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
New edition. Set up and electrotyped. Published April, 1908.
Norwood Press J. S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co. Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
PREFACE
About seven years ago I began to dictate the first of these Plays to Lady Gregory. My eyesight had become so bad that I feared I could henceforth write nothing with my own hands but verses, which, as Theophile Gautier has said, can be written with a burnt match. Our Irish Dramatic movement was just passing out of the hands of English Actors, hired because we knew of no Irish ones, and our little troop of Irish amateurs--as they were at the time--could not have too many Plays, for they would come to nothing without continued playing. Besides, it was exciting to discover, after the unpopularity of blank verse, what one could do with three Plays written in prose and founded on three public interests deliberately chosen,--religion, humour, patriotism. I planned in those days to establish a dramatic movement upon the popular passions, as the ritual of religion is established in the emotions that surround birth and death and marriage, and it was only the coming of the unclassifiable, uncontrollable, capricious, uncompromising genius of J. M. Synge that altered the direction of the movement and made it individual, critical, and combative. If his had not, some other stone would have blocked up the old way, for the public mind of Ireland, stupefied by prolonged intolerant organisation, can take but brief pleasure in the caprice that is in all art, whatever its subject, and, more commonly, can but hate unaccustomed personal reverie.
I had dreamed the subject of "Cathleen ni Houlihan," but found when I looked for words that I could not create peasant dialogue that would go nearer to peasant life than the dialogue in "The Land of Heart's Desire" or "The Countess Cathleen." Every artistic form has its own ancestry, and the more elaborate it is, the more is the writer constrained to symbolise rather than to represent life, until perhaps his ladies of fashion are shepherds and shepherdesses, as when Colin Clout came home again. I could not get away, no matter how closely I watched the country life, from images and dreams which had all too royal blood, for they were descended like the thought of every poet from all the conquering dreams of Europe, and I wished to make that high life mix into some rough contemporary life without ceasing to be itself, as so many old books and Plays have mixed it and so few modern, and to do this I added another knowledge to my own. Lady Gregory had written no Plays, but had, I discovered, a greater knowledge of the country mind and country speech than anybody I had ever met with, and nothing but a burden of knowledge could keep "Cathleen ni Houlihan" from the clouds. I needed less help for the "Hour-Glass," for the speech there is far from reality, and so the Play is almost wholly mine. When, however, I brought to her the general scheme for the "Pot of Broth," a little farce which seems rather imitative to-day, though it plays well enough, and of the first version of "The Unicorn," "Where there is Nothing," a five-act Play written in a fortnight to save it from a plagiarist, and tried to dictate them, her share grew more and more considerable. She would not allow me to put her name to these Plays, though I have always tried to explain her share in them, but has signed "The Unicorn from the Stars," which but for a good deal of the general plan and a single character and bits of another is wholly hers. I feel indeed that my best share in it is that idea, which I have been capable of expressing completely in criticism alone, of bringing together the rough life of the road and the frenzy that the poets have found in their ancient cellar,--a prophecy, as it were, of the time when it will be once again possible for a Dickens and a Shelley to be born in the one body.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: The Unicorn from the Stars and Other Plays
- 2: While Miss Maude Gonne was Cathleen ni Houlihan
- 3: Among them an ornament representing the lion and the unicorn
- 4: And coaches being the handiest
- 5: Compound medicines are usually taken inwardly
- 6: I will go back to the hillside
- 7: I would not like trances to be coming on myself
- 8: Then I saw the horses we were on had changed to unicorns
- 9: The cure that will cure yourself
- 10: Thomas doesn't understand your thoughts
- 11: I know that I saw the unicorns trampling
- 12: Destroyed we all are with the hunger and the drouth
- 13: Either in trance or in contemplation
- 14: MARTIN and FATHER JOHN go out
- 15: Leave talking to me of your rods and your scourges
- 16: Sure that man could not be John Gibbons that is outlawed
- 17: But Unicorns I never heard of before
- 18: The big herb and the little herb
- 19: MARTIN giving banner to PAUDEEN
- 20: How well you threatened us with gaol
- 21: And the troop of the Whiteboys gone
- 22: And said no word at all to Paudeen or to that son you have
- 23: And he wakened again after another while
- 24: And how long will it be before he will waken of himself
- 25: Or maybe I would waken him myself
- 26: We will clash them sure enough
- 27: The soldiers are out after him and the constables
- 28: They struggle with CONSTABLES
- 29: MICHAEL GILLANE his son
- 30: We will go to the fair of Ballina to buy the stock
- 31: PATRICK turning round from the window
- 32: MICHAEL coming from the door
- 33: MICHAEL sits down beside her at the hearth
- 34: And stands whispering to BRIDGET
- 35: MICHAEL breaks away from DELIA and goes out
- 36: A WISE MAN sitting at his desk
- 37: Now I know that you are Teigue the Fool
- 38: For you have denied the existence of Purgatory
- 39: They pretend that they disbelieve
- 40: TEIGUE still stands at the door
- 41: Some dream when they are awake
- 42: BRIDGET goes through the kitchen door
- 43: If he would ask Teigue the Fool
- 44: Noyes pays a glowing tribute and Lewis Carroll
- 45: Published by the macmillan company 64 66 fifth avenue
