with the sense of beauty; and when we come to examine
those astonishments that seemed so alien we find that
he has but transfigured with beauty the common sights
of the world. He describes the dance in the air
of large butterflies as we have seen it in the sun-steeped
air of noon. ’And they danced but danced
idly, on the wings of the air, as some haughty queen
of distant conquered lands might in her poverty and
exile dance in some encampment of the gipsies for
the mere bread to live by, but beyond this would never
abate her pride to dance for one fragment more.’
He can show us the movement of sand, as we have seen
it where the sea shore meets the grass, but so changed
that it becomes the deserts of the world: ’and
all that night the desert said many things softly
and in a whisper but I knew not what he said.
Only the sand knew and arose and was troubled and
lay down again and the wind knew. Then, as the
hours of the night went by, these two discovered the
foot-tracks wherewith we had disturbed the holy desert
and they troubled over them and covered them up; and
then the wind lay down and the sand rested.’
Or he will invent some incredible sound that will
yet call before us the strange sounds of the night,
as when he says, ‘sometimes some monster of
the river coughed.’ And how he can play
upon our fears with that great gate of his carved from
a single ivory tusk dropped by some terrible beast;
or with his tribe of wanderers that pass about the
city telling one another tales that we know to be
terrible from the blanched faces of the listeners though
they tell them in an unknown tongue; or with his stone
gods of the mountain, for ‘when we see rock
walking it is terrible’ ’rock should not
walk in the evening.’
Yet say what I will, so strange is the pleasure that
they give, so hard to analyse and describe, I do not
know why these stories and plays delight me.
Now they set me thinking of some old Irish jewel work,
now of a sword covered with Indian Arabesques that
hangs in a friend’s hall, now of St. Mark’s
at Venice, now of cloud palaces at the sundown; but
more often still of a strange country or state of the
soul that once for a few weeks I entered in deep sleep
and after lost and have ever mourned and desired.
V
Not all Lord Dunsany’s moods delight me, for
he writes out of a careless abundance; and from the
moment I first read him I have wished to have between
two covers something of all the moods that do.
I believe that I have it in this book, which I have
just been reading aloud to an imaginative young girl
more French than English, whose understanding, that
of a child and of a woman, and expressed not in words
but in her face, has doubled my own. Some of my
selections, those that I have called ‘A Miracle’
and ‘The Castle of Time’ are passages
from stories of some length, and I give but the first
act of ‘Argimenes,’ a play in the repertory
of the Abbey Theatre, but each selection can be read
I think with no thoughts but of itself. If ’Idle
Days on the Yann’ is a fragment it was left so
by its author, and if I am moved to complain I shall
remember that perhaps not even his imagination could
have found adventures worthy of a traveller who had
passed ‘memorable, holy Golnuz, and heard the
pilgrims praying,’ and smelt burned poppies
in Mandaroon.