Yeats' The Celtic Twilight
BELIEF AND UNBELIEF
There are some doubters even in the western villages. One woman told me last
Christmas that she did not believe either in hell or in ghosts. Hell she thought
was merely an invention got up by the priest to keep people good; and ghosts
would not be permitted, she held, to go 'trapsin about the earth' at their own
free will; 'but there are faeries,' she added, 'and little leprechauns, and
water-horses, and fallen angels.' I have met also a man with a mohawk Indian
tattooed upon his arm, who held exactly similar beliefs and unbeliefs. No matter
what one doubts one never doubts the faeries, for, as the man with the mohawk
Indian on his arm said to me, 'they stand to reason.' Even the official mind
does not escape this faith.
A little girl who was at service in the village of Grange, close under the
seaward slopes of Ben Bulben, suddenly disappeared one night
about three years ago. There was at once great excitement in the
neighbourhood, because it was rumoured that the faeries had taken her. A
villager was said to have long struggled to hold her from them, but at last they
prevailed, and he found nothing in his hands but a broomstick. The local
constable was applied to, and he at once instituted a house-to-house search, and
at the same time advised the people to burn all the bucalauns (ragweed)
on the field she vanished from, because bucalauns are sacred to the
faeries. They spent the whole night burning them, the constable repeating spells
the while. In the morning the little girl was found, the story goes, wandering
in the field. She said the faeries had taken her away a great distance, riding
on a faery horse. At last she saw a big river, and the man who had tried to keep
her from being carried off was drifting down it--such are the topsy-turvydoms of
faery glamour--in a cockleshell. On the way her
companions had mentioned the names of several people who were about to die
shortly in the village.
Perhaps the constable was right. It is better doubtless to believe much
unreason and a little truth than to deny for denial's sake truth and unreason
alike, for when we do this we have not even a rush candle to guide our steps,
not even a poor sowlth to dance before us on the marsh, and must needs fumble
our way into the great emptiness where dwell the mis-shapen dhouls. And after
all, can we come to so great evil if we keep a little fire on our hearths and in
our souls, and welcome with open hand whatever of excellent come to warm itself,
whether it be man or phantom, and do not say too fiercely, even to the dhouls
themselves, 'Be ye gone'? When all is said and done, how do we not know but that
our own unreason may be better than another's truth? for it has been
warmed on our hearths and in our souls, and is ready for the wild bees of truth to
hive in it, and make their sweet honey. Come into the world again, wild bees,
wild bees!
  
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