Yeats' The Celtic Twilight
THE SORCERERS
In Ireland we hear but little of the
darker powers,1 and come across any who have seen them even more rarely, for
the imagination of the people dwells rather upon the fantastic and capricious,
and fantasy and caprice would lose the freedom which is their breath of life,
were they to unite them either with evil or with good. And yet the wise are of
opinion that wherever man is, the dark powers who would feed his rapacities are
there too, no less than the bright beings who store their honey in the cells of
his heart, and the twilight beings who flit hither and thither, and that they
encompass him with a passionate and melancholy multitude. They hold, too, that
he who by long desire or through accident of birth possesses the power of
piercing into their hidden abode can see them there, those who were once men or women full
of a terrible vehemence, and those who have never lived upon the earth, moving
slowly and with a subtler malice. The dark powers cling about us, it is said,
day and night, like bats upon an old tree; and that we do not hear more of them
is merely because the darker kinds of magic have been but little practised. I
have indeed come across very few persons in Ireland who try to communicate with
evil powers, and the few I have met keep their purpose and practice wholly
hidden from those among whom they live. They are mainly small clerks and the
like, and meet for the purpose of their art in a room hung with black hangings.
They would not admit me into this room, but finding me not altogether ignorant
of the arcane science, showed gladly elsewhere what they would do. 'Come to us,'
said their leader, a clerk in a large flour-mill, 'and we will show you spirits
who will talk to you face to face, and in shapes as solid and heavy as our own.'
I had been talking of the power of communicating in states of trance with the
angelical and faery beings,--the children of the day and of the twilight--and he
had been contending that we should only believe in what we can see and feel when
in our ordinary everyday state of mind. 'Yes,' I said, 'I will come to you,' or
some such words; 'but I will not permit myself to become entranced, and will
therefore know whether these shapes you talk of are any the more to be touched
and felt by the ordinary senses than are those I talk of.' I was not denying the
power of other beings to take upon themselves a clothing of mortal substance,
but only that simple invocations, such as he spoke of, seemed unlikely to do
more than cast the mind into trance, and thereby bring it into the presence of
the powers of day, twilight, and darkness.
'But,' he said, 'we have seen them move the furniture
hither and thither, and they go at our bidding, and help
or harm people who know nothing of them.' I am not giving the exact words, but
as accurately as I can the substance of our talk.
On the night arranged I turned up about eight, and found the leader sitting
alone in almost total darkness in a small back room. He was dressed in a black
gown, like an inquisitor's dress in an old drawing, that left nothing of him
visible: except his eyes, which peered out through two small round holes. Upon
the table in front of him was a brass dish of burning herbs, a large bowl, a
skull covered with painted symbols, two crossed daggers, and certain implements
shaped like quern stones, which were used to control the elemental powers in
some fashion I did not discover. I also put on a black gown, and remember that
it did not fit perfectly, and that it interfered with my movements considerably.
The sorcerer then took a black cock out of a basket, and cut its throat with one of the daggers,
letting the blood fall into the large bowl. He opened a book and began an
invocation, which was certainly not English, and had a deep guttural sound.
Before he had finished, another of the sorcerers, a man of about twenty-five,
came in, and having put on a black gown also, seated himself at my left band. I
had the invoker directly in front of me, and soon began to find his eyes, which
glittered through the small holes in his hood, affecting me in a curious way. I
struggled hard against their influence, and my head began to ache. The
invocation continued, and nothing happened for the first few minutes. Then the
invoker got up and extinguished the light in the hall, so that no glimmer might
come through the slit under the door. There was now no light except from the
herbs on the brass dish, and no sound except from the deep guttural murmur of
the invocation.
Presently the man at my left swayed himself about, and cried out, 'O god! O
god!' I asked him what ailed him, but he did not know he had spoken. A moment
after he said he could see a great serpent moving about the room, and became
considerably excited. I saw nothing with any definite shape, but thought that
black clouds were forming about me. I felt I must fall into a trance if I did
not struggle against it, and that the influence which was causing this trance
was out of harmony with itself, in other words, evil. After a struggle I got rid
of the black clouds, and was able to observe with my ordinary senses again. The
two sorcerers now began to see black and white columns moving about the room,
and finally a man in a monk's habit, and they became greatly puzzled because I
did not see these things also, for to them they were as solid as the table
before them. The invoker appeared to be gradually increasing in power, and I
began to feel as if a tide of darkness was pouring from him and concentrating
itself about me; and now too I noticed
that the man on my left hand had passed into a death-like trance. With a last
great effort I drove off the black clouds; but feeling them to be the only
shapes I should see without passing into a trance, and having no great love for
them, I asked for lights, and after the needful exorcism returned to the
ordinary world.
I said to the more powerful of the two sorcerers--'What would happen if one
of your spirits had overpowered me?' 'You would go out of this room,' he
answered, 'with his character added to your own.' I asked about the origin of
his sorcery, but got little of importance, except that he had learned it from
his father. He would not tell me more, for he had, it appeared, taken a vow of
secrecy.
For some days I could not get over the feeling of having a number of deformed
and grotesque figures lingering about me. The Bright Powers are always
beautiful and desirable, and the Dim Powers are now beautiful, now quaintly grotesque,
but the Dark Powers express their unbalanced natures in shapes of ugliness and
horror.
  
Footnotes
1. I know
better now. We have the dark powers much more than I thought, but not as much as
the Scottish, and yet I think the imagination of the people does dwell chiefly
upon the fantastic and capricious.
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