The Roaring Tinker if you like, But Mannion is my name, And I beat up the common sort And think it is no shame. The common breeds the common, A lout begets a lout, So when I take on half a score I knock their heads about. i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.) All Mannions come from Manannan, Though rich on every shore He never lay behind four walls He had such character, Nor ever made an iron red Nor soldered pot or pan; His roaring and his ranting Best please a wandering man. i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.) Could Crazy Jane put off old age And ranting time renew, Could that old god rise up again We'd drink a can or two, And out and lay our leadership On country and on town, Throw likely couples into bed And knock the others down. i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.) II My name is Henry Middleton, I have a small demesne, A small forgotten house that's set On a storm-bitten green. I scrub its floors and make my bed, I cook and change my plate, The post and garden-boy alone Have keys to my old gate. i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.) Though I have locked my gate on them, I pity all the young, I know what devil's trade they learn From those they live among, Their drink, their pitch-and-toss by day, Their robbery by night; The wisdom of the people's gone, How can the young go straight? i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.) When every Sunday afternoon On the Green Lands I walk And wear a coat in fashion. Memories of the talk Of henwives and of queer old men Brace me and make me strong; There's not a pilot on the perch Knows I have lived so long. i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.) III Come gather round me, players all: Come praise Nineteen-Sixteen, Those from the pit and gallery Or from the painted scene That fought in the Post Office Or round the City Hall, praise every man that came again, Praise every man that fell. i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.) Who was the first man shot that day? The player Connolly, Close to the City Hall he died; carriage and voice had he; He lacked those years that go with skill, But later might have been A famous, a brilliant figure Before the painted scene. i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.) Some had no thought of victory But had gone out to die That Ireland's mind be greater, Her heart mount up on high; And yet who knows what's yet to come? For Patrick Pearse had said That in every generation Must Ireland's blood be shed. i(From mountain to mountain ride the fierce horsemen.)
Return to the William Butler Yeats library , or . . . Read the next poem; Three Songs To The Same Tune