The great event of a boy’s life
is the awakening of sex. He will bathe many times
a day, or get up at dawn and having stripped leap to
and fro over a stick laid upon two chairs and hardly
know, and never admit, that he had begun to take pleasure
in his own nakedness, nor will he understand the change
until some dream discovers it. He may never understand
at all the greater change in his mind.
It all came upon me when I was close
upon seventeen like the bursting of a shell.
Somnambulistic country-girls, when it is upon them,
throw plates about or pull them with long hairs in
simulation of the polter-geist, or become mediums
for some genuine spirit-mischief, surrendering to their
desire of the marvellous. As I look backward,
I seem to discover that my passions, my loves and
my despairs, instead of being my enemies, a disturbance
and an attack, became so beautiful that I must be constantly
alone to give them my whole attention. I notice
that, for the first time as I run through my memory,
what I saw when alone is more vivid than what I did
or saw in company.
A herd had shown me a cave some hundred
and fifty feet below the cliff path and a couple of
hundred above the sea, and told me how an evicted
tenant called Macrom, dead some fifteen years, had
lived there many years, and shown me a rusty nail
in the rock which had served perhaps to hold up some
wooden protection from wind and weather. Here
I stored a tin of cocoa and some biscuits, and instead
of going to my bed, would slip out on warm nights
and sleep in the cave on the excuse of catching moths.
One had to pass over a rocky ledge, safe enough for
anyone with a fair head, yet seeming, if looked at
from above, narrow and sloping; and a remonstrance
from a stranger who had seen me climbing along it doubled
my delight in the adventure. When however, upon
a bank holiday, I found lovers in my cave, I was not
content with it again till I heard of alarm among the
fishing boats, because the ghost of Macrom had been
seen a little before the dawn, stooping over his fire
in the cave-mouth. I had been trying to cook
eggs, as I had read in some book, by burying them in
the earth under a fire of sticks.
At other times, I would sleep among
the rhododendrons and rocks in the wilder part of
the grounds of Howth Castle. After a while my
father said I must stay in-doors half the night, meaning
that I should get some sleep in my bed; but I, knowing
that I would be too sleepy and comfortable to get
up again, used to sit over the kitchen fire till half
the night was gone. Exaggerated accounts spread
through the school, and sometimes when I did not know
a lesson some master would banter me. My interest
in science began to fade away, and presently I said
to myself, “it has all been a misunderstanding.”
I remembered how soon I tired of my specimens, and
how little I knew after all my years of collecting,
and I came to believe that I had gone through so much
labour because of a text, heard for the first time
in St. John’s Church in Sligo. I wanted
to be certain of my own wisdom by copying Solomon,
who had knowledge of hyssop and of tree. I still
carried my green net but I began to play at being a
sage, a magician or a poet. I had many idols,
and now as I climbed along the narrow ledge I was
Manfred on his glacier, and now I thought of Prince
Athanase and his solitary lamp, but I soon chose Alastor
for my chief of men and longed to share his melancholy,
and maybe at last to disappear from everybody’s
sight as he disappeared drifting in a boat along some
slow-moving river between great trees. When I
thought of women they were modelled on those in my
favourite poets and loved in brief tragedy, or, like
the girl in “The Revolt of Islam,” accompanied
their lovers through all manner of wild places, lawless
women without homes and without children.