Yeats in the Magic Cottage, R.M. oil crayons |
I have enjoyed a lifelong relationship with my favorite dead poet, William
Butler Yeats. I have always loved his poetry and have been able – since
elementary school – to recite long passages from memory. I have had dreams and
visions of Yeats and his circle for as long as I can remember. He was not only
a marvellous poet; he was a Western magus, one of the leading figures in the
Order of the Golden Dawn.
Since I was a boy, Yeats has appeared in my dreams
at night as well as my daydreams and willed journeys in consciousness. In dreams, I sometimes seem to be living in his era; at other times I seem to meet him in a separate reality. When drumming for groups, I have had had strong impressions of Yeats conducting experiments in "mutual visioning" in his own time, and have felt communication between us.
I dreamed I received a message from Yeats inviting me to visit him at home. I was not sure where ‘home’ for Yeats might now be, but it did not appear to be inIreland . In a
subsequent vision, in the hypnagogic zone, I
found myself floating above my body, up through the ceiling, and then through
some kind of mesh that looked like an intricately woven fabric or netting. I
was drawn up as if a traction beam had been turned on. I was under no
compulsion, but I let myself rise on the intention of the one who was calling
me. I had no doubt who that was. His lines were running through my head:
I dreamed I received a message from Yeats inviting me to visit him at home. I was not sure where ‘home’ for Yeats might now be, but it did not appear to be in
I shall arise and go there, and go to
Innisfree…
Oh,
yes, the early poem that has been quoted so often that Yeats himself got bored
and irritated by it, vastly preferring the maturity and complexities of his
later work. But its rhythms helped me travel, helped me swim through the subtle
air.
I passed through many landscapes,
perhaps whole worlds. They were separated by dividing partitions that were
sometimes like cloud-banks, sometimes like membranes that stretched to let me
through, and sometimes like woven fabric or netting. I came at last to what
appeared to be a pleasant country cottage on a winding path. The flower beds
were bright with colour. It seemed to me that, as I glanced around, the colours
at the edge of my peripheral vision would change. Behind the cottage was a
gentle river, and on the banks of the river, spires and towers that might have
been those of Oxford .
I began to drift along the path beside the river and saw another town beyond
the first, this one quite certainly Italian; the architecture was that of the
Quattrocento Florence or the Urbino that Yeats had loved and sometimes
threatened to make his sanctuary from the critics and civil unrest in Ireland.
I was thrilled that scenes the
poet’s words had often conjured in my mind in lesser, drifting states of
reverie were now so vividly and palpably available to explore. I hurried toward
a palazzo worthy of a Medici that looked as if it has been constructed that
day.
But again there was that tug of
another’s intention, and I allowed it to pull me back to the cottage. Did the
cottage really have a thatched roof before, or was that detail changed while I
was looking elsewhere?
Through the door, long a hall, and
there was Yeats, sitting at a broad table covered with books and papers.
Through the leaded glass window at his left hand I saw the cities along the
river; they changed from one to another at the blink of an eye. I was excited
to see that Yeats was continuing to study and to write. I wondered whether it
hampered or helped his craft that his new work would not be published on earth.
He was patient with me, letting me gradually awaken to the understanding that,
from his new perspective, the most important from of publication might be to
inspire others, to operate as one of those ‘teachers of the thirteenth cone’ he
wrote about in A Vision.
He showed me a large blue crystal
lying on his desk. He was most insistent that I should use this blue stone for
creative inspiration and to open and focus the third eye of vision. This blue
crystal was a place in which to see, and a connection between the two of us.
He gave me some personal guidance
and an update on certain psychic crosscurrents involving individuals and group
that had been caught up in psychic battles in the past, in the time of the
great rift within the Order of the Golden Dawn and in the darker times of the
struggle between British magicians and the Nazi occultists. I asked Yeats where
exactly we were.
He told me very precisely: “We are
on the fourth level of the astral plane”. It seemed this was a neighbourhood
essentially reserved for people of creative genius, for writers and artists and
musicians.
I felt immensely privileged to have
been given this tour of Yeats’s environment. It was not clear to me whether he
lived in the cottage alone; I was not shown the private rooms. I did feel quite
certain that this Yeats was embarked on a vast new project, though its exact
nature was not yet made clear to me.
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