Authors: Seamus Heaney
74Â Â Â At last Sweeney arrived where Moling lived, the place that is known as St. Mullins. Just then, Moling was addressing himself to Kevin's psalter and reading from it to his students. Sweeney presented himself at the brink of the well and began to eat watercress.
    âAren't you the early bird? said the cleric; and continued, with Sweeney answering, as follows:
75 | Â | Moling: | Â | So, you would steal a march on us, up and breakfasting so early! |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | Not so very early, priest. Terce has come in Rome already.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | And what knowledge has a fool about the hour of terce in Rome? |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | The Lord makes me His oracle from sunrise till sun's going down.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | Then speak to us of hidden things, give us tidings of the Lord. |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | Not I. But if you are Moling, you are gifted with the Word.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | Mad as you are, you are sharp-witted. How do you know my face and name? |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | In my days astray I rested in this enclosure many a time.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | But Sweeney, son of Colman Cuar, why won't you settle in one place? |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | The resting place that I prefer is life in everlasting peace.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | God help you then. Do you not dread the slippery brim of hell's wide mouth? |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | My one affliction is that God denies me repose on earth.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | Come closer. Come here and share whatever morsels you would like. |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | There are worse things, priest, than hunger. Imagine living without a cloak.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | Then you are welcome to my smock, and welcome to take my cowl. |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | Sometimes memory brings back times it hurts me to recall.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | Are you Sweeney, the bogey-man, escaped out of the fight at Moira? |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | I am the early bird, the one who scavenges, if I am Sweeney.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | Mad as you are, how does it come you were fit to recognize me? |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | In this enclosure many times I watched you from a far eyrie.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | Look at this leaf of Kevin's book, the coilings on this psalter's page. |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | The yew leaf coils around my nook in Glen Bolcain's foliage.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | This churchyard, this flush of colour, is there no pleasure here for you? |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | My pleasure is great and other: the hosting that day at Moira.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | I will sing Mass, make a hush of high celebration. |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | Leaping an ivy bush is a higher calling even.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | My ministry is only toil, the weak and strong both exhaust me. |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | I toil to a bed on the chill steeps of Benevenagh.  |
 |  | Moling: |  | When your end comes, will it be death by water, in holy ground? |
 |  | Sweeney: |  | It will be early when I die. One of your herds will make the wound.  |
76Â Â Â âYou are more than welcome here, Sweeney, said Moling, for you are fated to live and die here. You shall leave the history of your adventures with us and receive a Christian burial in a churchyard. Therefore, said Moling, no matter how far you range over Ireland, day by day, I bind you to return to me every evening so that I may record your story.
77Â Â Â All during the next year the madman kept coming back to Moling. One day he would go to Inishbofin in west Connacht, another day to lovely Assaroe. Some days he would view the clean lines of Slemish, some days he would be shivering on the Mournes. But wherever he went, every night he would be back for vespers at St. Mullins.
    Moling ordered his cook to leave aside some of each day's milking for Sweeney's supper. This cook's name was Muirghil and she was married to a swineherd of Moling's called Mongan. Anyhow, Sweeney's supper was like this: she would sink her heel to the ankle in the nearest cow-dung and fill the hole to the brim with new milk. Then Sweeney would sneak into the deserted corner of the milking yard and lap it up.
78Â Â Â One night there was a row between Muirghil and another woman, in the course of which the woman said:
    âIf you do not prefer your husband, it is a pity you cannot take up with some other man than the looney you have been meeting all year.
    The herd's sister was within earshot and listening but she said nothing until the next morning. Then when she saw Muirghil going to leave the milk in the cow-dung beside the hedge where Sweeney roosted, she came in to her brother and said:
    âAre you a man at all? Your wife's in the hedge yonder with another man.
    Jealousy shook him like a brainstorm. He got up in a sudden fury, seized a spear from a rack in the house, and made for the madman. Sweeney was down swilling the milk out of the cow-dung with his side exposed towards the herd, who let go at him with the spear. It went into Sweeney at the nipple of his left breast, went through him, and broke his back.
    There is another story. Some say the herd had hidden a deer's horn at the spot where Sweeney drank from the cow-dung and that Sweeney fell and killed himself on the point of it.
79Â Â Â Enna McBracken was ringing the bell for prime at the door of the churchyard and saw what had happened. He spoke this poem:
80 | Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â | This is sad, herd, this was deliberate, outrageous, sickening and sinful. Whoever struck here will live to regret killing the king, the saint, the holy fool. Â |
 |  | What good did you expect to come of it? Repentance will be denied you at your death. Your soul will go howling to the devil, your body draw an unabsolved last breath.  |
 |  | But I expect to be with him in heaven, united in a single strain of prayer. The soul of the true guest is sped by psalms on the lips of a fasting, chanting choir.  |
 |  | My heart is breaking with pity for him. He was a man of fame and high birth. He was a king, he was a madman. His grave will be a hallowing of earth.  |
81Â Â Â Enna went back and told Moling that Sweeney had been killed by his swineherd Mongan. Immediately, Moling and his community came along to where Sweeney lay and Sweeney repented and made his confession to Moling. He received Christ's body and thanked God for having received it and after that was anointed by the clerics.
83 | Â | Sweeney: | Â | There was a time when I preferred the turtle-dove's soft jubilation as it flitted round a pool to the murmur of conversation. Â |
 |  |  |  | There was a time when I preferred the blackbird singing on the hill and the stag loud against the storm to the clinking tongue of this bell.  |
 |  |  |  | There was a time when I preferred the mountain grouse crying at dawn to the voice and closeness of a beautiful woman.  |
 |  |  |  | There was a time when I preferred wolf-packs yelping and howling to the sheepish voice of a cleric bleating out plainsong.  |
 |  |  |  | You are welcome to pledge healths and carouse in your drinking dens; I will dip and steal water from a well with my open palm.  |
 |  |  |  | You are welcome to that cloistered hush of your students' conversation; I will study the pure chant of hounds baying in Glen Bolcain.  |
 |  |  |  | You are welcome to your salt meat and fresh meat in feasting-houses; I will live content elsewhere on tufts of green watercress.  |
 |  |  |  | The herd's sharp spear wounded me and passed clean through my body. Ah Christ, who disposed all things, why was I not killed at Moira?  |
 |  |  |  | Of all the innocent lairs I made the length and breadth of Ireland I remember an open bed above the lough in Mourne.  |
 |  |  |  | Of all the innocent lairs I made the length and breadth of Ireland I remember bedding down above the wood in Glen Bolcain.  |
 |  |  |  | To you, Christ, I give thanks for your Body in communion. Whatever evil I have done in this world, I repent.  |
84Â Â Â Then Sweeney's death-swoon came over him and Moling, attended by his clerics, rose up and each of them placed a stone on Sweeney's grave.
    âThe man who is buried here was cherished indeed, said Moling. How happy we were when we walked and talked along this path. And how I loved to watch him yonder at the well. It is called the Madman's Well because he would often eat its watercress and drink its water, and so it is named after him. And every other place he used to haunt will be cherished, too.
    And then Moling said:
85 | Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â | I am standing beside Sweeney's tomb remembering him. Wherever he migrated in flight from home will always be dear to me. Â |
 |  | Because Sweeney loved Glen Bolcain I learned to love it, too. He'll miss the fresh streams tumbling down, the green beds of watercress.  |
 |  | He would drink his sup of water from the well yonder we have called the Madman's Well; now his name keeps brimming in its sandy cold.  |
 |  | I waited long but knew he'd come. I welcomed, sped him as a guest. With holy viaticum I limed him for the Holy Ghost.  |
 |  | Because Sweeney was a pilgrim to the stoup of every well and every green-frilled, cress-topped stream, their water's his memorial.  |
 |  | Now, if it be the will of God, rise, Sweeney, take this guiding hand that has to lay you in the sod and draw the dark blinds of the ground.  |
 |  | I ask a blessing, by Sweeney's grave. His memory flutters in my breast. His soul roosts in the tree of love. His body sinks in its clay nest.  |