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- THE STOLEN CHILD
-
- WHERE dips the rocky highland
- Of Sleuth Wood in the lake,
- There lies a leafy island
- Where flapping herons wake
- The drowsy water-rats;
- There we've hid our faery vats,
- Full of berries
- And of reddest stolen chetries.
- i{Come away, O human child!
- To the waters and the wild
- With afacry, hand in hand,
- For the world's morefull of weeping than you
- can understand.}
- Where the wave of moonlight glosses
- The dim grey sands with light,
- Far off by furthest Rosses
- We foot it all the night,
- Weaving olden dances,
- Mingling hands and mingling glances
- Till the moon has taken flight;
- To and fro we leap
- And chase the frothy bubbles,
- While the world is full of troubles
- And is anxious in its sleep.
- i{Come away, O human child!
- To the waters and the wild}
- With a faery, hand in hand,
- For the world's morefully of weeping than you
- can understand.}
- Where the wandering water gushes
- From the hills above Glen-Car,.
- In pools among the rushes
- That scarce could bathe a star,
- We seek for slumbering trout
- And whispering in their ears
- Give them unquiet dreams;
- Leaning softly out
- From ferns that drop their tears
- Over the young streams.
- i{Come away, O human child!
- To to waters and the wild
- With a faery, hand in hand,
- For to world's morefully of weeping than you
- can understand.}
- Away with us he's going,
- The solemn-eyed:
- He'll hear no more the lowing
- Of the calves on the warm hillside
- Or the kettle on the hob
- Sing peace into his breast,
- Or see the brown mice bob
- Round and round the oatmeal-chest.
- i{For be comes, the human child,
- To the waters and the wild
- With a faery, hand in hand,
- from a world more full of weeping than you
- can understand.}
-