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The Dream of the Children

THE CHILDREN awoke in their dreaming
 While earth lay dewy and still:
They followed the rill in its gleaming
 To the heart-light of the hill.
 
Its sounds and sights were forsaking
 The world as they faded in sleep,
When they heard a music breaking
 Out from the heart-light deep.
 
It ran where the rill in its flowing
 Under the star-light gay,
With wonderful colour was glowing
 Like the bubbles they blew in their play.
 
From the misty mountain under
 Shot gleams of an opal star;
Its pathways of rainbow wonder
 Rayed to their feet from afar.
 
From their feet as they strayed in the meadow
 It led through caverned aisles,
Filled with purple and green light and shadow
 For mystic miles on miles.
 
The children were glad: it was lonely
 To play on the hillside by day.
‘But now,’ they said, ‘we have only
 To go where the good people stray.’
 
For all the hillside was haunted
 By the faery folk come again;
And down in the heart-light enchanted
 Were opal-coloured men.
 
They moved like kings unattended
 Without a squire or dame,
But they wore tiaras splendid
 With feathers of starlight flame.
 
They laughed at the children over
 And called them into the heart.
‘Come down here, each sleepless rover;
 We will show you some of our art.’
 
And down through the cool of the mountain
 The children sank at the call,
And stood in a blazing fountain
 And never a mountain at all.
 
The lights were coming and going
 In many a shining strand,
For the opal fire-kings were blowing
 The darkness out of the land.
 
This golden breath was a madness
 To set a poet on fire;
And this was a cure for sadness,
 And that the ease of desire.
 
They said as dawn glimmered hoary,
 ‘We will show yourselves for an hour.’
And the children were changed to a glory
 By the beautiful magic of power.
 
The fire-kings smiled on their faces
 And called them by olden names,
Till they towered like the starry races
 All plumed with the twilight flames.
 
They talked for a while together
 How the toil of ages oppressed,
And of how they best could weather
 The ship of the world to its rest.
 
The dawn in the room was straying:
 The children began to blink,
When they heard a far voice saying
 ‘You can grow like that if you think.’
 
The sun came in yellow and gay light:
 They tumbled out of the cot:
And half of the dream went with daylight
 And half was never forgot.
Other works by George William Russell...



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