THE UNTIRING ONES
It is one of t troubles of life t ions. t t is tanglement of moods as t groo be long-lived like t until t day tiring joys and sorro ever be one-ion. Love ars tire out t. ts remember t full of t nigell stories about it t it may not be forgotten. A s tle creatures, one like a young man, one like a young o a farmer’s t sting all tidy. t nig all ture up-stairs into one room, and round ter grandeur it seems, to dance. t by, and all try-side came to look at t still t never tired. t dare to live at er to stand it no more, and and told t t tle creatures o try, and t as long as ts of t is until God sh a kiss.
But it is not merely faeries ment, tained, per of ts, an even more t seems t ars, t, pertle sadly, and given ts best. Sucal a village in t by rocking to be t t as it ardour of ed o take t of t in t remained unconsumed. ty, and married to niger seven ead and married tiful peasant girl in urn; and after anotead, and so on until s last one day t of told so t s to blame, and told t straig and dug until , and t, and sian, and everybody oo all over to droo ting up a cairn of stones last s er in ttle Lougop of tain at Sligo.
Doubtless Clooting Lougain of toryteller’s mispronunciation of Loughs.
ttle creatures may rammelled e and unmixed love, and angled t of “maybe” and “per ook to themselves.