XXIX
Night
				I know a little Druid wood
				
				Where I would slumber if I could
				
				And have the murmuring of the stream
				
				To mingle with a midnight dream,
				
				And have the holy hazel trees
				
				To play above me in the breeze,
				
				And smell the thorny eglantine;
				
				For there the white owls all night long
				
				In the scented gloom divine
				
				Hear the wild, strange, tuneless song
				
				Of faerie voices, thin and high
				
				As the bat’s unearthly cry,
				
				And the measure of their shoon
				
				Dancing, dancing, under the moon,
				
				Until, amid the pale of dawn
				
				The wandering stars begin to swoon. …
				
				Ah, leave the world and come away!
				
				The windy folk are in the glade,
				
				And men have seen their revels, laid
				
				In secret on some flowery lawn
				
				Underneath the beechen covers
				
				Kings of old, I’ve heard them say,
				
				Here have found them faerie lovers
				
				That charmed them out of life and kissed
				
				Their lips with cold lips unafraid,
				
				And such a spell around them made
				
				That they have passed beyond the mist
				
				And fount eh Country-under-wave. …
			
Kings of old, whom none could save!