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    The Untiring Ones

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    It is one of the great troubles of life that we cannot have any
    unmixed emotions. There is always something in our enemy that we like,
    and something in our sweetheart that we dislike. It is this
    entanglement of moods which makes us old, and puckers our brows and
    deepens the furrows about our eyes. If we could love and hate with as
    good heart as the faeries do, we might grow to be long-lived like them.
    But until that day their untiring joys and sorrows must ever be one-
    half of their fascination. Love with them never grows weary, nor can
    the circles of the stars tire out their dancing feet. The Donegal
    peasants remember this when they bend over the spade, or sit full of
    the heaviness of the fields beside the griddle at nightfall, and they
    tell stories about it that it may not be forgotten. A short while ago,
    they say, two faeries, little creatures, one like a young man, one like
    a young woman, came to a farmer's house, and spent the night sweeping
    the hearth and setting all tidy. The next night they came again, and
    while the farmer was away, brought all the furniture up-stairs into one
    room, and having arranged it round the walls, for the greater grandeur
    it seems, they began to dance. They danced on and on, and days and days
    went by, and all the country-side came to look at them, but still their
    feet never tired. The farmer did not dare to live at home the while;
    and after three months he made up his mind to stand it no more, and
    went and told them that the priest was coming. The little creatures
    when they heard this went back to their own country, and there their
    joy shall last as long as the points of the rushes are brown, the
    people say, and that is until God shall burn up the world with a kiss.

    But it is not merely faeries who know untiring days, for there have
    been men and women who, falling under their enchantment, have attained,
    perhaps by the right of their God-given spirits, an even more than
    faery abundance of life and feeling. It seems that when mortals have
    gone amid those poor happy leaves of the Imperishable Rose of Beauty,
    blown hither and thither by the winds that awakened the stars, the dim
    kingdom has acknowledged their birthright, perhaps a little sadly, and

    given them of its best. Such a mortal was born long ago at a village in
    the south of Ireland. She lay asleep in a cradle, and her mother sat by
    rocking her, when a woman of the Sidhe (the faeries) came in, and said
    that the child was chosen to be the bride of the prince of the dim
    kingdom, but that as it would never do for his wife to grow old and die
    while he was still in the first ardour of his love, she would be gifted
    with a faery life. The mother was to take the glowing log out of the
    fire and bury it in the garden, and her child
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