ome, thou, my shepherd, and lead me away.
He then lay back quite still and waited. He could not say whether hours
or minutes had passed, or whether he had slept or not, until he was
aware of a tall golden-bearded man standing by his bed. Wonderfully
light was this figure, as if the sunlight ran through his limbs; a
spiritual beauty was on the face, and those strange eyes of bronze and
gold with their subtle intense gaze made Con aware for the first time of
the difference between inner and out in himself.
"Come, Con, come away!" the child seemed to hear uttered silently.
"You're the Shepherd!" said Con, "I'll go." Then suddenly, "I won't come
back and be old when they're all dead?" a vivid remembrance of Ossian's
fate flashing upon him.
A most beautiful laughter, which again to Con seemed half soundless,
came in reply. His fears vanished; the golden-bearded man stretched a
hand over him for a moment, and he found himself out in the night, now
clear and starlit. Together they moved on as if borne by the wind, past
many woods and silver-gleaming lakes, and mountains which shone like a
range of opals below the purple skies. The Shepherd stood still for a
moment by one of these hills, and there flew out, riverlike, a melody
mingled with a tinkling as of innumerable elfin hammers, and there, was
a sound of many gay voices where an unseen people were holding festival,
or enraptured hosts who were let loose for the awakening, the new day
which was to dawn, for the delighted child felt that faeryland was come
over again with its heroes and battles.
"Our brothers rejoice," said the Shepherd to Con.
"Who are they?" asked the boy.
"They are the thoughts of our Father."
"May we go in?" Con asked, for he was fascinated by the melody, mystery,
and flashing lights.
"Not now. We are going to my home where I lived in the days past when
there came to me many kings and queens of ancient Eire, many heroes and
beautiful women, who longed for the Druid wisdom we taught."
"And did you fight like Finn, and carry spears as tall as trees, and
chase the deer through the Woods, and have feastings and singing?"
"No, we, the Dananns, did none of those things--but those who were weary
of battle, and to whom feast and song brought no pleasure, came to us
and passed hence to a more wonderful land, a more immortal land than
this."
As he spoke he paused before a great mound, grown over with trees, and
around it silver clear in th
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