Lyrics The Wild Swans at Coole (The Woodlands) - Laís
The
woodland
paths
are
dry,
Under
October
twilight
the
water
Mirrors
a
still
sky
Upon
the
brimming
water
among
the
stones
Are
nine-and-fifty
swans.
The
Autumn
has
come
upon
me
Since
I
first
made
my
count
I
saw,
before
I
had
well
finished,
And
scatter
wheeling
in
great
broken
rings
Upon
their
clamorous
wings.
I
have
looked
upon
those
brilliant
creatures,
And
now
my
heart
is
sore.
All's
changed
since
I,
hearing
at
twilight,
The
bell-beat
of
their
wings
above
my
head,
Trod
with
a
lighter
tread.
Unwearied
still,
lover
by
lover,
They
paddle
in
the
cold,
Companionable
streams
or
climb
the
air
Their
hearts
have
not
grown
old
Passion
or
conquest,
wander
where
they
will,
Attend
upon
them
still.
But
now
they
drift
on
the
still
water
Mysterious,
beautiful
Among
what
rushes
will
they
build,
Delight
men's
eyes,
when
I
awake
some
day
To
find
they
have
flown
away?
William
Butler
Yeats
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