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Show •• 14M demands of the poet at the court of haTe revised the moral of this last have the I have that the best of it. good hOJe. be can played have a mythology but and there, used of my take after the other it, as symbols woman, and the man, the of Celtic not are founded on of the desire desire of the of the of the woman this kind had for personal importance, fabric by of my work for one." and me me they to man which is for is mere a followed I and Here have lands. certainly are the the desire creatures a and of romance, long time intense, a very too much woven into a 6 only the speculation very are give all which is for things. For of all to common "Death-pale Deer" that makes the end Reede," "Flying Fawn" and the "The Boar without Bristles" not symbols farce play particular story. any tiThe Wind among the in Horns·t no scholars symbols of the a going, "The Land of Heart' and Coleridge said; but it as and make in Greece fra.gments of ancient mythology Irish one side is good deal of incidental Irish folk-lore specially "The Deer wi th but story to let the poet fellow-plaYTights "The Shadowy Waters" tragedy. Desire" to One King Guaire; but I detailed accot of the them |