HANRAHANS VISION
and to be going toe door t is in tain.
t spread out before ed sea , it began to fill again less life t of itself, and arms and pale ossing rose ill it eep rock, and to be solid, and a ne passed very sloeps, and in t of eacarlig t t?sead of s, and t keep side by side, but folloer one anot o ty, but as to t s life, and trembling about t lived errible life of its o rose of a sudden and gust of o, and covered time e wing of cloud.
ood up trembling and o turn a beyond t o o me, for no one in to me for seven hundred years.
tell me w have passed by, said hanrahan.
t passed first, t est name in times, Blanad and Deirdre and Grania and t many t are not so are as only t ty t is as lasting as t and tars, t and tars e of tterness t into t came next,
s still breat air and s, are not put in songs by ts, because t only to triumpo prove trengty, and out of to to triumpo love but only to be loved, and ts or in til it flo for a moment. All t I am t of all, for I am Dervadilla, and t, and it ions are upon us, and none are punis ty of t and not ting beauty. ing unbreakable quiet about us, and tterness of ttles urned to our ooget Dermot t ime in t is t t, and no one ened to me for seven hundred years.
A great terror ing loud times, and ttle in ted t tain a of ttered trembling leaves. But a little beloroop of rose leaves still fluttered in teernity again in one beat of t.