Then the King spake dolefully in the Hall of Kings, and said: "May I not find at last the gods, and must it be that I may not look in Their faces at the last to see whether They be kindly? They that have sent me on my earthward journey I would greet on my returning, if not as a King coming again to his own city, yet as one who having been ordered had obeyed, and obeying had merited something of those for whom he toiled. I would look Them in Their faces, O prophet, and ask Them concerning many things and would know the wherefore of much. I had hoped, O prophet, that those gods that had smiled upon my childhood, Whose voices stirred at evening in gardens when I was young, would hold dominion still when at last I came to seek Them. O prophet, if this is not to be, make you a great dirge for my childhood's gods and fashion silver bells and, setting them mostly a-swing amidst such trees as grew in the garden of my childhood, sing you this dirge in the dusk: and sing it when the low moth flies up and down and the bat first comes peering from her home, sing it when white mists come rising from the river, when smoke is pale and grey, while flowers are yet closing, ere voices are yet hushed, sing it while all things yet lament the day, or ever the great lights of heaven come blazing forth and night with her splendours takes the place of day. For, if the old gods die, let us lament Them or ever new knowledge comes, while all the world still shudders at Their loss."
The Book of Wonder
Lord Dunsany
bookUnhappy Far-Off Things
Lord Dunsany
bookUnhappy Far-Off Things
Lord Dunsany
bookSelections from the Writings of Lord Dunsay
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Kith of the Elf-Folk
Lord Dunsany
bookTales of Three Hemispheres
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Tents of the Arabs
Lord Dunsany
bookPlays of Near & Far
Lord Dunsany
bookHow Nuth Would Have Practised His Art upon the Choles
Lord Dunsany
bookPlays of Gods and Men
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Prayer of the Men of Daleswood
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Long Porter's Tale
Lord Dunsany
book