Wednesday, March 10, 2021

This Week's Freebie from The 1937 Flood

 More than a century ago, the Irish poet William Butler Yeats wrote an amazing verse called “The Song of Wandering Aengus.” 

In it an old man remembers a mystical experience in his youth, in which a silver trout he’d just fished from a stream suddenly transforms into a glimmering girl, who called him by his name and then vanished. To this day, he looks for her, through the long green dappled grass of hilly lands and hollow lands, search the silver apples of the moon, the golden apples of the sun. 

Many years later, folksinger Travis Edmonson set Yeats’ words to a lovely, ephemeral melody,
which the Family Flood sat down with last night.

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