And so but who wouldve thought that the Pied Piper was not stealing the children from the adults of Hamlin for some perceived transgression on their part of a bargain that had had something to do with rats, but instead was liberating a race of dreamers from the drudgery that was to be their futurea future that was surely to consist of them growing into adults and being forced to toil in the adult world while their dreams slowly melted under the strain of responsibility and of being forced to make transgressions against all manner of helpful Pied Pipersand ever preserving the luminous presence that was their dreamtime. Strange, then, that he, the Pied Piper, would so willingly sell them, the children, back into slavery. But even a Pied Piper must have his dreams, and is gold really all that less luminous than the childrens dreamtime?
VIEW 7 of 7 COMMENTS
iyce:
hey thanks for the advice. Ok now where is the rest of that body of urs?? Can I get a peek?
pyratwilly:
at some point we all sell our dreams. Some of us are lucky enough to be able to realize our mistake, and buy them back out of hawk from the pawn shop for more than we originally sold them for. But sadly most of us will never be able to afford the pawnbroker's profit margin. Right now, I'm selling everything in a wild last ditch effort to buy back my dream... it may just work.