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Life & Wisdom Quote by William Butler Yeats

"Come Fairies, take me out of this dull world, for I would ride with you upon the wind and dance upon the mountains like a flame!"

About this Quote

Yeats isn’t asking for a whimsical field trip. He’s staging an escape hatch from modernity, the kind that looks like fantasy until you notice how sharply it’s aimed at the “dull world” he names with a flat, almost contemptuous thud. The line pivots on that insult: everything after it is velocity, heat, altitude. Wind, mountains, flame. The syntax itself accelerates, a single breathless surge that performs the craving it describes.

The fairies matter because Yeats’s faeries aren’t Disney mascots; they’re emissaries from Irish folklore, seductive and dangerous, tied to an older order of enchantment and violence. In the Celtic Revival, that mythic register was a cultural counter-program: a way to refuse British rationalism, industrial drabness, and the narrowing bourgeois idea of what counts as “real.” Calling on fairies is also calling on an Ireland that is uncolonized in the imagination, where the unseen world still has jurisdiction.

Subtext: this is an artist’s tantrum against disenchantment, but it’s also a strategy. Yeats converts dissatisfaction into spectacle. He doesn’t argue with the dull world; he out-sings it. “Ride with you upon the wind” suggests surrendering agency to forces larger than the self, while “dance upon the mountains like a flame” insists on a different kind of power: brief, bright, uncontainable. The intent isn’t to vanish. It’s to be transfigured - to make escape feel like ascent, and refusal look like radiance.

Quote Details

TopicPoetry
Source
Unverified source: The Land of Heart's Desire (William Butler Yeats, 1894)
Text match: 92.31%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Faeries, came take me out of this dull world, For I would ride with you upon the wind, Run on the top of the dishevelled tide, And dance upon the mountains like a flame!. This line is from Yeats's play The Land of Heart's Desire, spoken by the character Maire Bruin. The wording commonly circulate...
Other candidates (1)
... Come Fairies , take me out of this dull world , for I would ride with you upon the wind and dance upon the mounta...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Yeats, William Butler. (2026, February 9). Come Fairies, take me out of this dull world, for I would ride with you upon the wind and dance upon the mountains like a flame! FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/come-fairies-take-me-out-of-this-dull-world-for-i-2385/

Chicago Style
Yeats, William Butler. "Come Fairies, take me out of this dull world, for I would ride with you upon the wind and dance upon the mountains like a flame!" FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/come-fairies-take-me-out-of-this-dull-world-for-i-2385/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Come Fairies, take me out of this dull world, for I would ride with you upon the wind and dance upon the mountains like a flame!" FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/come-fairies-take-me-out-of-this-dull-world-for-i-2385/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Come Fairies take me out of this dull world ride upon the wind
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About the Author

William Butler Yeats

William Butler Yeats (June 13, 1865 - January 28, 1939) was a Poet from Ireland.

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