When I was a child, and my dreams were of gold I always believed everything I was told, My faith was implicit, my innocence pure And magic existed, of that I was sure.
My old uncle Arthur was always in bed His twinkling eyes sunken into his head, He told me his stories of dragons and elves That lived in the books on his library shelves.
On the table that stood at the foot of his bed Was an old leather box coloured purple and red, And the lid was embroidered in threads of maroon With the soft shining face of the man in the moon.
I asked him to show me what rested inside And he said Press the button, and open it wide!, Then up from the box, with a deep whirring sigh Rose a magic mechanical gold butterfly.
It fluttered its wings as it gently spun round Its beauty serene in the absence of sound, And I was entranced by its magical flight As it bathed in the flame of the candles soft light.
As I lay in my bed with my head in a dream I still could imagine the butterflys gleam, So I made up my mind to go back the next day To watch the gold butterfly flutter and play.
But when I got there, the old house was in gloom My old uncle Arthur was gone from his room, And even though mother had tried to explain I never did see uncle Arthur again.
That night I slept soundly, in dreams of delight At the dawn I awoke to the mornings first light, And there on my desk, by the side of my bed Was an old leather box coloured purple and red