In the cool of dawn I rose; Life lay there from hill to hill In the core of a blue pearl, As it seemed, so deep and still. Not a word the mountains said Of the day that was to be, As I crossed them, till you came At the sunrise back with me. Then we heard the whitethroat sing, And the world was left behind. A new paradise arose Out of his untarnished mind. The brown road lay through the wood, And the forest floor was spread For our footing with the fern, And the cornel berries red. There the woodland rivers sang; Not a sorrow touched their glee, Dancing up the yellow sun, From the purple mountain sea. Towns and turbulence and fame Were as fabled things that lay Through the gateway of the notch, Long ago and far away. There we loitered and went on, Where the roadside berries grew; Earth with all its joy once more Was made over for us two. And at last a meaning filled The round morning fair and good, Waited for a thousand years, There was no more solitude. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NOVEMBER BLUE by ALICE MEYNELL A MORTIFYING MISTAKE by ANNA MARIA PRATT COMPOSED UPON WESTMINSTER BRIDGE, SEPTEMBER 3, 1802 by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH TEARS by TUMADIR BINT IBN AL-SHARID AL-KHANSA VERSES ON SEEING IN AN ALBUM A SKETCH OF AN OLD GATEWAY by BERNARD BARTON UNTEACHABLE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THE CONSOLATION OF PHILOSOPHY: BOOK 3 by ANICIUS MANLIUS SEVERINUS BOETHIUS |