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George William Russell - 38. A New World

I WHO had sought afar from earth
  The faery land to meet,
Now find content within its girth
  And wonder nigh my feet.
 

To-day a nearer love I choose
  And seek no distant sphere;
For aureoled by faery dews
  The dear brown breasts appear.
 

With rainbow radiance come and go
  The airy breaths of day;
And eve is all a pearly glow
  With moonlit winds a-play.
 

The lips of twilight burn my brow,
  The arms of night caress:
Glimmer her white eyes drooping now
  With grave old tenderness.
 

I close mine eyes from dream to be
  The diamond-rayed again,
As in the ancient hours ere we
  Forgot ourselves to men.
 

And all I thought of heaven before
  I find in earth below:
A sunlight in the hidden core
  To dim the noonday glow.
 

And with the earth my heart is glad,
  I move as one of old;
With mists of silver I am clad
  And bright with burning gold.

Added: May 12 2003 | Viewed: 1304 times | Comments (0)


38. A New World - Comments and Information

Poet: George William Russell
Poem: 38. 38. A New World
Volume: Collected Poems by A.E.
Year: Published/Written in 1913
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