George Eliot: 2 Poems
George Eliot
(Mary Ann Evans, 1819 – 1880)
Ay De Mi
O bird, that used to press,
Thy head against my cheek
With touch that seem’d to speak,
And ask a tender "yes" –
Ay de mi, my bird:
Ay de mi, my bird, my bird –
Ay de mi, my bird.
O tender downy breast,
And warmly beating heart,
That beating seem’d a part
Of me who gave it rest –
Ay de mi, my bird:
Ay de mi, my bird, my bird –
Ay de mi, my bird.
The Radiant Dark
Should I long that dark were fair? Say, O song.
Lacks my love aught that I should long?
Dark the night with breath all flow’rs
And tender broken voice that fills
With ravishment the list’ning hours.
Whis’prings, wooings,
Liquid ripples, and soft ring-dove cooings,
in low-toned rhythm that love’s aching stills.
Dark the night, yet is she bright,
For in her dark she brings the mystic star,
Trembling yet strong as is the voice of love
From some unknown afar.
O radiant dark, O darkly foster’d ray,
Thou hast a joy too deep for shallow day.
George Eliot poetry
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