Two Lovers

by George Eliot English

Two lovers by a moss-grown spring: They leaned soft cheeks together there, Mingled the dark and sunny hair, And heard the wooing thrushes sing.       O budding time!       O love’s blest prime! Two wedded from the portal stept: The bells made happy carolings, The air was soft as fanning wings, White petals on the pathway slept.       O pure-eyed bride!       O tender pride! Two faces o’er a cradle bent: Two hands above the head were locked; These pressed each other while they rocked, Those watched a life that love had sent.       O solemn hour!       O hidden power! Two parents by the evening fire: The red light fell about their knees On heads that rose by slow degrees Like buds upon the lily spire.       O patient life!       O tender strife! The two still sat together there, The red light shone about their knees; But all the heads by slow degrees Had gone and left that lonely pair.       O voyage fast!       O vanished past! The red light shone upon the floor And made the space between them wide; They drew their chairs up side by side, Their pale cheeks joined, and said,       “Once more!”       O memories!       O past that is!

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