Renascence

D. H. Lawrence

1885 to 1930

Poem Image
Track 1

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We have bit no forbidden apple,
Something of which she's the giver.
Eve and I,
This is our own still valley
Falling round us no longer dapple
With feelings that change and quiver:
I learned it all from my Eve
Our Eden, our home,
Last night when I went with the lantern, the sow was grabbing her litter
Yet the splashes of day and night
But day shows it vivid with feeling
Of the new-born, and after that, the old owl, then the bats that flitter.
She has taught my heart-strings to weave
And the pallor of night does not tally
Till I could borrow
She's a finer instructress than years;
Through the web of all laughter and tears.
The same Eden with purple and white.
My little red heifer, to-night I looked in her eyes,
This warm, dumb wisdom.
—She will calve to-morrow:
And I woke to the sound of the wood-pigeons, and lay and listened,
Fleshed all like me
With red, snarling jaws: and I heard the cries
And all things seem to tally
With dark sleep that once covered its ceiling.
A few quick beats of a wood-pigeon's heart, and when I did rise
And now I see the valley
With something in me,
And I saw that home, this valley, was wider than Paradise.
The morning sun on the shaken iris glistened,