Waking

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Darkness had stretched its colour,
  Deep blue across the pane:
  No cloud to make night duller,
  No moon with its tarnish stain;
  But only here and there a star,
  One sharp point of frosty fire,
  Hanging infinitely far
  In mockery of our life and death
  And all our small desire.

  Now in this hour of waking
  From under brows of stone,
  A new pale day is breaking
  And the deep night is gone.
  Sordid now, and mean and small
  The daylight world is seen again,
  With only the veils of mist that fall
  Deaf and muffling over all
  To hide its ugliness and pain.

  But to-day this dawn of meanness
  Shines in my eyes, as when
  The new world's brightness and cleanness
  Broke on the first of men.
  For the light that shows the huddled things
  Of this close-pressing earth,
  Shines also on your face and brings
  All its dear beauty back to me
  In a new miracle of birth.

  I see you asleep and unpassioned,
  White-faced in the dusk of your hair--
  Your beauty so fleetingly fashioned
  That it filled me once with despair
  To look on its exquisite transience
  And think that our love and thought and laughter
  Puff out with the death of our flickering sense,
  While we pass ever on and away
  Towards some blank hereafter.

  But now I am happy, knowing
  That swift time is our friend,
  And that our love's passionate glowing,
  Though it turn ash in the end,
  Is a rose of fire that must blossom its way
  Through temporal stuff, nor else could be
  More than a nothing. Into day
  The boundless spaces of night contract
  And in your opening eyes I see
  Night born in day, in time eternity.

© Aldous Huxley