Complete Works of Thomas Hardy (Illustrated)

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Complete Works of Thomas Hardy (Illustrated) Page 739

by Thomas Hardy

And yet I spoke untruth unknowingly! -

  For meet again we did. Now, guess you aught?

  The weeping mother on Calvaria

  Was she I had known — albeit that time and tears

  Had wasted rudely her once flowerlike form,

  And her soft eyes, now swollen with sorrowing.

  ”Though I betrayed some qualms, she marked me not;

  And I was scarce of mood to comrade her

  And close the silence of so wide a time

  To claim a malefactor as my son -

  (For so I guessed him). And inquiry made

  Brought rumour how at Nazareth long before

  An old man wedded her for pity’s sake

  On finding she had grown pregnant, none knew how,

  Cared for her child, and loved her till he died.

  ”Well; there it ended; save that then I learnt

  That he — the man whose ardent blood was mine -

  Had waked sedition long among the Jews,

  And hurled insulting parlance at their god,

  Whose temple bulked upon the adjoining hill,

  Vowing that he would raze it, that himself

  Was god as great as he whom they adored,

  And by descent, moreover, was their king;

  With sundry other incitements to misrule.

  ”The impalements done, and done the soldiers’ game

  Of raffling for the clothes, a legionary,

  Longinus, pierced the young man with his lance

  At signs from me, moved by his agonies

  Through naysaying the drug they had offered him.

  It brought the end. And when he had breathed his last

  The woman went. I saw her never again . . .

  Now glares my moody meaning on you, friend? -

  That when you talk of offspring as sheer joy

  So trustingly, you blink contingencies.

  Fors Fortuna! He who goes fathering

  Gives frightful hostages to hazardry!”

  Thus Panthera’s tale. ‘Twas one he seldom told,

  But yet it got abroad. He would unfold,

  At other times, a story of less gloom,

  Though his was not a heart where jests had room.

  He would regret discovery of the truth

  Was made too late to influence to ruth

  The Procurator who had condemned his son —

  Or rather him so deemed. For there was none

  To prove that Panthera erred not: and indeed,

  When vagueness of identity I would plead,

  Panther himself would sometimes own as much -

  Yet lothly. But, assuming fact was such,

  That the said woman did not recognize

  Her lover’s face, is matter for surprise.

  However, there’s his tale, fantasy or otherwise.

  Thereafter shone not men of Panthera’s kind:

  The indolent heads at home were ill-inclined

  To press campaigning that would hoist the star

  Of their lieutenants valorous afar.

  Jealousies kept him irked abroad, controlled

  And stinted by an Empire no more bold.

  Yet in some actions southward he had share -

  In Mauretania and Numidia; there

  With eagle eye, and sword and steed and spur,

  Quelling uprisings promptly. Some small stir

  In Parthia next engaged him, until maimed,

  As I have said; and cynic Time proclaimed

  His noble spirit broken. What a waste

  Of such a Roman! — one in youth-time graced

  With indescribable charm, so I have heard,

  Yea, magnetism impossible to word

  When faltering as I saw him. What a fame,

  O Son of Saturn, had adorned his name,

  Might the Three so have urged Thee! — Hour by hour

  His own disorders hampered Panthera’s power

  To brood upon the fate of those he had known,

  Even of that one he always called his own -

  Either in morbid dream or memory . . .

  He died at no great age, untroublously,

  An exit rare for ardent soldiers such as he.

  THE UNBORN

  I rose at night, and visited

  The Cave of the Unborn:

  And crowding shapes surrounded me

  For tidings of the life to be,

  Who long had prayed the silent Head

  To haste its advent morn.

  Their eyes were lit with artless trust,

  Hope thrilled their every tone;

  “A scene the loveliest, is it not?

  A pure delight, a beauty-spot

  Where all is gentle, true and just,

  And darkness is unknown?”

  My heart was anguished for their sake,

  I could not frame a word;

  And they descried my sunken face,

  And seemed to read therein, and trace

  The news that pity would not break,

  Nor truth leave unaverred.

  And as I silently retired

  I turned and watched them still,

  And they came helter-skelter out,

  Driven forward like a rabble rout

  Into the world they had so desired

  By the all-immanent Will.

  1905.

  THE MAN HE KILLED

  ”Had he and I but met

  By some old ancient inn,

  We should have sat us down to wet

  Right many a nipperkin!

  ”But ranged as infantry,

  And staring face to face,

  I shot at him as he at me,

  And killed him in his place.

  ”I shot him dead because -

  Because he was my foe,

  Just so: my foe of course he was;

  That’s clear enough; although

  ”He thought he’d ‘list, perhaps,

  Off-hand like — just as I -

  Was out of work — had sold his traps -

  No other reason why.

  ”Yes; quaint and curious war is!

  You shoot a fellow down

  You’d treat if met where any bar is,

  Or help to half-a-crown.”

  1902.

  GEOGRAPHICAL KNOWLEDGE (A MEMORY OF CHRISTIANA C-)

  Where Blackmoor was, the road that led

  To Bath, she could not show,

  Nor point the sky that overspread

  Towns ten miles off or so.

  But that Calcutta stood this way,

  Cape Horn there figured fell,

  That here was Boston, here Bombay,

  She could declare full well.

  Less known to her the track athwart

  Froom Mead or Yell’ham Wood

  Than how to make some Austral port

  In seas of surly mood.

  She saw the glint of Guinea’s shore

  Behind the plum-tree nigh,

  Heard old unruly Biscay’s roar

  In the weir’s purl hard by . . .

  “My son’s a sailor, and he knows

  All seas and many lands,

  And when he’s home he points and shows

  Each country where it stands.

  “He’s now just there — by Gib’s high rock -

  And when he gets, you see,

  To Portsmouth here, behind the clock,

  Then he’ll come back to me!”

  ONE RALPH BLOSSOM SOLILOQUIZES

  (“It being deposed that vij women who were mayds before he knew them have been brought upon the towne [rates?] by the fornicacions of one Ralph Blossom, Mr Major inquired why he should not contribute xiv pence weekly toward their mayntenance. But it being shewn that the sayd R. B. was dying of a purple feaver, no order was made.” — Budmouth Borough Minutes: 16 — .)

  When I am in hell or some such place,

  A-groaning over my sorry case,

  What will those seven women say to me

  Who,
when I coaxed them, answered “Aye” to me?

  “I did not understand your sign!”

  Will be the words of Caroline;

  While Jane will cry, “If I’d had proof of you,

  I should have learnt to hold aloof of you!”

  “I won’t reproach: it was to be!”

  Will dryly murmur Cicely;

  And Rosa: “I feel no hostility,

  For I must own I lent facility.”

  Lizzy says: “Sharp was my regret,

  And sometimes it is now! But yet

  I joy that, though it brought notoriousness,

  I knew Love once and all its gloriousness!”

  Says Patience: “Why are we apart?

  Small harm did you, my poor Sweet Heart!

  A manchild born, now tall and beautiful,

  Was worth the ache of days undutiful.”

  And Anne cries: “O the time was fair,

  So wherefore should you burn down there?

  There is a deed under the sun, my Love,

  And that was ours. What’s done is done, my Love.

  These trumpets here in Heaven are dumb to me

  With you away. Dear, come, O come to me!”

  THE NOBLE LADY’S TALE (circa 1790)

  I

  ”We moved with pensive paces,

  I and he,

  And bent our faded faces

  Wistfully,

  For something troubled him, and troubled me.

  ”The lanthorn feebly lightened

  Our grey hall,

  Where ancient brands had brightened

  Hearth and wall,

  And shapes long vanished whither vanish all.

  ”‘O why, Love, nightly, daily,’

  I had said,

  ’Dost sigh, and smile so palely,

  As if shed

  Were all Life’s blossoms, all its dear things dead?’

  ”‘Since silence sets thee grieving,’

  He replied,

  ’And I abhor deceiving

  One so tried,

  Why, Love, I’ll speak, ere time us twain divide.’

  ”He held me, I remember,

  Just as when

  Our life was June — (September

  It was then);

  And we walked on, until he spoke again.

  ”‘Susie, an Irish mummer,

  Loud-acclaimed

  Through the gay London summer,

  Was I; named

  A master in my art, who would be famed.

  ”‘But lo, there beamed before me

  Lady Su;

  God’s altar-vow she swore me

  When none knew,

  And for her sake I bade the sock adieu.

  ”‘My Lord your father’s pardon

  Thus I won:

  He let his heart unharden

  Towards his son,

  And honourably condoned what we had done;

  ”‘But said — recall you, dearest? -

  As for Su,

  I’d see her — ay, though nearest

  Me unto -

  Sooner entombed than in a stage purlieu!

  ”‘Just so. — And here he housed us,

  In this nook,

  Where Love like balm has drowsed us:

  Robin, rook,

  Our chief familiars, next to string and book.

  ”‘Our days here, peace-enshrouded,

  Followed strange

  The old stage-joyance, crowded,

  Rich in range;

  But never did my soul desire a change,

  ”‘Till now, when far uncertain

  Lips of yore

  Call, call me to the curtain,

  There once more,

  But ONCE, to tread the boards I trod before.

  ”‘A night — the last and single

  Ere I die -

  To face the lights, to mingle

  As did I

  Once in the game, and rivet every eye!’

  ”‘To something drear, distressing

  As the knell

  Of all hopes worth possessing!’ . . .

  — What befell

  Seemed linked with me, but how I could not tell.

  ”Hours passed; till I implored him,

  As he knew

  How faith and frankness toward him

  Ruled me through,

  To say what ill I had done, and could undo.

  ”‘FAITH — FRANKNESS. Ah! Heaven save such!’

  Murmured he,

  ’They are wedded wealth! I gave such

  Liberally,

  But you, Dear, not. For you suspected me.’

  ”I was about beseeching

  In hurt haste

  More meaning, when he, reaching

  To my waist,

  Led me to pace the hall as once we paced.

  ”‘I never meant to draw you

  To own all,’

  Declared he. ‘But — I SAW you -

  By the wall,

  Half-hid. And that was why I failed withal!’

  ”‘Where? when?’ said I — ’Why, nigh me,

  At the play

  That night. That you should spy me,

  Doubt my fay,

  And follow, furtive, took my heart away!’

  ”That I had never been there,

  But had gone

  To my locked room — unseen there,

  Curtains drawn,

  Long days abiding — told I, wonder-wan.

  ”‘Nay, ‘twas your form and vesture,

  Cloak and gown,

  Your hooded features — gesture

  Half in frown,

  That faced me, pale,’ he urged, ‘that night in town.

  ”‘And when, outside, I handed

  To her chair

  (As courtesy demanded

  Of me there)

  The leading lady, you peeped from the stair.

  ”Straight pleaded I: ‘Forsooth, Love,

  Had I gone,

  I must have been in truth, Love,

  Mad to don

  Such well-known raiment.’ But he still went on

  ”That he was not mistaken

  Nor misled. -

  I felt like one forsaken,

  Wished me dead,

  That he could think thus of the wife he had wed!

  ”His going seemed to waste him

  Like a curse,

  To wreck what once had graced him;

  And, averse

  To my approach, he mused, and moped, and worse.

  ”Till, what no words effected

  Thought achieved:

  IT WAS MY WRAITH — projected,

  He conceived,

  Thither, by my tense brain at home aggrieved.

  ”Thereon his credence centred

  Till he died;

  And, no more tempted, entered

  Sanctified,

  The little vault with room for one beside.”

  III

  Thus far the lady’s story. -

  Now she, too,

  Reclines within that hoary

  Last dark mew

  In Mellstock Quire with him she loved so true.

  A yellowing marble, placed there

  Tablet-wise,

  And two joined hearts enchased there

  Meet the eyes;

  And reading their twin names we moralise:

  Did she, we wonder, follow

  Jealously?

  And were those protests hollow? -

  Or saw he

  Some semblant dame? Or can wraiths really be?

  Were it she went, her honour,

  All may hold,

  Pressed truth at last upon her

  Till she told -

  (Him only — others as these lines unfold.)

  Riddle death-sealed for ever,

  Let it rest! . . .

  One’s heart could blame her never

  If one guessed

  That go she did. She knew her actor best.

  UNR
EALIZED

  Down comes the winter rain -

  Spoils my hat and bow -

  Runs into the poll of me;

  But mother won’t know.

  We’ve been out and caught a cold,

  Knee-deep in snow;

  Such a lucky thing it is

  That mother won’t know!

  Rosy lost herself last night -

  Couldn’t tell where to go.

  Yes — it rather frightened her,

  But mother didn’t know.

  Somebody made Willy drunk

  At the Christmas show:

  O ‘twas fun! It’s well for him

  That mother won’t know!

  Howsoever wild we are,

  Late at school or slow,

  Mother won’t be cross with us,

  Mother won’t know.

  How we cried the day she died!

  Neighbours whispering low . . .

  But we now do what we will -

  Mother won’t know.

  WAGTAIL AND BABY

  A baby watched a ford, whereto

  A wagtail came for drinking;

  A blaring bull went wading through,

  The wagtail showed no shrinking.

  A stallion splashed his way across,

  The birdie nearly sinking;

  He gave his plumes a twitch and toss,

  And held his own unblinking.

  Next saw the baby round the spot

  A mongrel slowly slinking;

  The wagtail gazed, but faltered not

  In dip and sip and prinking.

  A perfect gentleman then neared;

  The wagtail, in a winking,

  With terror rose and disappeared;

  The baby fell a-thinking.

  ABERDEEN

  (April: 1905)

  “And wisdom and knowledge shall be the stability of thy times.” — Isaiah xxxiii. 6.

  I looked and thought, “All is too gray and cold

 

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