Complete Works of Thomas Hardy (Illustrated)

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Complete Works of Thomas Hardy (Illustrated) Page 753

by Thomas Hardy


  Perhaps that soldier’s fighting

  In a land that’s far away,

  Or he may be idly plighting

  Some foreign hussy gay;

  Or perhaps his bones are whiting

  In the wind to their decay! . . .

  Ah! — does he mind him how

  The girls he saw that day

  On the bridge, were sitting singing

  At the time of curfew-ringing,

  “Take me, Paddy; will you now, dear?

  Paddy, will you now?”

  GREY’S BRIDGE.

  THE YOUNG CHURCHWARDEN

  When he lit the candles there,

  And the light fell on his hand,

  And it trembled as he scanned

  Her and me, his vanquished air

  Hinted that his dream was done,

  And I saw he had begun

  To understand.

  When Love’s viol was unstrung,

  Sore I wished the hand that shook

  Had been mine that shared her book

  While that evening hymn was sung,

  His the victor’s, as he lit

  Candles where he had bidden us sit

  With vanquished look.

  Now her dust lies listless there,

  His afar from tending hand,

  What avails the victory scanned?

  Does he smile from upper air:

  “Ah, my friend, your dream is done;

  And ‘tis YOU who have begun

  To understand!

  I TRAVEL AS A PHANTOM NOW

  I travel as a phantom now,

  For people do not wish to see

  In flesh and blood so bare a bough

  As Nature makes of me.

  And thus I visit bodiless

  Strange gloomy households often at odds,

  And wonder if Man’s consciousness

  Was a mistake of God’s.

  And next I meet you, and I pause,

  And think that if mistake it were,

  As some have said, O then it was

  One that I well can bear!

  1915.

  LINES TO A MOVEMENT IN MOZART’S E-FLAT SYMPHONY

  Show me again the time

  When in the Junetide’s prime

  We flew by meads and mountains northerly! -

  Yea, to such freshness, fairness, fulness, fineness, freeness,

  Love lures life on.

  Show me again the day

  When from the sandy bay

  We looked together upon the pestered sea! -

  Yea, to such surging, swaying, sighing, swelling, shrinking,

  Love lures life on.

  Show me again the hour

  When by the pinnacled tower

  We eyed each other and feared futurity! -

  Yea, to such bodings, broodings, beatings, blanchings, blessings,

  Love lures life on.

  Show me again just this:

  The moment of that kiss

  Away from the prancing folk, by the strawberry-tree! -

  Yea, to such rashness, ratheness, rareness, ripeness, richness,

  Love lures life on.

  Begun November 1898.

  IN THE SEVENTIES

  “Qui deridetur ab amico suo sicut ego.” — JOB.

  In the seventies I was bearing in my breast,

  Penned tight,

  Certain starry thoughts that threw a magic light

  On the worktimes and the soundless hours of rest

  In the seventies; aye, I bore them in my breast

  Penned tight.

  In the seventies when my neighbours — even my friend -

  Saw me pass,

  Heads were shaken, and I heard the words, “Alas,

  For his onward years and name unless he mend!”

  In the seventies, when my neighbours and my friend

  Saw me pass.

  In the seventies those who met me did not know

  Of the vision

  That immuned me from the chillings of mis-prision

  And the damps that choked my goings to and fro

  In the seventies; yea, those nodders did not know

  Of the vision.

  In the seventies nought could darken or destroy it,

  Locked in me,

  Though as delicate as lamp-worm’s lucency;

  Neither mist nor murk could weaken or alloy it

  In the seventies! — could not darken or destroy it,

  Locked in me.

  THE PEDIGREE

  I

  I bent in the deep of night

  Over a pedigree the chronicler gave

  As mine; and as I bent there, half-unrobed,

  The uncurtained panes of my window-square let in the watery light

  Of the moon in its old age:

  And green-rheumed clouds were hurrying past where mute and cold it

  globed

  Like a drifting dolphin’s eye seen through a lapping wave.

  II

  So, scanning my sire-sown tree,

  And the hieroglyphs of this spouse tied to that,

  With offspring mapped below in lineage,

  Till the tangles troubled me,

  The branches seemed to twist into a seared and cynic face

  Which winked and tokened towards the window like a Mage

  Enchanting me to gaze again thereat.

  III

  It was a mirror now,

  And in it a long perspective I could trace

  Of my begetters, dwindling backward each past each

  All with the kindred look,

  Whose names had since been inked down in their place

  On the recorder’s book,

  Generation and generation of my mien, and build, and brow.

  IV

  And then did I divine

  That every heave and coil and move I made

  Within my brain, and in my mood and speech,

  Was in the glass portrayed

  As long forestalled by their so making it;

  The first of them, the primest fuglemen of my line,

  Being fogged in far antiqueness past surmise and reason’s reach.

  V

  Said I then, sunk in tone,

  ”I am merest mimicker and counterfeit! -

  Though thinking, I AM I

  AND WHAT I DO I DO MYSELF ALONE.”

  — The cynic twist of the page thereat unknit

  Back to its normal figure, having wrought its purport wry,

  The Mage’s mirror left the window-square,

  And the stained moon and drift retook their places there.

  1916.

  THIS HEART A WOMAN’S DREAM

  At midnight, in the room where he lay dead

  Whom in his life I had never clearly read,

  I thought if I could peer into that citadel

  His heart, I should at last know full and well

  What hereto had been known to him alone,

  Despite our long sit-out of years foreflown,

  “And if,” I said, “I do this for his memory’s sake,

  It would not wound him, even if he could wake.”

  So I bent over him. He seemed to smile

  With a calm confidence the whole long while

  That I, withdrawing his heart, held it and, bit by bit,

  Perused the unguessed things found written on it.

  It was inscribed like a terrestrial sphere

  With quaint vermiculations close and clear -

  His graving. Had I known, would I have risked the stroke

  Its reading brought, and my own heart nigh broke!

  Yes, there at last, eyes opened, did I see

  His whole sincere symmetric history;

  There were his truth, his simple singlemindedness,

  Strained, maybe, by time’s storms, but there no less.

  There were the daily deeds from sun to sun

  In blindness, but good faith, that he had done;

  There were regr
ets, at instances wherein he swerved

  (As he conceived) from cherishings I had deserved.

  There were old hours all figured down as bliss -

  Those spent with me — (how little had I thought this!)

  There those when, at my absence, whether he slept or waked,

  (Though I knew not ‘twas so!) his spirit ached.

  There that when we were severed, how day dulled

  Till time joined us anew, was chronicled:

  And arguments and battlings in defence of me

  That heart recorded clearly and ruddily.

  I put it back, and left him as he lay

  While pierced the morning pink and then the gray

  Into each dreary room and corridor around,

  Where I shall wait, but his step will not sound.

  WHERE THEY LIVED

  Dishevelled leaves creep down

  Upon that bank to-day,

  Some green, some yellow, and some pale brown;

  The wet bents bob and sway;

  The once warm slippery turf is sodden

  Where we laughingly sat or lay.

  The summerhouse is gone,

  Leaving a weedy space;

  The bushes that veiled it once have grown

  Gaunt trees that interlace,

  Through whose lank limbs I see too clearly

  The nakedness of the place.

  And where were hills of blue,

  Blind drifts of vapour blow,

  And the names of former dwellers few,

  If any, people know,

  And instead of a voice that called, “Come in, Dears,”

  Time calls, “Pass below!”

  THE OCCULTATION

  When the cloud shut down on the morning shine,

  And darkened the sun,

  I said, “So ended that joy of mine

  Years back begun.”

  But day continued its lustrous roll

  In upper air;

  And did my late irradiate soul

  Live on somewhere?

  LIFE LAUGHS ONWARD

  Rambling I looked for an old abode

  Where, years back, one had lived I knew;

  Its site a dwelling duly showed,

  But it was new.

  I went where, not so long ago,

  The sod had riven two breasts asunder;

  Daisies throve gaily there, as though

  No grave were under.

  I walked along a terrace where

  Loud children gambolled in the sun;

  The figure that had once sat there

  Was missed by none.

  Life laughed and moved on unsubdued,

  I saw that Old succumbed to Young:

  ‘Twas well. My too regretful mood

  Died on my tongue.

  THE PEACE-OFFERING

  It was but a little thing,

  Yet I knew it meant to me

  Ease from what had given a sting

  To the very birdsinging

  Latterly.

  But I would not welcome it;

  And for all I then declined

  O the regrettings infinite

  When the night-processions flit

  Through the mind!

  SOMETHING TAPPED

  Something tapped on the pane of my room

  When there was never a trace

  Of wind or rain, and I saw in the gloom

  My weary Beloved’s face.

  “O I am tired of waiting,” she said,

  ”Night, morn, noon, afternoon;

  So cold it is in my lonely bed,

  And I thought you would join me soon!”

  I rose and neared the window-glass,

  But vanished thence had she:

  Only a pallid moth, alas,

  Tapped at the pane for me.

  August 1913.

  THE WOUND

  I climbed to the crest,

  And, fog-festooned,

  The sun lay west

  Like a crimson wound:

  Like that wound of mine

  Of which none knew,

  For I’d given no sign

  That it pierced me through.

  A MERRYMAKING IN QUESTION

  “I will get a new string for my fiddle,

  And call to the neighbours to come,

  And partners shall dance down the middle

  Until the old pewter-wares hum:

  And we’ll sip the mead, cyder, and rum!”

  From the night came the oddest of answers:

  A hollow wind, like a bassoon,

  And headstones all ranged up as dancers,

  And cypresses droning a croon,

  And gurgoyles that mouthed to the tune.

  I SAID AND SANG HER EXCELLENCE

  (Fickle Lover’s Song)

  I said and sang her excellence:

  They called it laud undue.

  (Have your way, my heart, O!)

  Yet what was homage far above

  The plain deserts of my olden Love

  Proved verity of my new.

  “She moves a sylph in picture-land,

  Where nothing frosts the air:”

  (Have your way, my heart, O!)

  “To all winged pipers overhead

  She is known by shape and song,” I said,

  Conscious of licence there.

  I sang of her in a dim old hall

  Dream-built too fancifully,

  (Have your way, my heart, O!)

  But lo, the ripe months chanced to lead

  My feet to such a hall indeed,

  Where stood the very She.

  Strange, startling, was it then to learn

  I had glanced down unborn time,

  (Have your way, my heart, O!)

  And prophesied, whereby I knew

  That which the years had planned to do

  In warranty of my rhyme.

  BY RUSHY-POND.

  A JANUARY NIGHT (1879)

  The rain smites more and more,

  The east wind snarls and sneezes;

  Through the joints of the quivering door

  The water wheezes.

  The tip of each ivy-shoot

  Writhes on its neighbour’s face;

  There is some hid dread afoot

  That we cannot trace.

  Is it the spirit astray

  Of the man at the house below

  Whose coffin they took in to-day?

  We do not know.

  A KISS

  By a wall the stranger now calls his,

  Was born of old a particular kiss,

  Without forethought in its genesis;

  Which in a trice took wing on the air.

  And where that spot is nothing shows:

  There ivy calmly grows,

  And no one knows

  What a birth was there!

  That kiss is gone where none can tell -

  Not even those who felt its spell:

  It cannot have died; that know we well.

  Somewhere it pursues its flight,

  One of a long procession of sounds

  Travelling aethereal rounds

  Far from earth’s bounds

  In the infinite.

  THE ANNOUNCEMENT

  They came, the brothers, and took two chairs

  In their usual quiet way;

  And for a time we did not think

  They had much to say.

  And they began and talked awhile

  Of ordinary things,

  Till spread that silence in the room

  A pent thought brings.

  And then they said: “The end has come.

  Yes: it has come at last.”

  And we looked down, and knew that day

  A spirit had passed.

  THE OXEN

  Christmas Eve, and twelve of the clock.

  ”Now they are all on their knees,”

  An elder said as we sat in a flock

  By the embers in hearthside ease.

  We pictur
ed the meek mild creatures where

  They dwelt in their strawy pen,

  Nor did it occur to one of us there

  To doubt they were kneeling then.

  So fair a fancy few would weave

  In these years! Yet, I feel,

  If someone said on Christmas Eve,

  ”Come; see the oxen kneel

  “In the lonely barton by yonder coomb

  Our childhood used to know,”

  I should go with him in the gloom,

  Hoping it might be so.

  1915.

  THE TRESSES

  ”When the air was damp

  It made my curls hang slack

  As they kissed my neck and back

  While I footed the salt-aired track

  I loved to tramp.

  ”When it was dry

  They would roll up crisp and tight

  As I went on in the light

  Of the sun, which my own sprite

  Seemed to outvie.

  ”Now I am old;

  And have not one gay curl

  As I had when a girl

  For dampness to unfurl

  Or sun uphold!”

  THE PHOTOGRAPH

  The flame crept up the portrait line by line

  As it lay on the coals in the silence of night’s profound,

  And over the arm’s incline,

  And along the marge of the silkwork superfine,

  And gnawed at the delicate bosom’s defenceless round.

  Then I vented a cry of hurt, and averted my eyes;

  The spectacle was one that I could not bear,

  To my deep and sad surprise;

 

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