Complete Works of Thomas Hardy (Illustrated)

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Complete Works of Thomas Hardy (Illustrated) Page 756

by Thomas Hardy


  We on our urgent way, -

  Four of us; fair She, dark She, fair He, I, are there,

  But one — elsewhere.

  Autumn moulds the hard fruit mellow,

  And forward still we press

  Through moors, briar-meshed plantations, clay-pits yellow,

  As in the spring hours — yes,

  Three of us: fair He, fair She, I, as heretofore,

  But — fallen one more.

  The leaf drops: earthworms draw it in

  At night-time noiselessly,

  The fingers of birch and beech are skeleton-thin,

  And yet on the beat are we, -

  Two of us; fair She, I. But no more left to go

  The track we know.

  Icicles tag the church-aisle leads,

  The flag-rope gibbers hoarse,

  The home-bound foot-folk wrap their snow-flaked heads,

  Yet I still stalk the course, -

  One of us . . . Dark and fair He, dark and fair She, gone:

  The rest — anon.

  THE WIND’S PROPHECY

  I travel on by barren farms,

  And gulls glint out like silver flecks

  Against a cloud that speaks of wrecks,

  And bellies down with black alarms.

  I say: “Thus from my lady’s arms

  I go; those arms I love the best!”

  The wind replies from dip and rise,

  “Nay; toward her arms thou journeyest.”

  A distant verge morosely gray

  Appears, while clots of flying foam

  Break from its muddy monochrome,

  And a light blinks up far away.

  I sigh: “My eyes now as all day

  Behold her ebon loops of hair!”

  Like bursting bonds the wind responds,

  “Nay, wait for tresses flashing fair!”

  From tides the lofty coastlands screen

  Come smitings like the slam of doors,

  Or hammerings on hollow floors,

  As the swell cleaves through caves unseen.

  Say I: “Though broad this wild terrene,

  Her city home is matched of none!”

  From the hoarse skies the wind replies:

  “Thou shouldst have said her sea-bord one.”

  The all-prevailing clouds exclude

  The one quick timorous transient star;

  The waves outside where breakers are

  Huzza like a mad multitude.

  “Where the sun ups it, mist-imbued,”

  I cry, “there reigns the star for me!”

  The wind outshrieks from points and peaks:

  “Here, westward, where it downs, mean ye!”

  Yonder the headland, vulturine,

  Snores like old Skrymer in his sleep,

  And every chasm and every steep

  Blackens as wakes each pharos-shine.

  “I roam, but one is safely mine,”

  I say. “God grant she stay my own!”

  Low laughs the wind as if it grinned:

  “Thy Love is one thou’st not yet known.”

  Rewritten from an old copy.

  DURING WIND AND RAIN

  They sing their dearest songs -

  He, she, all of them — yea,

  Treble and tenor and bass,

  And one to play;

  With the candles mooning each face . . .

  Ah, no; the years O!

  How the sick leaves reel down in throngs!

  They clear the creeping moss -

  Elders and juniors — aye,

  Making the pathways neat

  And the garden gay;

  And they build a shady seat . . .

  Ah, no; the years, the years;

  See, the white storm-birds wing across!

  They are blithely breakfasting all -

  Men and maidens — yea,

  Under the summer tree,

  With a glimpse of the bay,

  While pet fowl come to the knee . . .

  Ah, no; the years O!

  And the rotten rose is ript from the wall.

  They change to a high new house,

  He, she, all of them — aye,

  Clocks and carpets and chairs

  On the lawn all day,

  And brightest things that are theirs . . .

  Ah, no; the years, the years;

  Down their carved names the rain-drop ploughs.

  HE PREFERS HER EARTHLY

  This after-sunset is a sight for seeing,

  Cliff-heads of craggy cloud surrounding it.

  — And dwell you in that glory-show?

  You may; for there are strange strange things in being,

  Stranger than I know.

  Yet if that chasm of splendour claim your presence

  Which glows between the ash cloud and the dun,

  How changed must be your mortal mould!

  Changed to a firmament-riding earthless essence

  From what you were of old:

  All too unlike the fond and fragile creature

  Then known to me . . . Well, shall I say it plain?

  I would not have you thus and there,

  But still would grieve on, missing you, still feature

  You as the one you were.

  THE DOLLS

  “Whenever you dress me dolls, mammy,

  Why do you dress them so,

  And make them gallant soldiers,

  When never a one I know;

  And not as gentle ladies

  With frills and frocks and curls,

  As people dress the dollies

  Of other little girls?”

  Ah — why did she not answer:-

  ”Because your mammy’s heed

  Is always gallant soldiers,

  As well may be, indeed.

  One of them was your daddy,

  His name I must not tell;

  He’s not the dad who lives here,

  But one I love too well.”

  MOLLY GONE

  No more summer for Molly and me;

  There is snow on the tree,

  And the blackbirds plump large as the rooks are, almost,

  And the water is hard

  Where they used to dip bills at the dawn ere her figure was lost

  To these coasts, now my prison close-barred.

  No more planting by Molly and me

  Where the beds used to be

  Of sweet-william; no training the clambering rose

  By the framework of fir

  Now bowering the pathway, whereon it swings gaily and blows

  As if calling commendment from her.

  No more jauntings by Molly and me

  To the town by the sea,

  Or along over Whitesheet to Wynyard’s green Gap,

  Catching Montacute Crest

  To the right against Sedgmoor, and Corton-Hill’s far-distant cap,

  And Pilsdon and Lewsdon to west.

  No more singing by Molly to me

  In the evenings when she

  Was in mood and in voice, and the candles were lit,

  And past the porch-quoin

  The rays would spring out on the laurels; and dumbledores hit

  On the pane, as if wishing to join.

  Where, then, is Molly, who’s no more with me?

  — As I stand on this lea,

  Thinking thus, there’s a many-flamed star in the air,

  That tosses a sign

  That her glance is regarding its face from her home, so that there

  Her eyes may have meetings with mine.

  A BACKWARD SPRING

  The trees are afraid to put forth buds,

  And there is timidity in the grass;

  The plots lie gray where gouged by spuds,

  And whether next week will pass

  Free of sly sour winds is the fret of each bush

  Of barberry waiting to bloom.

  Yet the snowdrop’s face betrays no gloom,

  And the primrose
pants in its heedless push,

  Though the myrtle asks if it’s worth the fight

  This year with frost and rime

  To venture one more time

  On delicate leaves and buttons of white

  From the selfsame bough as at last year’s prime,

  And never to ruminate on or remember

  What happened to it in mid-December.

  April 1917.

  LOOKING ACROSS

  I

  It is dark in the sky,

  And silence is where

  Our laughs rang high;

  And recall do I

  That One is out there.

  II

  The dawn is not nigh,

  And the trees are bare,

  And the waterways sigh

  That a year has drawn by,

  And Two are out there.

  III

  The wind drops to die

  Like the phantom of Care

  Too frail for a cry,

  And heart brings to eye

  That Three are out there.

  IV

  This Life runs dry

  That once ran rare

  And rosy in dye,

  And fleet the days fly,

  And Four are out there.

  V

  Tired, tired am I

  Of this earthly air,

  And my wraith asks: Why,

  Since these calm lie,

  Are not Five out there?

  December 1915.

  AT A SEASIDE TOWN IN 1869

  (Young Lover’s Reverie)

  I went and stood outside myself,

  Spelled the dark sky

  And ship-lights nigh,

  And grumbling winds that passed thereby.

  Then next inside myself I looked,

  And there, above

  All, shone my Love,

  That nothing matched the image of.

  Beyond myself again I ranged;

  And saw the free

  Life by the sea,

  And folk indifferent to me.

  O ‘twas a charm to draw within

  Thereafter, where

  But she was; care

  For one thing only, her hid there!

  But so it chanced, without myself

  I had to look,

  And then I took

  More heed of what I had long forsook:

  The boats, the sands, the esplanade,

  The laughing crowd;

  Light-hearted, loud

  Greetings from some not ill-endowed;

  The evening sunlit cliffs, the talk,

  Hailings and halts,

  The keen sea-salts,

  The band, the Morgenblatter Waltz.

  Still, when at night I drew inside

  Forward she came,

  Sad, but the same

  As when I first had known her name.

  Then rose a time when, as by force,

  Outwardly wooed

  By contacts crude,

  Her image in abeyance stood . . .

  At last I said: This outside life

  Shall not endure;

  I’ll seek the pure

  Thought-world, and bask in her allure.

  Myself again I crept within,

  Scanned with keen care

  The temple where

  She’d shone, but could not find her there.

  I sought and sought. But O her soul

  Has not since thrown

  Upon my own

  One beam! Yea, she is gone, is gone.

  From an old note.

  THE GLIMPSE

  She sped through the door

  And, following in haste,

  And stirred to the core,

  I entered hot-faced;

  But I could not find her,

  No sign was behind her.

  “Where is she?” I said:

  - “Who?” they asked that sat there;

  “Not a soul’s come in sight.”

  - “A maid with red hair.”

  - “Ah.” They paled. “She is dead.

  People see her at night,

  But you are the first

  On whom she has burst

  In the keen common light.”

  It was ages ago,

  When I was quite strong:

  I have waited since, — O,

  I have waited so long!

  - Yea, I set me to own

  The house, where now lone

  I dwell in void rooms

  Booming hollow as tombs!

  But I never come near her,

  Though nightly I hear her.

  And my cheek has grown thin

  And my hair has grown gray

  With this waiting therein;

  But she still keeps away!

  THE PEDESTRIAN AN INCIDENT OF 1883

  “Sir, will you let me give you a ride?

  Nox Venit, and the heath is wide.”

  - My phaeton-lantern shone on one

  Young, fair, even fresh,

  But burdened with flesh:

  A leathern satchel at his side,

  His breathings short, his coat undone.

  ‘Twas as if his corpulent figure slopped

  With the shake of his walking when he stopped,

  And, though the night’s pinch grew acute,

  He wore but a thin

  Wind-thridded suit,

  Yet well-shaped shoes for walking in,

  Artistic beaver, cane gold-topped.

  “Alas, my friend,” he said with a smile,

  “I am daily bound to foot ten mile -

  Wet, dry, or dark — before I rest.

  Six months to live

  My doctors give

  Me as my prospect here, at best,

  Unless I vamp my sturdiest!”

  His voice was that of a man refined,

  A man, one well could feel, of mind,

  Quite winning in its musical ease;

  But in mould maligned

  By some disease;

  And I asked again. But he shook his head;

  Then, as if more were due, he said:-

  “A student was I — of Schopenhauer,

  Kant, Hegel, — and the fountained bower

  Of the Muses, too, knew my regard:

  But ah — I fear me

  The grave gapes near me! . . .

  Would I could this gross sheath discard,

  And rise an ethereal shape, unmarred!”

  How I remember him! — his short breath,

  His aspect, marked for early death,

  As he dropped into the night for ever;

  One caught in his prime

  Of high endeavour;

  From all philosophies soon to sever

  Through an unconscienced trick of Time!

  WHO’S IN THE NEXT ROOM?

  ”Who’s in the next room? — who?

  I seemed to see

  Somebody in the dawning passing through,

  Unknown to me.”

  “Nay: you saw nought. He passed invisibly.”

  ”Who’s in the next room? — who?

  I seem to hear

  Somebody muttering firm in a language new

  That chills the ear.”

  “No: you catch not his tongue who has entered there.”

  ”Who’s in the next room? — who?

  I seem to feel

  His breath like a clammy draught, as if it drew

  From the Polar Wheel.”

  “No: none who breathes at all does the door conceal.”

  ”Who’s in the next room? — who?

  A figure wan

  With a message to one in there of something due?

  Shall I know him anon?”

  “Yea he; and he brought such; and you’ll know him anon.”

  AT A COUNTRY FAIR

  At a bygone Western country fair

  I saw a giant led by a dwarf

  With a red string like a long thin scarf;

  How much he was the stronger th
ere

  The giant seemed unaware.

  And then I saw that the giant was blind,

  And the dwarf a shrewd-eyed little thing;

  The giant, mild, timid, obeyed the string

  As if he had no independent mind,

  Or will of any kind.

  Wherever the dwarf decided to go

  At his heels the other trotted meekly,

  (Perhaps — I know not — reproaching weakly)

  Like one Fate bade that it must be so,

  Whether he wished or no.

  Various sights in various climes

  I have seen, and more I may see yet,

  But that sight never shall I forget,

  And have thought it the sorriest of pantomimes,

  If once, a hundred times!

  THE MEMORIAL BRASS: 186-

  ”Why do you weep there, O sweet lady,

  Why do you weep before that brass? -

  (I’m a mere student sketching the mediaeval)

  Is some late death lined there, alas? -

  Your father’s? . . . Well, all pay the debt that paid he!”

  ”Young man, O must I tell! — My husband’s! And under

  His name I set mine, and my DEATH! -

  Its date left vacant till my heirs should fill it,

  Stating me faithful till my last breath.”

  - “Madam, that you are a widow wakes my wonder!”

  ”O wait! For last month I — remarried!

  And now I fear ‘twas a deed amiss.

  We’ve just come home. And I am sick and saddened

  At what the new one will say to this;

  And will he think — think that I should have tarried?

  ”I may add, surely, — with no wish to harm him -

  That he’s a temper — yes, I fear!

  And when he comes to church next Sunday morning,

  And sees that written . . . O dear, O dear!

  - “Madam, I swear your beauty will disarm him!”

 

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