Moments of Vision and Miscellaneous Verses. Thomas Hardy

Moments of Vision and Miscellaneous Verses - Thomas Hardy


Скачать книгу
is awake?

      That mirror

       Can test each mortal when unaware;

       Yea, that strange mirror

       May catch his last thoughts, whole life foul or fair,

       Glassing it—where?

       Table of Contents

      Forty Augusts—aye, and several more—ago,

       When I paced the headlands loosed from dull employ,

       The waves huzza’d like a multitude below

       In the sway of an all-including joy

       Without cloy.

      Blankly I walked there a double decade after,

       When thwarts had flung their toils in front of me,

       And I heard the waters wagging in a long ironic laughter

       At the lot of men, and all the vapoury

       Things that be.

      Wheeling change has set me again standing where

       Once I heard the waves huzza at Lammas-tide;

       But they supplicate now—like a congregation there

       Who murmur the Confession—I outside,

       Prayer denied.

       (Wooer’s Song)

       Table of Contents

      Why be at pains that I should know

       You sought not me?

       Do breezes, then, make features glow

       So rosily?

       Come, the lit port is at our back,

       And the tumbling sea;

       Elsewhere the lampless uphill track

       To uncertainty!

      O should not we two waifs join hands?

       I am alone,

       You would enrich me more than lands

       By being my own.

       Yet, though this facile moment flies,

       Close is your tone,

       And ere to-morrow’s dewfall dries

       I plough the unknown.

       (Bournemouth, 1875)

       Table of Contents

      We sat at the window looking out,

       And the rain came down like silken strings

       That Swithin’s day. Each gutter and spout

       Babbled unchecked in the busy way

       Of witless things:

       Nothing to read, nothing to see

       Seemed in that room for her and me

       On Swithin’s day.

      We were irked by the scene, by our own selves; yes,

       For I did not know, nor did she infer

       How much there was to read and guess

       By her in me, and to see and crown

       By me in her.

       Wasted were two souls in their prime,

       And great was the waste, that July time

       When the rain came down.

       (Circa 1850)

       Table of Contents

      On afternoons of drowsy calm

       We stood in the panelled pew,

       Singing one-voiced a Tate-and-Brady psalm

       To the tune of “Cambridge New.”

      We watched the elms, we watched the rooks,

       The clouds upon the breeze,

       Between the whiles of glancing at our books,

       And swaying like the trees.

      So mindless were those outpourings!—

       Though I am not aware

       That I have gained by subtle thought on things

       Since we stood psalming there.

       Table of Contents

      There floated the sounds of church-chiming,

       But no one was nigh,

       Till there came, as a break in the loneness,

       Her father, she, I.

       And we slowly moved on to the wicket,

       And downlooking stood,

       Till anon people passed, and amid them

       We parted for good.

      Greater, wiser, may part there than we three

       Who parted there then,

       But never will Fates colder-featured

       Hold sway there again.

       Of the churchgoers through the still meadows

       No single one knew

       What a play was played under their eyes there

       As thence we withdrew.

       Table of Contents

      I

      Here’s the mould of a musical bird long passed from light,

       Which over the earth before man came was winging;

       There’s a contralto voice I heard last night,

       That lodges in me still with its sweet singing.

      II

      Such a dream is Time that the coo of this ancient bird

       Has perished not, but is blent, or will be blending

       Mid visionless wilds of space with the voice that I heard,

       In the full-fugued song of the universe unending.

      Exeter.

       Table of Contents

      I met you first—ah, when did I first meet you?

       When I was full of wonder, and innocent,

       Standing meek-eyed with those of choric bent,

       While dimming day grew dimmer

       In the pulpit-glimmer.

      Much


Скачать книгу