Complete Works of Thomas Hardy (Illustrated)

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Complete Works of Thomas Hardy (Illustrated) Page 755

by Thomas Hardy


  In the day-fall wan,

  When nighted birds break off their song,

  Mere ghostly head it skims along,

  Just as it did when warm and strong,

  Body seeming gone.

  Such it is I see

  Above the fog that sheets the mead -

  Yea, that which once could breathe and plead! -

  Skimming along with spectre-speed

  To a last tryst with me.

  OVERLOOKING THE RIVER STOUR

  The swallows flew in the curves of an eight

  Above the river-gleam

  In the wet June’s last beam:

  Like little crossbows animate

  The swallows flew in the curves of an eight

  Above the river-gleam.

  Planing up shavings of crystal spray

  A moor-hen darted out

  From the bank thereabout,

  And through the stream-shine ripped his way;

  Planing up shavings of crystal spray

  A moor-hen darted out.

  Closed were the kingcups; and the mead

  Dripped in monotonous green,

  Though the day’s morning sheen

  Had shown it golden and honeybee’d;

  Closed were the kingcups; and the mead

  Dripped in monotonous green.

  And never I turned my head, alack,

  While these things met my gaze

  Through the pane’s drop-drenched glaze,

  To see the more behind my back . . .

  O never I turned, but let, alack,

  These less things hold my gaze!

  THE MUSICAL BOX

  Lifelong to be

  Seemed the fair colour of the time;

  That there was standing shadowed near

  A spirit who sang to the gentle chime

  Of the self-struck notes, I did not hear,

  I did not see.

  Thus did it sing

  To the mindless lyre that played indoors

  As she came to listen for me without:

  “O value what the nonce outpours -

  This best of life — that shines about

  Your welcoming!”

  I had slowed along

  After the torrid hours were done,

  Though still the posts and walls and road

  Flung back their sense of the hot-faced sun,

  And had walked by Stourside Mill, where broad

  Stream-lilies throng.

  And I descried

  The dusky house that stood apart,

  And her, white-muslined, waiting there

  In the porch with high-expectant heart,

  While still the thin mechanic air

  Went on inside.

  At whiles would flit

  Swart bats, whose wings, be-webbed and tanned,

  Whirred like the wheels of ancient clocks:

  She laughed a hailing as she scanned

  Me in the gloom, the tuneful box

  Intoning it.

  Lifelong to be

  I thought it. That there watched hard by

  A spirit who sang to the indoor tune,

  “O make the most of what is nigh!”

  I did not hear in my dull soul-swoon -

  I did not see.

  ON STURMINSTER FOOT-BRIDGE (ONOMATOPOEIC)

  Reticulations creep upon the slack stream’s face

  When the wind skims irritably past,

  The current clucks smartly into each hollow place

  That years of flood have scrabbled in the pier’s sodden base;

  The floating-lily leaves rot fast.

  On a roof stand the swallows ranged in wistful waiting rows,

  Till they arrow off and drop like stones

  Among the eyot-withies at whose foot the river flows;

  And beneath the roof is she who in the dark world shows

  As a lattice-gleam when midnight moans.

  ROYAL SPONSORS

  “The king and the queen will stand to the child;

  ’Twill be handed down in song;

  And it’s no more than their deserving,

  With my lord so faithful at Court so long,

  And so staunch and strong.

  “O never before was known such a thing!

  ’Twill be a grand time for all;

  And the beef will be a whole-roast bullock,

  And the servants will have a feast in the hall,

  And the ladies a ball.

  “While from Jordan’s stream by a traveller,

  In a flagon of silver wrought,

  And by caravan, stage-coach, wain, and waggon

  A precious trickle has been brought,

  Clear as when caught.”

  The morning came. To the park of the peer

  The royal couple bore;

  And the font was filled with the Jordan water,

  And the household awaited their guests before

  The carpeted door.

  But when they went to the silk-lined cot

  The child was found to have died.

  “What’s now to be done? We can disappoint not

  The king and queen!” the family cried

  With eyes spread wide.

  “Even now they approach the chestnut-drive!

  The service must be read.”

  “Well, since we can’t christen the child alive,

  By God we shall have to christen him dead!”

  The marquis said.

  Thus, breath-forsaken, a corpse was taken

  To the private chapel — yea -

  And the king knew not, nor the queen, God wot,

  That they answered for one returned to clay

  At the font that day.

  OLD FURNITURE

  I know not how it may be with others

  Who sit amid relics of householdry

  That date from the days of their mothers’ mothers,

  But well I know how it is with me

  Continually.

  I see the hands of the generations

  That owned each shiny familiar thing

  In play on its knobs and indentations,

  And with its ancient fashioning

  Still dallying:

  Hands behind hands, growing paler and paler,

  As in a mirror a candle-flame

  Shows images of itself, each frailer

  As it recedes, though the eye may frame

  Its shape the same.

  On the clock’s dull dial a foggy finger,

  Moving to set the minutes right

  With tentative touches that lift and linger

  In the wont of a moth on a summer night,

  Creeps to my sight.

  On this old viol, too, fingers are dancing -

  As whilom — just over the strings by the nut,

  The tip of a bow receding, advancing

  In airy quivers, as if it would cut

  The plaintive gut.

  And I see a face by that box for tinder,

  Glowing forth in fits from the dark,

  And fading again, as the linten cinder

  Kindles to red at the flinty spark,

  Or goes out stark.

  Well, well. It is best to be up and doing,

  The world has no use for one to-day

  Who eyes things thus — no aim pursuing!

  He should not continue in this stay,

  But sink away.

  A THOUGHT IN TWO MOODS

  I saw it — pink and white — revealed

  Upon the white and green;

  The white and green was a daisied field,

  The pink and white Ethleen.

  And as I looked it seemed in kind

  That difference they had none;

  The two fair bodiments combined

  As varied miens of one.

  A sense that, in some mouldering year,

  As one they both would lie,

  Made me move quickly on to her

  To pass the pale thought by.

>   She laughed and said: “Out there, to me,

  You looked so weather-browned,

  And brown in clothes, you seemed to be

  Made of the dusty ground!”

  THE LAST PERFORMANCE

  “I am playing my oldest tunes,” declared she,

  ”All the old tunes I know, -

  Those I learnt ever so long ago.”

  - Why she should think just then she’d play them

  Silence cloaks like snow.

  When I returned from the town at nightfall

  Notes continued to pour

  As when I had left two hours before:

  It’s the very last time,” she said in closing;

  ”From now I play no more.”

  A few morns onward found her fading,

  And, as her life outflew,

  I thought of her playing her tunes right through;

  And I felt she had known of what was coming,

  And wondered how she knew.

  1912.

  YOU ON THE TOWER

  I

  “You on the tower of my factory -

  What do you see up there?

  Do you see Enjoyment with wide wings

  Advancing to reach me here?”

  - “Yea; I see Enjoyment with wide wings

  Advancing to reach you here.”

  II

  “Good. Soon I’ll come and ask you

  To tell me again thereon . . .

  Well, what is he doing now? Hoi, there!”

  — ”He still is flying on.”

  “Ah, waiting till I have full-finished.

  Good. Tell me again anon . . .

  III

  Hoi, Watchman! I’m here. When comes he?

  Between my sweats I am chill.”

  — ”Oh, you there, working still?

  Why, surely he reached you a time back,

  And took you miles from your mill?

  He duly came in his winging,

  And now he has passed out of view.

  How can it be that you missed him?

  He brushed you by as he flew.”

  THE INTERLOPER

  “And I saw the figure and visage of Madness seeking for a home.”

  There are three folk driving in a quaint old chaise,

  And the cliff-side track looks green and fair;

  I view them talking in quiet glee

  As they drop down towards the puffins’ lair

  By the roughest of ways;

  But another with the three rides on, I see,

  Whom I like not to be there!

  No: it’s not anybody you think of. Next

  A dwelling appears by a slow sweet stream

  Where two sit happy and half in the dark:

  They read, helped out by a frail-wick’d gleam,

  Some rhythmic text;

  But one sits with them whom they don’t mark,

  One I’m wishing could not be there.

  No: not whom you knew and name. And now

  I discern gay diners in a mansion-place,

  And the guests dropping wit — pert, prim, or choice,

  And the hostess’s tender and laughing face,

  And the host’s bland brow;

  I cannot help hearing a hollow voice,

  And I’d fain not hear it there.

  No: it’s not from the stranger you met once. Ah,

  Yet a goodlier scene than that succeeds;

  People on a lawn — quite a crowd of them. Yes,

  And they chatter and ramble as fancy leads;

  And they say, “Hurrah!”

  To a blithe speech made; save one, mirthless,

  Who ought not to be there.

  Nay: it’s not the pale Form your imagings raise,

  That waits on us all at a destined time,

  It is not the Fourth Figure the Furnace showed,

  O that it were such a shape sublime;

  In these latter days!

  It is that under which best lives corrode;

  Would, would it could not be there!

  LOGS ON THE HEARTH A MEMORY OF A SISTER

  The fire advances along the log

  Of the tree we felled,

  Which bloomed and bore striped apples by the peck

  Till its last hour of bearing knelled.

  The fork that first my hand would reach

  And then my foot

  In climbings upward inch by inch, lies now

  Sawn, sapless, darkening with soot.

  Where the bark chars is where, one year,

  It was pruned, and bled -

  Then overgrew the wound. But now, at last,

  Its growings all have stagnated.

  My fellow-climber rises dim

  From her chilly grave -

  Just as she was, her foot near mine on the bending limb,

  Laughing, her young brown hand awave.

  December 1915.

  THE SUNSHADE

  Ah — it’s the skeleton of a lady’s sunshade,

  Here at my feet in the hard rock’s chink,

  Merely a naked sheaf of wires! -

  Twenty years have gone with their livers and diers

  Since it was silked in its white or pink.

  Noonshine riddles the ribs of the sunshade,

  No more a screen from the weakest ray;

  Nothing to tell us the hue of its dyes,

  Nothing but rusty bones as it lies

  In its coffin of stone, unseen till to-day.

  Where is the woman who carried that sun-shade

  Up and down this seaside place? -

  Little thumb standing against its stem,

  Thoughts perhaps bent on a love-stratagem,

  Softening yet more the already soft face!

  Is the fair woman who carried that sunshade

  A skeleton just as her property is,

  Laid in the chink that none may scan?

  And does she regret — if regret dust can -

  The vain things thought when she flourished this?

  SWANAGE CLIFFS.

  THE AGEING HOUSE

  When the walls were red

  That now are seen

  To be overspread

  With a mouldy green,

  A fresh fair head

  Would often lean

  From the sunny casement

  And scan the scene,

  While blithely spoke the wind to the little sycamore tree.

  But storms have raged

  Those walls about,

  And the head has aged

  That once looked out;

  And zest is suaged

  And trust is doubt,

  And slow effacement

  Is rife throughout,

  While fiercely girds the wind at the long-limbed sycamore tree!

  THE CAGED GOLDFINCH

  Within a churchyard, on a recent grave,

  I saw a little cage

  That jailed a goldfinch. All was silence save

  Its hops from stage to stage.

  There was inquiry in its wistful eye,

  And once it tried to sing;

  Of him or her who placed it there, and why,

  No one knew anything.

  AT MADAME TUSSAUD’S IN VICTORIAN YEARS

  “That same first fiddler who leads the orchestra to-night

  Here fiddled four decades of years ago;

  He bears the same babe-like smile of self-centred delight,

  Same trinket on watch-chain, same ring on the hand with the bow.

  “But his face, if regarded, is woefully wanner, and drier,

  And his once dark beard has grown straggling and gray;

  Yet a blissful existence he seems to have led with his lyre,

  In a trance of his own, where no wearing or tearing had sway.

  “Mid these wax figures, who nothing can do, it may seem

  That to do but a little thing counts a great deal;

  To be watched by kings, councillors, queens, may be flattering to
him

  -

  With their glass eyes longing they too could wake notes that appeal.”

  * * *

  Ah, but he played staunchly — that fiddler — whoever he was,

  With the innocent heart and the soul-touching string:

  May he find the Fair Haven! For did he not smile with good cause?

  Yes; gamuts that graced forty years’-flight were not a small thing!

  THE BALLET

  They crush together — a rustling heap of flesh -

  Of more than flesh, a heap of souls; and then

  They part, enmesh,

  And crush together again,

  Like the pink petals of a too sanguine rose

  Frightened shut just when it blows.

  Though all alike in their tinsel livery,

  And indistinguishable at a sweeping glance,

  They muster, maybe,

  As lives wide in irrelevance;

  A world of her own has each one underneath,

  Detached as a sword from its sheath.

  Daughters, wives, mistresses; honest or false, sold, bought;

  Hearts of all sizes; gay, fond, gushing, or penned,

  Various in thought

  Of lover, rival, friend;

  Links in a one-pulsed chain, all showing one smile,

  Yet severed so many a mile!

  THE FIVE STUDENTS

  The sparrow dips in his wheel-rut bath,

  The sun grows passionate-eyed,

  And boils the dew to smoke by the paddock-path;

  As strenuously we stride, -

  Five of us; dark He, fair He, dark She, fair She, I,

  All beating by.

  The air is shaken, the high-road hot,

  Shadowless swoons the day,

  The greens are sobered and cattle at rest; but not

 

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