Ballade of reading Gaol. Wilde Oscar

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style="font-size:15px;">      His cricket cap was on his head,

      And his step seemed light and gay,

      But I never saw a man who looked

      So wistfully at the day.

      I never saw a man who looked

      With such a wistful eye

      Upon that little tent of blue

      Which prisoners call the sky,

      And at every wandering cloud that trailed

      Its raveled fleeces by.

      He did not wring his hands, as do

      Those witless men who dare

      To try to rear the changeling Hope

      In the cave of black Despair:

      He only looked upon the sun,

      And drank the morning air.

      He did not wring his hands nor weep,

      Nor did he peek or pine,

      But he drank the air as though it held

      Some healthful anodyne;

      With open mouth he drank the sun

      As though it had been wine!

      And I and all the souls in pain,

      Who tramped the other ring,

      Forgot if we ourselves had done

      A great or little thing,

      And watched with gaze of dull amaze

      The man who had to swing.

      And strange it was to see him pass

      With a step so light and gay,

      And strange it was to see him look

      So wistfully at the day,

      And strange it was to think that he

      Had such a debt to pay.

      ___

      For oak and elm have pleasant leaves

      That in the spring-time shoot:

      But grim to see is the gallows-tree,

      With its adder-bitten root,

      And, green or dry, a man must die

      Before it bears its fruit!

      The loftiest place is that seat of grace

      For which all worldlings try:

      But who would stand in hempen band

      Upon a scaffold high,

      And through a murderer's collar take

      His last look at the sky?

      It is sweet to dance to violins

      When Love and Life are fair:

      To dance to flutes, to dance to lutes

      Is delicate and rare:

      But it is not sweet with nimble feet

      To dance upon the air!

      So with curious eyes and sick surmise

      We watched him day by day,

      And wondered if each one of us

      Would end the self-same way,

      For none can tell to what red Hell

      His sightless soul may stray.

      At last the dead man walked no more

      Amongst the Trial Men,

      And I knew that he was standing up

      In the black dock's dreadful pen,

      And that never would I see his face

      In God's sweet world again.

      Like two doomed ships that pass in storm

      We had crossed each other's way:

      But we made no sign, we said no word,

      We had no word to say;

      For we did not meet in the holy night,

      But in the shameful day.

      A prison wall was round us both,

      Two outcast men were we:

      The world had thrust us from its heart,

      And God from out His care:

      And the iron gin that waits for Sin

      Had caught us in its snare.

      In Debtors' Yard the stones are hard,

      And the dripping wall is high,

      So it was there he took the air

      Beneath the leaden sky,

      And by each side a Warder walked,

      For fear the man might die.

      Or else he sat with those who watched

      His anguish night and day;

      Who watched him when he rose to weep,

      And when he crouched to pray;

      Who watched him lest himself should rob

      Their scaffold of its prey.

      The Governor was strong upon

      The Regulations Act:

      The Doctor said that Death was but

      A scientific fact:

      And twice a day the Chaplain called

      And left a little tract.

      And twice a day he smoked his pipe,

      And drank his quart of beer:

      His soul was resolute, and held

      No hiding-place for fear;

      He often said that he was glad

      The hangman's hands were near.

      But why he said so strange a thing

      No

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