The Complete Poetical Works. Томас Харди

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The Complete Poetical Works - Томас Харди

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href="#u40e7930d-27c4-529a-9d65-22ade97fd5cf">The Ivy-Wife

       A Meeting with Despair

       Unknowing

       Friends Beyond

       To Outer Nature

       Thoughts of Phena

       Middle-Age Enthusiasms

       In a Wood

       To a Lady

       To an Orphan Child

       Nature’s Questioning

       The Impercipient

       At an Inn

       The Slow Nature

       In a Eweleaze Near Weatherbury

       The Fire at Tranter Sweatley’s

       Heiress and Architect

       The Two Men

       Lines

       “I Look Into My Glass”

      Preface to Wessex Poems

       Table of Contents

      Of the miscellaneous collection of verse that follows, only four pieces have been published, though many were written long ago, and other partly written. In some few cases the verses were turned into prose and printed as such, it having been unanticipated at that time that they might see the light.

      Whenever an ancient and legitimate word of the district, for which there was no equivalent in received English, suggested itself as the most natural, nearest, and often only expression of a thought, it has been made use of, on what seemed good grounds.

      The pieces are in a large degree dramatic or personative in conception; and this even where they are not obviously so.

      The dates attached to some of the poems do not apply to the rough sketches given in illustration, which have been recently made, and, as may be surmised, are inserted for personal and local reasons rather than for their intrinsic qualities.

      T. H.

      September 1898.

      The Temporary The All

       Table of Contents

      Change and chancefulness in my flowering youthtime,

       Set me sun by sun near to one unchosen;

       Wrought us fellow-like, and despite divergence,

       Friends interlinked us.

      “Cherish him can I while the true one forthcome—

       Come the rich fulfiller of my prevision;

       Life is roomy yet, and the odds unbounded.”

       So self-communed I.

      Thwart my wistful way did a damsel saunter,

       Fair, the while unformed to be all-eclipsing;

       “Maiden meet,” held I, “till arise my forefelt

       Wonder of women.”

      Long a visioned hermitage deep desiring,

       Tenements uncouth I was fain to house in;

       “Let such lodging be for a breath-while,” thought I,

       “Soon a more seemly.

      “Then, high handiwork will I make my life-deed,

       Truth and Light outshow; but the ripe time pending,

       Intermissive aim at the thing sufficeth.”

       Thus I . . . But lo, me!

      Mistress, friend, place, aims to be bettered straightway,

       Bettered not has Fate or my hand’s achieving;

       Sole the showance those of my onward earth-track—

       Never transcended!

      Amabel

       Table of Contents

      I marked her ruined hues,

       Her custom-straitened views,

       And asked, “Can there indwell

       My Amabel?”

      I looked upon her gown,

       Once rose, now earthen brown;

       The change was like the knell

       Of Amabel.

      Her step’s mechanic ways

       Had lost the life of May’s;

       Her laugh, once sweet in swell,

       Spoilt Amabel.

      I

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