Moments of Vision | Page 7

Thomas Hardy
the slope where the rabbits fed,
Of the periwinks' rockwork lair,
Of the fuchsias ringing their bells of
red -
And the something else seen there.
Between the blooms where the sod basked bright,

By the bobbing fuchsia trees,
Was another and yet more eyesome
sight -
The sight that richened these.
I shall seek those beauties in the spring,
When the days are fit and fair,
But only as foils to the one more thing
That also will flower there!
THE CHANGE
Out of the past there rises a week -
Who shall read the years O! -
Out of the past there rises a week
Enringed with a purple zone.
Out of the past there rises a week

When thoughts were strung too thick to speak,
And the magic of its
lineaments remains with me alone.
In that week there was heard a singing -
Who shall spell the years, the years! -
In that week there was heard a
singing,
And the white owl wondered why.
In that week, yea, a voice was
ringing,
And forth from the casement were candles flinging

Radiance that fell on the deodar and lit up the path thereby.
Could that song have a mocking note? -
Who shall unroll the years O! -
Could that song have a mocking note
To the white owl's sense as it fell?
Could that song have a mocking
note
As it trilled out warm from the singer's throat,
And who was
the mocker and who the mocked when two felt all was well?

In a tedious trampling crowd yet later -
Who shall bare the years, the years! -
In a tedious trampling crowd
yet later,
When silvery singings were dumb;
In a crowd uncaring what time
might fate her,
Mid murks of night I stood to await her,
And the
twanging of iron wheels gave out the signal that she was come.
She said with a travel-tired smile -
Who shall lift the years O! -
She said with a travel-tired smile,
Half scared by scene so strange;
She said, outworn by mile on mile,

The blurred lamps wanning her face the while,
"O Love, I am here;
I am with you!" . . . Ah, that there should have come a change!
O the doom by someone spoken -
Who shall unseal the years, the years! -
O the doom that gave no
token,
When nothing of bale saw we:
O the doom by someone spoken,
O
the heart by someone broken,
The heart whose sweet reverberances
are all time leaves to me.
Jan.-Feb. 1913.
SITTING ON THE BRIDGE
(Echo of an old song)
Sitting on the bridge
Past the barracks, town and ridge,
At once the
spirit seized us
To sing a song that pleased us -
As "The Fifth" were
much in rumour;
It was "Whilst I'm in the humour,
Take me, Paddy, will you now?"
And a lancer soon drew nigh,
And
his Royal Irish eye
Said, "Willing, faith, am I,
O, to take you
anyhow, dears,

To take you anyhow."
But, lo!--dad walking by,
Cried, "What, you lightheels! Fie!
Is this
the way you roam
And mock the sunset gleam?"
And he marched
us straightway home,
Though we said, "We are only, daddy,

Singing, 'Will you take me, Paddy?'"
--Well, we never saw from then

If we sang there anywhen,
The soldier dear again,
Except at night
in dream-time,
Except at night in dream.
Perhaps that soldier's fighting
In a land that's far away,
Or he may be idly plighting
Some foreign hussy gay;
Or perhaps his bones are whiting
In the wind to their decay! . . .
Ah!--does he mind him how
The
girls he saw that day
On the bridge, were sitting singing
At the time
of curfew-ringing,
"Take me, Paddy; will you now, dear?
Paddy, will you now?"
GREY'S BRIDGE.
THE YOUNG CHURCHWARDEN
When he lit the candles there,
And the light fell on his hand,
And it
trembled as he scanned
Her and me, his vanquished air
Hinted that
his dream was done,
And I saw he had begun
To understand.
When Love's viol was unstrung,
Sore I wished the hand that shook

Had been mine that shared her book
While that evening hymn was
sung,
His the victor's, as he lit
Candles where he had bidden us sit

With vanquished look.
Now her dust lies listless there,
His afar from tending hand,
What
avails the victory scanned?
Does he smile from upper air:
"Ah, my
friend, your dream is done;
And 'tis YOU who have begun
To understand!
"I TRAVEL AS A PHANTOM NOW"
I travel as a phantom now,
For people do not wish to see
In flesh
and blood so bare a bough
As Nature makes of me.
And thus I visit bodiless
Strange gloomy households often at odds,

And wonder if Man's consciousness
Was a mistake of God's.
And next I meet you, and I pause,
And think that if mistake it were,

As some have said, O then it was
One that I well can bear!
1915.
LINES
TO A MOVEMENT IN MOZART'S E-FLAT
SYMPHONY
Show me again the time
When in the Junetide's prime
We flew by
meads and mountains northerly! -
Yea, to such freshness, fairness,
fulness, fineness, freeness,
Love
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