Time's Laughingstocks and Other Verses by Thomas Hardy
page 44 of 158 (27%)
page 44 of 158 (27%)
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When silent seasons inched me
On to this death . . . - A Troubadour-youth I rambled With Life for lyre, The beats of being raging In me like fire. But when I practised eyeing The goal of men, It iced me, and I perished A little then. When passed my friend, my kinsfolk Through the Last Door, And left me standing bleakly, I died yet more; And when my Love's heart kindled In hate of me, Wherefore I knew not, died I One more degree. And if when I died fully I cannot say, And changed into the corpse-thing I am to-day; Yet is it that, though whiling The time somehow |
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