Collected poems of Thomas Hardy | ||
UNDER HIGH-STOY HILL
Four climbed High-Stoy from Ivelwards,
Where hedge meets hedge, and cart-ruts wind,
Chattering like birds,
And knowing not what lay behind.
Where hedge meets hedge, and cart-ruts wind,
Chattering like birds,
And knowing not what lay behind.
We laughed beneath the moonlight blink,
Said supper would be to our mind,
And did not think
Of Time, and what might lie behind. . . .
Said supper would be to our mind,
And did not think
Of Time, and what might lie behind. . . .
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The moon still meets that tree-tipped height,
The road—as then—still trails inclined;
But since that night
We have well learnt what lay behind!
The road—as then—still trails inclined;
But since that night
We have well learnt what lay behind!
For all of the four then climbing here
But one are ghosts, and he brow-lined;
With him they fare,
Yet speak not of what lies behind.
But one are ghosts, and he brow-lined;
With him they fare,
Yet speak not of what lies behind.
Collected poems of Thomas Hardy | ||