Poem Thomas Hardy

Reminiscences of a Dancing Man

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I

Who now remembers Almack’s balls —
   Willis’s sometime named —
In those two smooth-floored upper halls
   For faded ones so famed?
Where as we trod to trilling sound
   The fancied phantoms stood around,
Or joined us in the maze,
   Of the powdered Dears from Georgian years,
Whose dust lay in sightless sealed-up biers,
   The fairest of former days.

II

Who now remembers gay Cremorne,
   And all its jaunty jills,
And those wild whirling figures born
   Of Jullien’s grand quadrilles?
With hats on head and morning coats
   There footed to his prancing notes
Our partner-girls and we;
   And the gas-jets winked, and the lustres clinked,
And the platform throbbed as with arms enlinked
   We moved to the minstrelsy.

III

Who now recalls those crowded rooms
   Of old yclept ” The Argyle”,
Where to the deep Drum-polka’s booms
   We hopped in standard style?
Whither have danced those damsels now!
   Is Death the partner who doth moue
Their wormy chaps and bare?
   Do their spectres spin like sparks within
The smoky halls of the Prince of Sin
   To a thunderous Jullien air?

The Dead Man Walking
Shut Out That Moon

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