Poem Thomas Hardy

The Vampirine Fair

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Gilbert had sailed to India’s shore,
   And I was all alone:
My lord came in at my open door
   And said, “O fairest one!”

He leant upon the slant bureau,
   And sighed, “I am sick for thee!”
“My Lord,” said I, “pray speak not so,
   Since wedded wife I be.”

Leaning upon the slant bureau,
   Bitter his next words came:
“So much I know; and likewise know
   My love burns on the same!

“But since you thrust my love away,
   And since it knows no cure,
I must live out as best I may
   The ache that I endure.”

When Michaelmas browned the nether Coomb
   And Wingreen Hill above,
And made the hollyhocks rags of bloom,
   My lord grew ill of love.

My lord grew ill with love for me;
   Gilbert was far from port;
And—so it was—that time did see
   Me housed at Manor Court.

About the bowers of Manor Court
   The primrose pushed its head
When, on a day at last, report
   Arrived of him I had wed.

“Gilbert, my Lord, is homeward bound,
   His sloop is drawing near,
What shall I do when I ain found
   Not in his house but here?”

“O I will heal the injuries
   I’ve done to him and thee.
I’ll give him means to live at ease
   Afar from Shastonb’ry.”

When Gilbert came we both took thought:
   “Since comfort and good cheer,”
Said he, “so readily are bought,
   He’s welcome to thee, Dear.”

So when my lord flung liberally
   His gold in Gilbert’s hands,
I coaxed and got my brothers three
   Made stewards of his lands.

And then I coaxed him to install
   My other kith and kin,
With aim to benefit them all
   Before his love ran thin.

And next I craved to be possessed
   Of plate and jewels rare.
He groaned: “You give me, Love, no rest,
   Take all the law will spare!”

And so in course of years my wealth
   Became a goodly hoard,
My steward brethren, too, by stealth
   Had each a fortune stored.

Thereafter in the gloom he’d walk,
   And by and by began
To say aloud in absent talk,
   “I am a ruined man!—

“I hardly could have thought,” he said,
   “When first I looked on thee,
That one so soft, so rosy red,
   Could thus have beggared me!”

Seeing his fair estates in pawn,
   And him in such decline,
I knew that his domain had gone
   To lift up me and mine.

Next month upon a Sunday morn
   A gunshot sounded nigh:
By his own hand my lordly born
   Had doomed himself to die.

“Live, my dear Lord, and much of thine
   Shall be restored to thee!”
He smiled, and said ‘twixt word and sign,
   “Alas—that cannot be !”

And while I searched his cabinet
   For letters, keys, or will,
Twas touching that his gaze was set
   With love upon me still.

And when I burnt each document
   Before his dying eyes,
‘Twas sweet that he did not resent
   My fear of compromise.

The steeple-cock gleamed golden when
   I watched his spirit go:
And I became repentant then
   That I had wrecked him so.

Three weeks at least had come and gone,
   With many a saddened word,
Before I wrote to Gilbert on
   The stroke that so had stirred.

And having worn a mournful gown,
   I joined, in decent while,
My husband at a dashing town
   To live in dashing style.

Yet though I now enjoy my fling,
   And dine and dance and drive,
I’d give my prettiest emerald ring
   To see my lord alive.

And when the meet on hunting-days
   Is near his churchyard home,
I leave my bantering beaux to place
   A flower upon his tomb;

And sometimes say: “Perhaps too late
   The saints in Heaven deplore
That tender time when, moved by Fate,
   He darked my cottage door.”

The Reminder
The Roman Road

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