Thomas Hardy — 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.


Other Thomas Hardy songs:
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