Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Christening by Thomas Hardy
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The Christening

    By Thomas Hardy



    Whose child is this they bring
    Into the aisle? -
    At so superb a thing
    The congregation smile
    And turn their heads awhile.

    Its eyes are blue and bright,
    Its cheeks like rose;
    Its simple robes unite
    Whitest of calicoes
    With lawn, and satin bows.

    A pride in the human race
    At this paragon
    Of mortals, lights each face
    While the old rite goes on;
    But ah, they are shocked anon.

    What girl is she who peeps
    From the gallery stair,
    Smiles palely, redly weeps,
    With feverish furtive air
    As though not fitly there?

    "I am the baby's mother;
    This gem of the race
    The decent fain would smother,
    And for my deep disgrace
    I am bidden to leave the place."

    "Where is the baby's father?" -
    "In the woods afar.
    He says there is none he'd rather
    Meet under moon or star
    Than me, of all that are.

    "To clasp me in lovelike weather,
    Wish fixing when,
    He says: To be together
    At will, just now and then,
    Makes him the blest of men;

    "But chained and doomed for life
    To slovening
    As vulgar man and wife,
    He says, is another thing:
    Yea: sweet Love's sepulchring!"

    1904.



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