Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Dawn After The Dance by Thomas Hardy
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The Dawn After The Dance

    By Thomas Hardy



    Here is your parents' dwelling with its curtained windows telling
    Of no thought of us within it or of our arrival here;
    Their slumbers have been normal after one day more of formal
    Matrimonial commonplace and household life's mechanic gear.

    I would be candid willingly, but dawn draws on so chillingly
    As to render further cheerlessness intolerable now,
    So I will not stand endeavouring to declare a day for severing,
    But will clasp you just as always - just the olden love avow.

    Through serene and surly weather we have walked the ways together,
    And this long night's dance this year's end eve now finishes the spell;
    Yet we dreamt us but beginning a sweet sempiternal spinning
    Of a cord we have spun to breaking - too intemperately, too well.

    Yes; last night we danced I know, Dear, as we did that year ago, Dear,
    When a new strange bond between our days was formed, and felt, and heard;
    Would that dancing were the worst thing from the latest to the first thing
    That the faded year can charge us with; but what avails a word!

    That which makes man's love the lighter and the woman's burn no brighter
    Came to pass with us inevitably while slipped the shortening year . . .
    And there stands your father's dwelling with its blind bleak windows telling
    That the vows of man and maid are frail as filmy gossamere.

    WEYMOUTH, 1869.



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