Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Quid Hic Agis? by Thomas Hardy
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Quid Hic Agis?

    By Thomas Hardy



I

    When I weekly knew
    An ancient pew,
    And murmured there
    The forms of prayer
    And thanks and praise
    In the ancient ways,
    And heard read out
    During August drought
    That chapter from Kings
    Harvest-time brings;
    - How the prophet, broken
    By griefs unspoken,
    Went heavily away
    To fast and to pray,
    And, while waiting to die,
    The Lord passed by,
    And a whirlwind and fire
    Drew nigher and nigher,
    And a small voice anon
    Bade him up and be gone, -
    I did not apprehend
    As I sat to the end
    And watched for her smile
    Across the sunned aisle,
    That this tale of a seer
    Which came once a year
    Might, when sands were heaping,
    Be like a sweat creeping,
    Or in any degree
    Bear on her or on me!

II

    When later, by chance
    Of circumstance,
    It befel me to read
    On a hot afternoon
    At the lectern there
    The selfsame words
    As the lesson decreed,
    To the gathered few
    From the hamlets near -
    Folk of flocks and herds
    Sitting half aswoon,
    Who listened thereto
    As women and men
    Not overmuch
    Concerned at such -
    So, like them then,
    I did not see
    What drought might be
    With me, with her,
    As the Kalendar
    Moved on, and Time
    Devoured our prime.

III

    But now, at last,
    When our glory has passed,
    And there is no smile
    From her in the aisle,
    But where it once shone
    A marble, men say,
    With her name thereon
    Is discerned to-day;
    And spiritless
    In the wilderness
    I shrink from sight
    And desire the night,
    (Though, as in old wise,
    I might still arise,
    Go forth, and stand
    And prophesy in the land),
    I feel the shake
    Of wind and earthquake,
    And consuming fire
    Nigher and nigher,
    And the voice catch clear,
    "What doest thou here?"

    The Spectator 1916. During the War.



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