Public Domain Poetry And Stories - At Madame Tussaud's In Victorian Years by Thomas Hardy
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At Madame Tussaud's In Victorian Years

    By Thomas Hardy



    "That same first fiddler who leads the orchestra to-night
    Here fiddled four decades of years ago;
    He bears the same babe-like smile of self-centred delight,
    Same trinket on watch-chain, same ring on the hand with the bow.

    "But his face, if regarded, is woefully wanner, and drier,
    And his once dark beard has grown straggling and gray;
    Yet a blissful existence he seems to have led with his lyre,
    In a trance of his own, where no wearing or tearing had sway.

    "Mid these wax figures, who nothing can do, it may seem
    That to do but a little thing counts a great deal;
    To be watched by kings, councillors, queens, may be flattering to him
    With their glass eyes longing they too could wake notes that appeal."

    * * *

    Ah, but he played staunchly - that fiddler - whoever he was,
    With the innocent heart and the soul-touching string:
    May he find the Fair Haven! For did he not smile with good cause?
    Yes; gamuts that graced forty years'-flight were not a small thing!



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