Public Domain Poetry And Stories - At The Dinner-Table by Thomas Hardy
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At The Dinner-Table

    By Thomas Hardy



    I sat at dinner in my prime,
    And glimpsed my face in the sideboard-glass,
    And started as if I had seen a crime,
    And prayed the ghastly show might pass.

    Wrenched wrinkled features met my sight,
    Grinning back to me as my own;
    I well-nigh fainted with affright
    At finding me a haggard crone.

    My husband laughed. He had slily set
    A warping mirror there, in whim
    To startle me. My eyes grew wet;
    I spoke not all the eve to him.

    He was sorry, he said, for what he had done,
    And took away the distorting glass,
    Uncovering the accustomed one;
    And so it ended? No, alas,

    Fifty years later, when he died,
    I sat me in the selfsame chair,
    Thinking of him. Till, weary-eyed,
    I saw the sideboard facing there;

    And from its mirror looked the lean
    Thing I'd become, each wrinkle and score
    The image of me that I had seen
    In jest there fifty years before.



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