Public Domain Poetry And Stories - By The Earth's Corpse by Thomas Hardy
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By The Earth's Corpse

    By Thomas Hardy



I

    "O Lord, why grievest Thou? -
    Since Life has ceased to be
    Upon this globe, now cold
    As lunar land and sea,
    And humankind, and fowl, and fur
    Are gone eternally,
    All is the same to Thee as ere
    They knew mortality."

II

    "O Time," replied the Lord,
    "Thou read'st me ill, I ween;
    Were all THE SAME, I should not grieve
    At that late earthly scene,
    Now blestly past - though planned by me
    With interest close and keen! -
    Nay, nay: things now are NOT the same
    As they have earlier been.

III

    "Written indelibly
    On my eternal mind
    Are all the wrongs endured
    By Earth's poor patient kind,
    Which my too oft unconscious hand
    Let enter undesigned.
    No god can cancel deeds foredone,
    Or thy old coils unwind!

IV

    "As when, in Noe's days,
    I whelmed the plains with sea,
    So at this last, when flesh
    And herb but fossils be,
    And, all extinct, their piteous dust
    Revolves obliviously,
    That I made Earth, and life, and man,
    It still repenteth me!"



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