Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Face At The Casement by Thomas Hardy
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The Face At The Casement

    By Thomas Hardy



        If ever joy leave
    An abiding sting of sorrow,
    So befell it on the morrow
        Of that May eve . . .

        The travelled sun dropped
    To the north-west, low and lower,
    The pony's trot grew slower,
        And then we stopped.

        "This cosy house just by
    I must call at for a minute,
    A sick man lies within it
        Who soon will die.

        "He wished to marry me,
    So I am bound, when I drive near him,
    To inquire, if but to cheer him,
        How he may be."

        A message was sent in,
    And wordlessly we waited,
    Till some one came and stated
        The bulletin.

        And that the sufferer said,
    For her call no words could thank her;
    As his angel he must rank her
        Till life's spark fled.

        Slowly we drove away,
    When I turned my head, although not
    Called; why so I turned I know not
        Even to this day.

        And lo, there in my view
    Pressed against an upper lattice
    Was a white face, gazing at us
        As we withdrew.

        And well did I divine
    It to be the man's there dying,
    Who but lately had been sighing
        For her pledged mine.

        Then I deigned a deed of hell;
    It was done before I knew it;
    What devil made me do it
        I cannot tell!

        Yes, while he gazed above,
    I put my arm about her
    That he might see, nor doubt her
        My plighted Love.

        The pale face vanished quick,
    As if blasted, from the casement,
    And my shame and self-abasement
        Began their prick.

        And they prick on, ceaselessly,
    For that stab in Love's fierce fashion
    Which, unfired by lover's passion,
        Was foreign to me.

        She smiled at my caress,
    But why came the soft embowment
    Of her shoulder at that moment
        She did not guess.

        Long long years has he lain
    In thy garth, O sad Saint Cleather:
    What tears there, bared to weather,
        Will cleanse that stain!

        Love is long-suffering, brave,
    Sweet, prompt, precious as a jewel;
    But O, too, Love is cruel,
        Cruel as the grave.



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