Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Wind Blew Words by Thomas Hardy
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The Wind Blew Words

    By Thomas Hardy



    The wind blew words along the skies,
    And these it blew to me
    Through the wide dusk: "Lift up your eyes,
    Behold this troubled tree,
    Complaining as it sways and plies;
    It is a limb of thee.

    "Yea, too, the creatures sheltering round -
    Dumb figures, wild and tame,
    Yea, too, thy fellows who abound -
    Either of speech the same
    Or far and strange - black, dwarfed, and browned,
    They are stuff of thy own frame."

    I moved on in a surging awe
    Of inarticulateness
    At the pathetic Me I saw
    In all his huge distress,
    Making self-slaughter of the law
    To kill, break, or suppress.



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