Thomas Hardy (Томас Гарди (Харди))
A Gentleman’s Epitaph on Himself and a Lady, Who Were Buried Together
I dwelt in the shade of a city, She far by the sea, With folk perhaps good, gracious, witty; But never with me. Her form on the ballroom’s smooth flooring I never once met, To guide her with accents adoring Through Weippert’s ‘First Set’.1 I spent my life’s seasons with pale ones In Vanity Fair, And she enjoyed hers among hale ones In salt-smelling air. Maybe she had eyes of deep colour, Maybe they were blue, Maybe as she aged they got duller; That never I knew. She may have had lips like the coral, But I never kissed them, Saw pouting, nor curling in quarrel, Nor sought for, nor missed them. Not a word passed of love all our lifetime, Between us, nor thrill; We’d never a husband-and-wife time, For good or for ill. Yet as one dust, through bleak days and vernal Lie I and lies she, This never-known lady, eternal Companion to me! 1 Quadrilles danced early in the nineteenth century.
Thomas Hardy’s other poems:
933