My Spirit Will Not Haunt The Mound
Thomas Hardy
My spirit will not haunt the mound Above my breast, But travel, memory-possessed, To where my tremulous being found Life largest, best. My phantom-footed shape will go When nightfall grays Hither and thither along the ways I and another used to know In backward days. And there you’ll find me, if a jot You still should care For me, and for my curious air; If otherwise, then I shall not, For you, be there.
Next 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : Nature's Questioning
- Thomas Hardy : Near Lanivet, 1872
- Thomas Hardy : Neutral Tones
- Thomas Hardy : Night In The Old Home
- Thomas Hardy : No Buyers
- Thomas Hardy : On A Fine Morning
- Thomas Hardy : On A Midsummer Eve
- Thomas Hardy : On An Invitation To The United States
- Thomas Hardy : Postponement
- Thomas Hardy : Quid Hic Agis?
Previous 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : My Cicely
- Thomas Hardy : Mute Opinion
- Thomas Hardy : Moments Of Vision
- Thomas Hardy : Mismet
- Thomas Hardy : Midnight On The Great Western
- Thomas Hardy : Middle-age Enthusiasms
- Thomas Hardy : Men Who March Away
- Thomas Hardy : Mad Judy
- Thomas Hardy : Long Plighted
- Thomas Hardy : Lines On The Loss Of The Titanic