On An Invitation To The United States
Thomas Hardy
I My ardours for emprize nigh lost Since Life has bared its bones to me, I shrink to seek a modern coast Whose riper times have yet to be; Where the new regions claim them free From that long drip of human tears Which peoples old in tragedy Have left upon the centuried years. II For, wonning in these ancient lands, Enchased and lettered as a tomb, And scored with prints of perished hands, And chronicled with dates of doom, Though my own Being bear no bloom I trace the lives such scenes enshrine, Give past exemplars present room, And their experience count as mine.
Next 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : Postponement
- Thomas Hardy : Quid Hic Agis?
- Thomas Hardy : Revulsion
- Thomas Hardy : Rom: On The Palatine
- Thomas Hardy : Rome At The Pyramid Of Cestius Near The Graves Of Shelley And Keats
- Thomas Hardy : Rome: Building A New Street In The Ancient Quarter
- Thomas Hardy : Rome: On The Palatine.
- Thomas Hardy : Rome: The Vatican-sala Delle Muse.
- Thomas Hardy : San Sebastian
- Thomas Hardy : Sapphic Fragment
Previous 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : On A Midsummer Eve
- Thomas Hardy : On A Fine Morning
- Thomas Hardy : No Buyers
- Thomas Hardy : Night In The Old Home
- Thomas Hardy : Neutral Tones
- Thomas Hardy : Near Lanivet, 1872
- Thomas Hardy : Nature's Questioning
- Thomas Hardy : My Spirit Will Not Haunt The Mound
- Thomas Hardy : My Cicely
- Thomas Hardy : Mute Opinion