To Flowers From Italy In Winter
Thomas Hardy
Sunned in the South, and here to-day; --If all organic things Be sentient, Flowers, as some men say, What are your ponderings? How can you stay, nor vanish quite From this bleak spot of thorn, And birch, and fir, and frozen white Expanse of the forlorn? Frail luckless exiles hither brought! Your dust will not regain Old sunny haunts of Classic thought When you shall waste and wane; But mix with alien earth, be lit With frigid Boreal flame, And not a sign remain in it To tell men whence you came.
Next 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : To Life
- Thomas Hardy : To Lizbie Browne
- Thomas Hardy : To My Father's Violin
- Thomas Hardy : To Outer Nature
- Thomas Hardy : To Shakespeare After Three Hundred Years
- Thomas Hardy : To The Moon
- Thomas Hardy : Transformations
- Thomas Hardy : Under The Waterfall
- Thomas Hardy : Unknowing
- Thomas Hardy : V.r. 1819-1901 ( A Reverie. )
Previous 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : To An Unborn Pauper Child
- Thomas Hardy : To An Orphan Child
- Thomas Hardy : To A Lady
- Thomas Hardy : Timing Her
- Thomas Hardy : Thoughts Of Phena
- Thomas Hardy : Thought Of Ph---a At News Of Her Death
- Thomas Hardy : Then And Now
- Thomas Hardy : The Young Churchwarden
- Thomas Hardy : The Year's Awakening
- Thomas Hardy : The Wind Blew Words