Why Be At Pains?
Thomas Hardy
Why be at pains that I should know You sought not me? Do breezes, then, make features glow So rosily? Come, the lit port is at our back, And the tumbling sea; Elsewhere the lampless uphill track To uncertainty! O should not we two waifs join hands? I am alone, You would enrich me more than lands By being my own. Yet, though this facile moment flies, Close is your tone, And ere to-morrow's dewfall dries I plough the unknown.
Next 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : Winter In Durnover Field
- Thomas Hardy : Wives In The Sere
- Thomas Hardy : You Were The Sort That Men Forget
- Thomas Hardy : Zermatt To The Matterhorn.
- William Ernest Henley : A Desolate Shore
- William Ernest Henley : A Wink From Hesper, Falling
- William Ernest Henley : After
- William Ernest Henley : Allegro Maestoso
- William Ernest Henley : Andante Con Moto
- William Ernest Henley : Anterotics
Previous 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : When I Set Out For Lyonnesse
- Thomas Hardy : Weathers
- Thomas Hardy : We Sat At The Window
- Thomas Hardy : Waiting Both
- Thomas Hardy : Valenciennes
- Thomas Hardy : V.r. 1819-1901 ( A Reverie. )
- Thomas Hardy : Unknowing
- Thomas Hardy : Under The Waterfall
- Thomas Hardy : Transformations
- Thomas Hardy : To The Moon