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1840–1928

THE WANDERER

Thomas Hardy

There is nobody on the road But I, And no beseeming abode I can try

For shelter, so abroad I must lie. The stars feel not far up, And to be

The lights by which I sup Glimmeringly, Set out in a hollow cup Over me.

They wag as though they were Panting for joy Where they shine, above all care, And annoy,

And demons of despair - Life's alloy. Sometimes outside the fence Feet swing past,

Clock-like, and then go hence, Till at last There is a silence, dense, Deep, and vast.

A wanderer, witch-drawn To and fro, To-morrow, at the dawn, On I go,

And where I rest anon Do not know! Yet it's meet — this bed of hay And roofless plight;

For there's a house of clay, My own, quite, To roof me soon, all day And all night.

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THE WANDERER · Thomas Hardy · Poetry Cove