In A Wood

Thomas Hardy

In a Wood


Pale beech and pine-tree blue, 
   Set in one clay, 
Bough to bough cannot you 
   Bide out your day? 
When the rains skim and skip, 
Why mar sweet comradeship, 
Blighting with poison-drip 
   Neighborly spray? 

Heart-halt and spirit-lame, 
   City-opprest, 
Unto this wood I came 
   As to a nest; 
Dreaming that sylvan peace 
Offered the harrowed ease 
Nature a soft release 
   From mens unrest. 

But, having entered in, 
   Great growths and small 
Show them to men akin 
   Combatants all! 
Sycamore shoulders oak, 
Bines the slim sapling yoke, 
Ivy-spun halters choke 
   Elms stout and tall. 

Touches from ash, O wych, 
   Sting you like scorn! 
You, too, brave hollies, twitch 
   Sidelong from thorn. 
Even the rank poplars bear 
Illy a rivals air, 
Cankering in black despair 
   If overborne. 

Since, then, no grace I find 
   Taught me of trees, 
Turn I back to my kind, 
   Worthy as these. 
There at least smiles abound, 
There discourse trills around, 
There, now and then, are found 
   Life-loyalties. 


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