The Ivy-wife
Thomas Hardy
I LONGED to love a full-boughed beech
And be as high as he:
I stretched an arm within his reach,
And signalled unity.
But with his drip he forced a breach,
And tried to poison me.
I gave the grasp of partnership
To one of other race--
A plane: he barked him strip by strip
From upper bough to base;
And me therewith; for gone my grip,
My arms could not enlace.
In new affection next I strove
To coll an ash I saw,
And he in trust received my love;
Till with my soft green claw
I cramped and bound him as I wove...
Such was my love: ha-ha!
By this I gained his strength and height
Without his rivalry.
But in my triumph I lost sight
Of afterhaps. Soon he,
Being bark-bound, flagged, snapped, fell outright,
And in his fall felled me!
Next 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : The King's Experiment
- Thomas Hardy : The Lacking Sense Scene.--a Sad-coloured Landscape, Waddon Vale
- Thomas Hardy : The Last Chrysanthemum
- Thomas Hardy : The Levelled Churchyard
- Thomas Hardy : The Lost Pyx: A Mediaeval Legend
- Thomas Hardy : The Man He Killed
- Thomas Hardy : The Masked Face
- Thomas Hardy : The Milkmaid
- Thomas Hardy : The Mother Mourns
- Thomas Hardy : The Oxen
Previous 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : The Inconsistent
- Thomas Hardy : The Impercipient
- Thomas Hardy : The House Of Hospitalities
- Thomas Hardy : The Going Of The Battery Wives. ( Lament )
- Thomas Hardy : The Going
- Thomas Hardy : The Ghost Of The Past
- Thomas Hardy : The Fire At Tranter Sweatleys
- Thomas Hardy : The Farm Woman's Winter
- Thomas Hardy : The Fallow Deer At The Lonely House
- Thomas Hardy : The Faded Face