The Rival
Thomas Hardy
I determined to find out whose it was -
The portrait he looked at so, and sighed;
Bitterly have I rued my meanness
And wept for it since he died!
I searched his desk when he was away,
And there was the likeness--yes, my own!
Taken when I was the season's fairest,
And time-lines all unknown.
I smiled at my image, and put it back,
And he went on cherishing it, until
I was chafed that he loved not the me then living,
But that past woman still.
Well, such was my jealousy at last,
I destroyed that face of the former me;
Could you ever have dreamed the heart of woman
Would work so foolishly!
Next 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : The Roman Road
- Thomas Hardy : The Ruined Maid
- Thomas Hardy : The Seasons Of Her Year
- Thomas Hardy : The Selfsame Song
- Thomas Hardy : The Self-unseeing
- Thomas Hardy : The Sergeant's Song
- Thomas Hardy : The Sick God
- Thomas Hardy : The Sleep-worker
- Thomas Hardy : The Slow Nature
- Thomas Hardy : The Souls Of The Slain
Previous 10 Poems
- Thomas Hardy : The Riddle
- Thomas Hardy : The Respectable Burgher On The Higher Criticism
- Thomas Hardy : The Rambler
- Thomas Hardy : The Puzzled Game-birds
- Thomas Hardy : The Problem
- Thomas Hardy : The Pity Of It
- Thomas Hardy : The Phantom Horsewoman.
- Thomas Hardy : The Peasent's Confession
- Thomas Hardy : The Peasant's Confession
- Thomas Hardy : The Oxen