The Darkling Thrush By Thomas Hardy

Thomas Hardy’s The Darkling Thrush is one of my favourite poems. I recollect having had similar thoughts to those described by Hardy while pausing to listen to the song of a bird. In my case it was, I think a blackbird rather than a thrush which produced the emotions so aptly described by the poet in the below poem.


 


“I leant upon a coppice gate


When Frost was spectre-grey,


And Winter’s dregs made desolate


The weakening eye of day.


The tangled bine-stems scored the sky


Like strings of broken lyres,


And all mankind that haunted nigh


Had sought their household fires.


The land’s sharp features seemed to be


The Century’s corpse outleant,


His crypt the cloudy canopy,


The wind his death-lament.


The ancient pulse of germ and birth


Was shrunken hard and dry,


And every spirit upon earth


Seemed fervourless as I.


At once a voice arose among


The bleak twigs overhead


In a full-hearted evensong


Of joy illimited;


An aged thrush, frail, gaunt, and small,


In blast-beruffled plume,


Had chosen thus to fling his soul


Upon the growing gloom.


So little cause for carolings


Of such ecstatic sound


Was written on terrestrial things


Afar or nigh around,


That I could think there trembled through


His happy good-night air


Some blessed Hope, whereof he knew


And I was unaware.”


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Published on December 08, 2013 13:15
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