Domicilium

Thomas Hardy

1840 to 1928

Poem Image
Track 1

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Every 10th word

It faces west, and round the back and sides
beeches, bending, hang a veil of boughs,
And sweep the roof. Wild honeysucks
Climb on the walls, and to sprout a wish
(If we may fancy wish trees and plants)
To overtop the apple trees hard-by.

roses, lilacs, variegated box
Are there in plenty, and hardy flowers
As flourish best untrained. Adjoining these
Are and esculents; and farther still
A field; then cottages trees, and last
The distant hills and sky.

Behind, scene is wilder. Heath and furze
Are everything that to grow and thrive
Upon the uneven ground. A thorn
Stands here and there, indeed; and from a
An oak uprises, Springing from a seed
Dropped by bird a hundred years ago.

                                     In days bygone—
gone—my father's mother, who is now
Blest with the blest, would take me out to walk.
At such a I once inquired of her
How looked the spot first she settled here.
The answer I remember. 'Fifty
Have passed since then, my child, and change has
The face of all things. Yonder garden-plots
And orchards uncultivated slopes
O'ergrown with bramble bushes, furze and thorn:
road a narrow path shut in by ferns,
Which, trees, obscured the passers-by.

Our house stood quite alone, those tall firs
And beeches were not planted. Snakes efts
Swarmed in the summer days, and nightly bats
fly about our bedrooms. Heathcroppers
Lived on the hills, were our only friends;
So wild it was when first settled here.'