devoted himself exclusively to it. I suspect that it was what Virginia Woolf called the âarchitectingâ of novels that no longer appealed to him. Poetry has it over the novel in that it uses fewer words. You can do more with less.
He did, though, write one huge poem â
The Dynasts
, about the Napoleonic wars. Some of it is windy and sprawling, but Hardy was nothing if not down to earth (itâs part of his fascination with graves). Here is a section about the night before Waterloo, but not about the common soldiers as Shakespeare might have done it, but the common creatures, disturbed by the preparations for the coming battle.
The Eve of Waterloo
(
from
The Dynasts)
CHORUS OF PHANTOMS
The eyelids of eve fall together at last,
And the forms so foreign to field and tree
Lie down as though native, and slumber fast!
Sore are the thrills of misgiving we see
In the artless champaign at this harlequinade,
Distracting a vigil where calm should be!
The green seems opprest, and the Plain afraid
Of a Something to come, whereof these are the proofs â
Neither earthquake, nor storm, nor eclipseâs shade!
Yea, the coneys are scared by the thud of hoofs,
And their white scuts flash at their vanishing heels,
And swallows abandon the hamlet-roofs.
The moleâs tunnelled chambers are crushed by wheels,
The larkâs eggs are scattered, their owners fled;
And the hedgehogâs household the sapper unseals.
The snail draws in at the terrible tread,
But in vain; he is crushed by the felloe-rim;
The worm asks what can be overheard,
And wriggles deep from a scene so grim,
And guesses him safe; for he does not know
What a foul red flood will be soaking him!
Beaten about by the heel and toe
Are butterflies, sick of the dayâs long rheum,
To die of a worse than the weather-foe.
Trodden and bruised to a miry tomb
Are ears that have greened but will never be gold,
And flowers in the bud that will never bloom.
So the seasonâs intent, ere its fruit unfold,
Is frustrate, and mangled, and made succumb,
Like a youth of promise struck stark and cold! â¦
Some of that sympathy with the unredeemed lives of small creatures found its way into many of Hardyâs poems. Once, when he was a boy in Dorset, he was crossing the field where the sheep were penned and took it into his head to get down on his hands and knees and pretend to crop the grass to see what it was like to be a sheep. When he looked up, the whole flock was gathered round him, gazing at him with astonished faces.
The railway hadnât reached Dorset when Hardy was born in 1840, but when it did, it was, of course, the Great Western, with its terminus at Paddington. It has been said that in London you settle near the station you arrive at, and when Hardy came to London to work as an architect, he lived in Bayswater and was married at St Peterâs, Paddington. Several of his poems are set on the railway, including this:
At the Railway Station, Upway
âThere is not much that I can do,
For Iâve no money thatâs quite my own!â
Spoke up the pitying child â
A little boy with a violin
At the station before the train came in, â
âBut I can play my fiddle to you,
And a nice one âtis, and good in tone!â
The man in the handcuffs smiled;
The constable looked, and he smiled, too,
As the fiddle began to twang;
And the man in the handcuffs suddenly sang
With grimful glee:
âThis life so free
Is the thing for me!â
And the constable smiled, and said no word,
As if unconscious of what he heard;
And so they went on till the train came in â
The convict, and boy with the violin.
Another of Hardyâs poems set on a train is a poetic version of a scene that occurs with much the same details in his last novel,
Jude the Obscure
.
Midnight on the Great Western
In the third-class seat sat the journeying boy,
And the roof-lampâs oily flame
Played down on his