THE DEAD MAN WALKING

by: Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)

      HEY hail me as one living,
      But don't they know
      That I have died of late years,
      Untombed although?
       
      I am but a shape that stands here,
      A pulseless mould,
      A pale past picture, screening
      Ashes gone cold.
       
      Not at a minute's warning,
      Not in a loud hour,
      For me ceased Time's enchantments
      In hall and bower.
       
      There was no tragic transit,
      No catch of breath,
      When silent seasons inched me
      On to this death ....
       
      -- A Troubadour-youth I rambled
      With Life for lyre,
      The beats of being raging
      In me like fire.
       
      But when I practised eyeing
      The goal of men,
      It iced me, and I perished
      A little then.
       
      When passed my friend, my kinsfolk,
      Through the Last Door,
      And left me standing bleakly,
      I died yet more;
       
      And when my Love's heart kindled
      In hate of me,
      Wherefore I knew not, died I
      One more degree.
       
      And if when I died fully
      I cannot say,
      And changed into the corpse-thing
      I am to-day,
       
      Yet is it that, though whiling
      The time somehow
      In walking, talking, smiling,
      I live not now.

"The Dead Man Walking" is reprinted from Time's Laughingstocks and Other Verses. Thomas Hardy. London: Macmillan and Co. 1909.

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