Lord Byron
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Robert Browning
Thomas Hardy
Charlotte Mew
Charles Causley
Seamus Heaney
Simon Armitage
Carol Ann Duffy
Owen Sheers
Andrew Waterhouse
Percy Bysshe Shelley
William Blake
William Wordsworth
Robert Browning
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Wilfred Owen
Seamus Heaney
Ted Hughes
Simon Armitage
Carol Ann Duffy
Imtiaz Dharker
Carol Rumens
John Agard
Beatrice Garland
One of Hardy’s most famous early poems, written in 1867 and included in his first collection, 1898’s Wessex Poems and Other Verses. This is a poem about disappointed love, and is probably auto-biographical. It is thought to be about Tryphena Sparks, who was believed to be his former lover. She was e...
We stood by a pond that winter day,
And the sun was white, as though chidden of God,
And a few leaves lay on the starving sod;
– They had fallen from an ash, and were gray.
Your eyes on me were as eyes that rove
Over tedious riddles of years ago;
And some words played between us to and fro
On which lost the more by our love.
The smile on your mouth was the deadest thing
Alive enough to have strength to die;
And a grin of bitterness swept thereby
Like an ominous bird a-wing….
Since then, keen lessons that love deceives,
And wrings with wrong, have shaped to me
Your face, and the God curst sun, and a tree,
And a pond edged with grayish leaves.