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Poems (Hardy)/Afternoon

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For works with similar titles, see Afternoon.
4640978Poems — AfternoonIrenè Hardy
AFTERNOON
WHAT, then, that winds blow chill along the shadowy waste,The sky is afternoon, and homeward flock the birds,And lonely sound my loom-strokes in a lonely room?Perennial burns my fire, and calm and pleasant-spacedMy day was, fair with color, interwoven wordsOf friend and book; so, brave and cheerily went my loom.
What, then, that, day's work done, a lonely supper waits,A lonely evening lamp when all is done?The faithful firelight warms a tender opaline gloom,Where stands my yet unfinished web, inwoven with datesOf purple, buds of rose, and sky of blue, and sunOf heaven's imperial noon; so, cheerily goes my loom?
'Twere easy—yes!—to weep because the threadTurns from the pattern here, and there, and here;But I laid not the warp that works my weal or doom;The woof was dyed ere I could know, or choose, or dread.The power that laid the varying strands is ever nearAnd measures all; so, brave and cheerily goes my loom.