And here, by way of counterweight to the International Day of Light, is a poem by Edward Thomas. As with the Donald Justice, it is one of his last and most beautiful (and untitled), written on his last Christmas at home with his family. A few months later, on Easter Monday 1917, Thomas was killed in action at Arras, shot through the chest.
| Out in the dark over the snow |
| The fallow fawns invisible go |
| With the fallow doe ; |
| And the winds blow |
| Fast as the stars are slow. |
| Stealthily the dark haunts round |
| And, when the lamp goes, without sound |
| At a swifter bound |
| Than the swiftest hound, |
| Arrives, and all else is drowned ; |
| And star and I and wind and deer, |
| Are in the dark together, – near, |
| Yet far, – and fear |
| Drums on my ear |
| In that sage company drear. |
| How weak and little is the light, |
| All the universe of sight, |
| Love and delight, |
| Before the might, |
| If you love it not, of night. |
My young daughter's first attempt to over-night in her tent in our back garden: darkness fell. There was a knock at the kitchen door.
ReplyDelete"Yes, my love?"
"Daddy, zactly how big is a hedgehog?"