Side By Side

741 Words
Subscribe for ad free access & additional features for teachers. Authors: 267, Books: 3,607, Poems & Short Stories: 4,435, Forum Members: 71,154, Forum Posts: 1,238,602, Quizzes: 344 Side By Side So there sat they, The estranged two, Thrust in one pew By chance that day; Placed so, breath-nigh, Each comer unwitting Who was to be sitting In touch close by. Thus side by side Blindly alighted, They seemed united As groom and bride, Who'd not communed For many years - Lives from twain spheres With hearts distuned. Her fringes brushed His garment's hem As the harmonies rushed Through each of them: Her lips could be heard In the creed and psalms, And their fingers neared At the giving of alms. And women and men, The matins ended, By looks commended Them, joined again. Quickly said she, "Don't undeceive them - Better thus leave them:" "Quite so," said he. Slight words!--the last Between them said, Those two, once wed, Who had not stood fast. Diverse their ways From the western door, To meet no more In their span of days. About Thomas Hardy Text Summary Apology Weathers The Maid of Keinton Mandeville Summer Schemes Epeisodia Faintheart In A Railway Train At Moonrise and Onwards The Garden Seat Barthelemon At Vauxhall I Sometimes Think Jezreel A Jog-Trot Pair The Curtains Now Are Drawn According To The Mighty Working I Was Not He The West-of-Wessex Girl Welcome Home Going And Staying Read By Moonlight At A House In Hampstead A Woman's Fancy Her Song A Wet August The Dissemblers To A Lady A Man Was Drawing Near To Me The Strange House As `TWere To-Night The Contretemps A Gentleman's Epitaph The Old Gown A Night In November A Duettist To Her Pianoforte Where Three Roads Joined And There Was A Great Calm Haunting Fingers The Woman I Met If It's Ever Spring Again The Two Houses On Stinsford Hill The Fallow Deer The Self-Same Song The Wanderer A Wife Comes Back A Young Man's Exhortation At Lulworth Cove A Bygone Occasion Two Serenades The Wedding Morning End Of The Year 1912 The Chimes Play I Worked No Wile To Meet You At The Railway Station, Upway Side By Side Dream Of The City Shopoman A Maiden's Pledge The Child And The Sage Mismet An Autumn Rain-Scene Meditations On A Holiday An Experience The Beauty The Collector Cleans His Picture The Wood Fire Saying Good-Bye On The Tune The Opportunity Evelyn G. The Rift Voices From Things On The Way She Did Not Turn Growth In May The Children And Sir Nameless At The Royal Academy Her Temple A Two-Year's Idyll By Henstridge Cross Penance I Look In Her Face After The War If You Had Known The Chapel-Organist Fetching Her Could I But Will She Revisits Alone At The Entering Of The New Year They Would Not Come After A Romantic Day The Two Wives I Knew A Lady A House With A History A Procession Of Dead Days He Follows Himself The Singing Woman Without, Not Within Her O I Won't Lead A Homely Life In The Small Hours The Little Old Table Vagg Hollow The Dream Is--Which? The Country Wedding First Or Last Lonely Days What Did It Mean? At The Dinner-Table The Marble Tablet The Master And The Leaves Last Words To A Dumb Friend A Drizzling Easter Morning On One Who Lived The Second Night She Who Saw Not The Old Workman The Sailor's Mother Outside The Casement The Passer-By I Was The Midmost A Sound In The Night On A Discovered Curl Of Hair An Old Likeness Her Apotheosis Sacred To The Memory To A Well-Named Dwelling The Whipper-In A Military Appointment The Milestone The Lament Cross-Currents The Old Neighbour The Chosen The Inscription The Marble-Streeted Town A Woman Driving A Woman's Trust Best Times The Casual Acquaintance Intra Sephulcrum The Whitewashed Wall Just The Same The Last Time The Seven Times The Sun's Last Look In A London Flat Drawing Rake-Hell Muses The Colour Murmers In The Gloom Epitaph An Ancient To Ancients After Reading Surview Sorry, no summary available yet. Art of Worldly Wisdom Daily In the 1600s, Balthasar Gracian, a jesuit priest wrote 300 aphorisms on living life called "The Art of Worldly Wisdom." Join our newsletter below and read them all, one at a time. Email: Sonnet-a-Day Newsletter Shakespeare wrote over 150 sonnets! Join our Sonnet-A-Day Newsletter and read them all, one at a time.
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