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There are some heights in Wessex, shaped as if a kindly hand
For thinking, dreaming, dying on, and crises when I stand,
Say, on Ingpen Beacon eastward, on Wylls-Neck westwardly,
I seem where I was before birth, and after death may be.
In the lowlands have no comrade, not even the lone man’s friend –
Her who suffereth long and is kind; accepts what is too weak to mend:
Down there they are and askance; there nobody thinks as I,
But mind-chains not clank where one’s next neighbour is the sky.
the towns I am tracked by phantoms having weird ways –
Shadows of beings who fellowed with myself earlier days:
They hang about at places, and they harsh heavy things –
Men with a frigid sneer, women with tart disparagings.
Down there I seem to false to myself, my simple self that was,
And not now, and I see him watching, wondering what cause
Can have merged him into such a strange as this,
Who yet has something in common with himself, my chrysalis.
I cannot go to the great grey Plain; there’s a figure against the moon,
Nobody sees it I, and it makes my breast beat out of tune;
I cannot go to the tall-spired town, being barred the forms now passed
For everybody but me, in long vision they stand there fast.
There’s a ghost Yell’ham Bottom chiding loud at the fall of the night,
There’s a ghost in Froom-side Vale, thin lipped and vague, in a shroud of white,
There is one in railway-train whenever I do not want it near,
I its profile against the pane, saying what I would hear.
As for one rare fair woman, I am but a thought of hers,
I enter her mind another thought succeeds me that she prefers;
Yet my for her in its fulness she herself even did know;
Well, time cures hearts of tenderness, and now can let her go.
So I am found on Beacon, or on Wylls-Neck to the west,
Or else homely Bulbarrow, or little Pilsdon Crest,
Where men have cared to haunt, nor women have walked with me,
ghosts then keep their distance; and I know some liberty.