The Death Of Regret

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I opened my shutter at sunrise,
  And looked at the hill hard by,
And I heartily grieved for the comrade
  Who wandered up there to die.


I let in the morn on the morrow,
  And failed not to think of him then,
As he trod up that rise in the twilight,
  And never came down again.


I undid the shutter a week thence,
  But not until after I'd turned
Did I call back his last departure
  By the upland there discerned.


Uncovering the casement long later,
  I bent to my toil till the gray,
When I said to myself, 'Ah - what ails me,
  To forget him all the day!'


As daily I flung back the shutter
  In the same blank bald routine,
He scarcely once rose to remembrance
  Through a month of my facing the scene.


And ah, seldom now do I ponder
  At the window as heretofore
On the long valued one who died yonder,
  And wastes by the sycamore.

© Thomas Hardy