While he was here in breath and bone,
To speak to and to see,
Would I had known more clearly known -
What that man did for me
When the wind scraped a minor lay,
And the spent west from white
To gray turned tiredly, and from gray
To broadest bands of night!
But I saw not, and he saw not
What shining life-tides flowed
To me-ward from his casual jot
Of service on that road.
He would have said: "'Twas nothing new;
We all do what we can;
'Twas only what one man would do
For any other man."
Now that I gauge his goodliness
He's slipped from human eyes;
And when he passed there's none can guess,
Or point out where he lies.
The Casual Acquaintance
Thomas Hardy
Suggested Poems
Explore a curated selection of verses that share themes, styles, and emotional resonance with the poem you've just read.