The daughters of the rich Go shopping on Thirty-fourth street: They are sweet, round and succulent, Nourished, firm-fleshed, Dainty and expensive morsels To glut desire And deaden the spirit. Down on Fourteenth street There is a waitress in a restaurant, Fresh-skinned and young-limbed, With a gesture that speaks of nodding hill-flow'rs in summer. For fifteen cents I order ham and eggs: But she will bring me a vivifying draught For my soul's quickening. ... | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OLD MEN ON THE COURTHOUSE LAWN, MURRAY, KENTUCKY by JAMES GALVIN THE MOURNING-GARMENT: THE SHEPHERD'S WIFE'S SONG by ROBERT GREENE WIFE, CHILDREN AND FRIENDS by WILLIAM ROBERT SPENCER SHADOWS by WILLIAM HERVEY ALLEN JR. LOVE'S BLINDNESS by ALFRED AUSTIN PSALM 113 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE |