LADY mine, most fair thou art With youth's gold and white and red; 'Tis a pity that thy heart Is so much harder than thy head. This has stayed my kisses oft, This from all thy charms debarr'd, That thy head is strangely soft, While thy heart is strangely hard. Nothing had kept us apart -- I had loved thee, I had wed -- Hadst thou had a softer heart Or a harder head. But I think I'll bear Love's smart Till the wound has healed and fled, Or thy head is like thy heart, Or thy heart is like thy head. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DUSK; TO MADEMOISELLE MARIE LAURENCIN by GUILLAUME APOLLINAIRE THE THINKER'S VISION by WILLIAM ROSE BENET OBSERVATIONS IN THE ART OF ENGLISH POESY: 3 by THOMAS CAMPION MY LITTLE YORKSHIRE TERRIER by HENRY CHAPPELL EASTER MUSIC by MARGARET WADE CAMPBELL DELAND |