I praised the daisies on my lawn, And then my lady mowed them down. My garden stones, improved by moss, She moved -- and that was Beauty's loss. When I adored the sunlight, she Kept a bright fire indoors for me. She saw I loved the birds, and that Made her one day bring home a cat. She plucks my flowers to deck each room, And make me follow where they bloom. Because my friends were kind and many, She said -- 'What need has Love of any?' What is my gain, and what my loss? Fire without sun, stones bare of moss, Daisies beheaded, one by one; The birds cat-hunted, friends all gone -- These are my losses: yet, I swear, A love less jealous in its care Would not be worth the changing skin That she and I are living in. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SECOND OPINION by STEPHEN CUSHMAN IDYLLS OF THE KING: THE MARRIAGE OF GERAINT by ALFRED TENNYSON FOR THE INAUGURATION OF A PUBLIC SCHOOL, CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY by WALT WHITMAN OVERTURE TO A DANCE OF LOCOMOTIVES by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS ODES: BOOK 2: ODE 7. TO REVEREND BENJAMIN, LORD BISHOP OF WINCHESTER by MARK AKENSIDE A ROW IN AN OMNIBUS BOX; A LEGEND OF THE HAYMARKET by RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM |