WHO taught fair Cleopatra how to bring Mark Antony to her knees -- the touch of love, As soft as velvet, that could stroke the wing Of a butterfly and take no powder off; The gentle purr that made eternal Rome, With all its marble, melt in that sweet sound, And vanish like the mist, when it has come Into a man's full height above the ground? When I see how a cat has, even now, With its own body curled and crouching low, Made a large, heavy collar, soft and warm, For that girl's neck, I think, with no alarm, If, young one, that's your friend -- as it was Hers -- I'll watch you round the corner of my fears. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE RIVER DUDDON: SONNET 34. AFTER-THOUGHT by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH FAREWELL, UNKIST by THOMAS WYATT THE DOUBLE STANDARD by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS THE LAST LANDLORD by ELIZABETH AKERS ALLEN EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 42. AUGMENTED BY FAVOURABLE BLASTS by PHILIP AYRES THE RHYME OF SIR LAUNCELOT BOGLE; A LEGEND OF GLASGOW by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN |