ALTON. YOU see that man with the quick eyes and brow, Too ponderous almost for his slender frame, His dark locks tinged with gray; you'd hardly think it, But he's a moral dandy, @3dilettante@1 (As your Italians say), whose fickle taste Leads him, like some fastidious bee, from flower To flower of social pastime! A fair girl, Pretty and piquante, fills his heart today; On airy wings of sentiment he hovers Lovingly round her, feeds the beauteous creature On honeyed nothings in a tone so sweet, They seem the genuine fruit of a strong soul Nurtured by passion, and true adoration; Then on the morrow when he meets once more "That Cynthia of the minute," a cold crust Of iciest form and etiquette o'erspreads His words, look, bearing; the whole man is changed -- As if a Tropic landscape, bright with sunlight, Had grown to frozen hardness in an hour: -- A demon, fickle, trifling, and capricious O'errules his spirit always! with men likewise, It is his pride to play the same vile game! Why, sir, your patience would be taxed to count His dupes within the year! he'll take a youth, Bright-minded, trusting, whom perchance he meets In casual fashion on the public square, Caress, solicit, flatter him -- at length Bear the poor fool, elate and jubilant, To banquet at his own well-ordered board, Ply him with curious questions, draw him out To make display of all his raciest wit, And when, like a squeezed orange, all his sap's Exhausted, -- faith! Sir Dainty down the wind Whistles his victim with a cool assurance, Which is the calm sublime of impudence! In fine, the man's a worn-out Epicurean, A ceaseless hunter after new sensations, To whom the world's a storehouse crammed with hearts And minds for his amusement! as for hearts, He'll toss 'em up, as jugglers toss their balls, Proud of his sleight of hand, his impish cunning, His matchless turns of quick dexterity! And if the baubles break, he's sore amazed That aught should be so brittle! yet thanks God The earth is full of these same delicate toys; And so he hurls the shattered plaything by, To re-assume his honest, juggling tricks, And charm his weary leisure-time with lies; A silken, soft, fair-spoken, dangerous knave. MARCUS. Some day he'll find his match! ALTON. Ay! you may swear to that; Some woman versed in every social art, Some rare, majestic creature, whose rich beauty Will set his amorous senses in a blaze; Slowly around him she will draw the net Of fascinations, multiform and strange; Enchant his fancy with her regal wit, His taste with every charm of female guile, Inflame him with voluptuous blandishments, By turns, sooth, flatter, madden, vow she loves At one delicious moment, then the next As warmly swear she loathes him! by a spell Invisible, but potent as the sun, She'll lead him, fawning, quivering to her feet, And at the last, O! consummation just! When on the very brink of blest fruition, He hovers, arms outstretched, and soul aglow, She'll freeze to sudden marble, wave him off With such calm haughtiness of queenly scorn, Imperious, crushing, fatal, that, by heaven, I should not wonder if the terrible sting Of disappointment and deceived desires, Of baffled passion, wounded self-conceit, And hope so swiftly murdered by despair, Struck to the core of being, and this man Falser than hell to others, perished wholly, By his own pestilent trickery done to death! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OLD TRAILS by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON THE BEGGAR'S HOLIDAY, FR. BEGGAR'S BUSH by JOHN FLETCHER IN THE MOONLIGHT by THOMAS HARDY EPIGRAM ON QUEEN CAROLINE'S DEATHBED by ALEXANDER POPE REPRESSION OF WAR EXPERIENCE by SIEGFRIED SASSOON SONNETS OF MANHOOD: SONNET 24. BALCOMBE FOREST by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |