Lady, there's fragrance in your sighs, And sunlight in your glances; I never saw such lips and eyes In pictures or romances; And Love will readily suppose, To make you quite enslaving, That you have taste for verse and prose, Hot pressed, and line engraving. And then, you waltz so like a Fay, That round you envy rankles; Your partner's head is turned, they say As surely as his ankles; And I was taught, in days far gone, By a most prudent mother, That in this world of sorrow, one Good turn deserves another. I may not win you! -- that's a bore! But yet 'tis sweet to woo you; And for this cause, -- and twenty more, I send this gay book to you. If its songs please you, -- by this light! I will not hold it treason To bid you dream of me to-night, And dance with me next season. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FOR REMEMBERING HOW TO LIVE WITHOUT YOU by JAMES GALVIN ILLINOIS FARMER by CARL SANDBURG THE BLACK RIDERS: 1 by STEPHEN CRANE THE FORGOTTEN GRAVE by EMILY DICKINSON EDWIN MORRIS; OR, THE LAKE by ALFRED TENNYSON AURORA by WILLIAM ALEXANDER (1567-1640) A MASQUE OF DEAD QUEENS by STANLEY E. BABB SONGS OF NIGHT TO MORNING: 1. AT THE THEATRE by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |