Some ladies dress in muslin full and white, Some gentlemen in cloth succinct and black; Some patronise a dog-cart, some a hack, Some think a painted clarence only right. Youth is not always such a pleasing sight, Witness a man with tassels on his back; Or woman in a great-coat like a sack Towering above her sex with horrid height. If all the world were water fit to drown There are some whom you would not teach to swim, Rather enjoying if you saw them sink; Certain old ladies dressed in girlish pink, With roses and geraniums on their gown: -- Go to the Bason, poke them o'er the rim. -- | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...APRIL, FR. LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE AN AUTUMN NIGHT by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS THE WEDDING FEAST: 2 by ANNA HEMPSTEAD BRANCH AN OLD MAN'S SONG by HELENE BUHLERT BULLOCK VIGIL by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON MY LADY OF THE HARVEST by EDWARD RALPH CHEYNEY |