I SAW you, lately, at an hour To lovers reckoned dear For tender trysts; and this is what I chanced to see and hear: You sat beneath the Summer moon, A friend on either hand, And one applauded your discourse, And one -- could understand. You quoted gems of poesy By mighty masters wrought; And one remarked the pleasant rhyme, And one, the golden thought. Your smiles (how equally bestowed!) Upon the list'ners fell; And one was fain to praise your eyes, And one, to read them well. You jested in a merry vein, And, conscious, played the child; And one was moved to brave retort, And one, in silence, smiled. You spoke of angel-life above That evermore endures; And one looked up, with lifted hands, And one -- was kissing yours! And then you laughed the ringing laugh That shows a spirit glad; And one, thereat, was very gay, And one was something sad. And did you guess (ah! need I ask?) While thus they sat with you, That one was but a light gallant, And one a lover true? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DICKENS IN CAMP by FRANCIS BRET HARTE THE OLD CHURCHYARD OF BONCHURCH by PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON SONNET: 86 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE THE CHILD ALONE: 6. BLOCK CITY by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON THE ABSINTHE-DRINKER by ARTHUR WILLIAM SYMONS SONG OF MYSELF by WALT WHITMAN THE CHURCH OF BROU by MATTHEW ARNOLD |