A poet's moonshine! Yes, for love must lend Answer to reason, though 'tis bitter breath. Better wild roses died their natural death Than evilly or idly them to rend. The girl was fair as flower the moon beneath, Gentle and good, and constant to her friend, Yet out of her own place, not so complete: Was wedded to her kind--had leave to lack, But old associations rarely slip. Tight as a stem of grass within its sheath, You yet may draw and nibble, touch the sweet With the tip tongue and browse the tender end Half-vacantly; but not to be put back, Or swallowed in, but sputtered from the lip. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ONLY ONE MOTHER by GEORGE COOPER ELEGY: 11. THE BRACELET; UPON THE LOSS OF HIS MISTRESS'S CHAIN by JOHN DONNE I DO NOT LOVE THEE by CAROLINE ELIZABETH SARAH SHERIDAN NORTON BEN JONSON ENTERTAINS A MAN FROM STRATFORD by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON TIMES GO BY TURNS by ROBERT SOUTHWELL VILLANELLE, WITH STEVENSON'S ASSISTANCE by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS MANSONG: CHORAL by MARCUS ADENEY TWO GRANDMOTHERS by IRENE ARCHER DAWN ON THE HILLS (FROM A HOTEL WINDOW) by LILLIAN ATCHERSON |