LAURA ON me he shall ne'er put a ring, So, mamma, 'tis in vain to take trouble -- For I was but eighteen in spring While his age exactly is double. MAMMA He's but in his thirty-sixth year, Tall, handsome, good-natured and witty, And should you refuse him, my dear, May you die an old maid without pity! LAURA His figure, I grant you, will pass, And at present he's young enough plenty; But when I am sixty, alas! Will not he be a hundred and twenty? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...JONES'S PRIVATE ARGYMENT by SIDNEY LANIER THE IRISH RAPPAREES; A PEASANT BALLAD OF 1691 by CHARLES GAVAN DUFFY DEAD COW FARM by ROBERT RANKE GRAVES EVENING HYMN by REGINALD HEBER SOMEBODY'S DARLING by MARIE LA CONTE WEDDED (PROVENCAL AIR) by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH |