'Come, try your skill, kind gentlemen, A penny for three tries!' Some threw and lost, some threw and won A ten-a-penny prize. She was a tawny gipsy girl, A girl of twenty years, I liked her for the lumps of Id That jingled from her ears; I liked the flaring yellow scarf Bound loose about her throat, I liked her showy purple gown And flashy velvet coat. A man came up, too loose of tongue, And said no good to her; She did not blush as Saxons do, Or turn upon the cur; She fawned and whined 'Sweet gentleman, A penny for three tries!' But oh, the den of wild things in The darkness of her eyes! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ETUDES DE PLUSIERS PAYSAGES DE L' AME: 1 by HAYDEN CARRUTH ANOTHER DARK LADY by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON LOVE IN BLACK AND WHITE by KAREN SWENSON LONG JOHN BROWN AND LITTLE MARY BELL by WILLIAM BLAKE A NORTHERN SUBURB by JOHN DAVIDSON SEASHORE (1) by RALPH WALDO EMERSON |