Idiot, last night, I prayed thee but forbear To read my verses; now I must to hear: For offering, with thy smiles, my wit to grace, Thy ignorance still laughs in the wrong place. And so my sharpness thou no less disjoints, Than thou didst late my sense, losing my points. So have I seen at Christmas sports one lost, And, hood-winked, for a man, embrace a post. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MIDNIGHT-BY THE OPEN WINDOW by LOUIS UNTERMEYER FRIENDSHIP by RALPH WALDO EMERSON THE LAST WORD OF A BLUEBIRD; AS TOLD TO A CHILD by ROBERT FROST MONNA INNOMINATA, A SONNET OF SONNETS: 2 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI LITTLE BELL by THOMAS WESTWOOD THE CHARACTER OF A HAPPY LIFE by HENRY WOTTON IN REFERENCE TO HER CHILDREN, 23 JUNE, 1659 by ANNE BRADSTREET QUILCA HOUSE TO THE DEAN by HENRY BROOKE ON THE LATE CAPT. GROSE'S PEREGRINATIONS THRO' SCOTLAND by ROBERT BURNS |