She would please two -- two fatal opposites: Husband and sire, young manhood and old age, Who had, besides, their fatal heritage -- Distrust and aims diverse. Now there he sits (His ledger in his lap): "Pray, use your wits; You think too anxiously about him; go Play with your sister's baby, daughter -- so Leave him to mumble in his moping fits." (This, as she pleaded for my happiness, In house of torment and distraction.) There, O there he sits (his ledger on his knee); And talks good doctrine how to break or bless A wildered husband, -- which in her despair Ever and ever she comes and tells to me. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A MAN'S VOCATION IS NOBODY'S BUSINESS by JAMES GALVIN LOVE'S MIRACLE by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON HOMAGE TO THE BRITISH MUSEUM by WILLIAM EMPSON FESSEDEN'S GARDEN by ELIZABETH AKERS ALLEN PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 54. AL-KAWI by EDWIN ARNOLD A FARMHOUSE DIRGE by ALFRED AUSTIN SHRODON FEAR: THE REST O'T by WILLIAM BARNES MILTON AT CRIPPLEGATE by CHARLES WILLIAM BRODRIBB SAINT ELIZABETH OF BOHEMIA: 1; SONNET by DINAH MARIA MULOCK CRAIK |