MORE yet and more, and yet we mark not all: The Warning fain to bid fair women heed Its hard brief note of deadly doom and deed; The verse that strewed too thick with flowers the hall Whence Nero watched his fiery festival; That iron page wherein men's eyes who read See bruised and marred between two babes that bleed, A mad red-handed husband's martyr fall; The scene which crossed and streaked with mirth the strife Of Henry with his sons and witchlike wife; And that sweet pageant of the kindly fiend, Who, seeing three friends in spirit and heart made one, Crowned with good hap the true-love wiles he screened In the pleached lanes of pleasant Edmonton. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE WANDERER: A ROCOCO STUDY (FIRST VERSION) by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS CAPTAIN MORROW'S THANKSGIVING by LILLIE E. BARR THE PASSING OF WOODROW WILSON, PROPHET OF PEACE by VINCENT GODFREY BURNS MEDITATIONS FOR EVERY DAY IN PASSION WEEK: SATURDAY by JOHN BYROM VERMONT DRIED BEEF by DANIEL LEAVENS CADY OBSERVATIONS IN THE ART OF ENGLISH POESY: 24. ELEGIAC VERSE: THE SEVENTH EPIGRAM by THOMAS CAMPION |