Much they reproached me and reviled Because I loved him so: 'How could you ever have defiled Yourself with one so low?' Too well the truth I realise, And, were it left to me, I would have chosen otherwise; But that was not to be. I love him for his flashing smile, The fragrance of his sighs, His sweetest lips, the magic wile Of his divinest eyes. My little fawn! His fingers slim About the spindle move As swiftly as the thought of him Provokes my heart to love. His fingers play as recklessly With shuttle and with loom As all the fondest hopes in me Are trifled with by doom. His hands embrace the warp, as grope His feet the woof to set; He wrestles like an antelope Caught in a huntsman's net. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE GOLDEN WEDDING OF STERLING AND SARAH LANIER by SIDNEY LANIER TO MY DEAR FRIEND, MR. CONGREVE, ON HIS COMEDY, 'THE DOUBLE-DEALER' by JOHN DRYDEN FROLIC by GEORGE WILLIAM RUSSELL AGAINST IDLENESS AND MISCHIEF by ISAAC WATTS FOOTLIGHT MOTIFS: 1. MRS. VERNON CASTLE by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS PRAYER TO THE VIRGIN OF CHARTRES by HENRY BROOKS ADAMS BRUCE: HOW AYMER DE VALENCE, AND JOHN OF LORN CHASED THE BRUCE ... by JOHN BARBOUR |