The daughters of the rich Go shopping on Thirty-fourth street: They are sweet, round and succulent, Nourished, firm-fleshed, Dainty and expensive morsels To glut desire And deaden the spirit. Down on Fourteenth street There is a waitress in a restaurant, Fresh-skinned and young-limbed, With a gesture that speaks of nodding hill-flow'rs in summer. For fifteen cents I order ham and eggs: But she will bring me a vivifying draught For my soul's quickening. ... | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...VERSES SUPPOSED TO BE WRITTEN BY ALEXANDER SELKIRK by WILLIAM COWPER MENAPHON: SEPHESTIA'S [CRADLE] SONG TO HER CHILD by ROBERT GREENE THE ARMADA; A FRAGMENT by THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY SATIRE: 3. TO SIR FRANCIS BRIAN by THOMAS WYATT WINTER TREE by WALTER R. ADAMS |