A lady somewhat dowdy as to dress, A gentle Brahmin of old family Sighing in shocked bewilderment to see How progress threatens her exclusiveness; She shows a helpless, fluttering distress Because her children somehow seem to be Raucously modern, wholly out of key With what she feels true culture should express. And yet for all her well-bred scorn of change And chill defense of custom and of caste, Her stern resistance to the new and strange, This fine old gentlewoman of the past Has eyes whose glance, with courteous manner met, Glows sweetly through her often raised lorgnette. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FLAG GOES BY by HENRY HOLCOMB BENNETT SUMTER by HENRY HOWARD BROWNELL TO MY NOSE by ALFRED HENRY FORRESTER ELAINE by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY THE FLIGHT OF THE GEESE by CHARLES GEORGE DOUGLAS ROBERTS POEMS ON THE SLAVE TRADE: 6 by ROBERT SOUTHEY A WOMAN'S SONNETS: 10 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT STEVENSON MAKES CONRAD WELCOME by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON A MEMORIAL ABSTRACT OF A SERMON PREACHED ON PROVERBS, XX, 27 by JOHN BYROM |