WHAT thoughts are mine when she is gone, And I sit dreaming here, alone; My fingers are the little people That climb her breast to its red steeple; And, there arrived, they play until She wakes and murmurs -- "Love, be still." She is the patient, loving mare, And I the colt to pull her hair; She is the deer, and my desire Pursues her like a forest fire; She is the child, and does not know What a fierce bear she calls "Bow-wow." But, Lord, when her sweet self is near, These very thoughts cause all my fear. I sit beneath her quiet sense, And each word fears its consequence; So "Puss, Puss, Puss!" I cry. At that I hang my head and stroke the cat. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: TOM MERRITT by EDGAR LEE MASTERS A LITTLE WHILE by SARA TEASDALE EMMELINE GRANGERFORD'S 'ODE TO STEPHEN DOLWING BOTS, DEC'D' by SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS FRINGED GENTIANS by AMY LOWELL NUPTIAL SLEEP by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI SONGS OF TRAVEL: 2. YOUTH AND LOVE: 1 by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON |