Yearn thou may'st: Thou shalt not see My wasting love For thee. Lean thy tresses; Fair that fruit; Slim as warbling bird's Thy throat. Peep thou then: Doubt not some swain Will of thy still decoy Be fain. But I? In sooth -- Nay, gaze thy fill! Scorn thee I must, And will. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE DESERTED PLANTATION by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR FOOTSTEPS OF ANGELS by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE MARYLAND BATTALION [AUGUST 27, 1776] by JOHN WILLIAMSON PALMER THE LOTOS-EATERS by ALFRED TENNYSON THREE PASTORAL ELEGIES: 1 by WILLIAM BASSE WILD ROSES AND SNOW by H. T. MACKENZIE BELL THE WINDING ROAD by CHARLOTTE LOUISE BERTLESEN |