Forgetting her mauve vows the Fania fled, Taking away her moonlight scarves with her -- There was no joy left in the calendar, And life was but an orchid that was dead. Even our pious peacocks went unfed -- I had deserved no treachery like this, For I had bitten sharp kiss after kiss Devoutly, till her sleek young body bled. Then Carlo came; he shone like a new sin -- Straightway I knew pearl-powder still was sweet, And that my bleeding heart would not be scarred. I sought a shop where shoes were sold within, And for three hundred francs made brave my feet, And then I danced along the boulevard! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STALKING LEMURS by KAREN SWENSON ON READING -- . by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH KU KLUX by MADISON JULIUS CAWEIN THE LAST SUPPER by RAINER MARIA RILKE JUNE BRACKEN AND HEATHER by ALFRED TENNYSON A DREAM OF DEATH by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS ON THE WATERFRONT by WILLIAM ROSE BENET THOUGHTS NEAR ASHAMPSTEAD AERODROME, HARVEST-TIME by CHARLES WILLIAM BRODRIBB HUGH STUART BOYD: HIS BLINDNESS by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING |