I like not that dainty-cut raiment, those earrings of pearl, I like not the light in that eye; I like not the note of that voice. Never so was the girl Who a year ago bade me good-bye! Hadst but come bare and moneyless, worn in the vamp, weather-gray, But innocent still as before, How warmly I'd lodged thee! But sport thy new gains far away; I pray thee now -- come here no more! And yet I'll not try to blot out every memory of thee; I'll think of thee -- yes, now and then: One who's watched thee since Time called thee out o' thy mother and me Must think of thee; aye, I know when! . . . When the cold sneer of dawn follows night-shadows black as a hearse, And the rain filters down the fruit tree, And the tempest mouths into the flue-top a word like a curse, Then, then shall I think, think of thee! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...JOHANNES AGRICOLA IN MEDITATION by ROBERT BROWNING CROSSING THE BAR by ALFRED TENNYSON THE BUOY-BELL by CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER THE NO-LONGER-MERRY ANCIENT MONARCH by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS A WOMAN'S SONNETS: 6 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT ON BOARD THE CUMBERLAND by GEORGE HENRY BOKER |