SHE saw herself a lady With fifty frocks in wear, And rolling wheels, and rooms the best, And faithful maidens' care, And open lawns and shady For weathers warm or drear. She found herself a striver, All liberal gifts debarred, With days of gloom, and movements stressed, And early visions marred, And got no man to wive her But one whose lot was hard. Yet in the moony night-time She steals to stile and lea During his heavy slumberous rest When homecome wearily, And dreams of some blest bright-time She knows can never be. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TOMMY [ATKINS] by RUDYARD KIPLING BLACK AND BLUE EYES by THOMAS MOORE JOHN PELHAM by JAMES RYDER RANDALL A LITTLE PARABLE by ANNE REEVE ALDRICH TO THE KING OF THULE by HENRI ALLORGE PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 35. AL-GHAFIR by EDWIN ARNOLD |