I SEE her in the festal warmth to-night, Her rest all grace, her motion all delight. Endowed with all the woman's arts that please, In her soft gown she seems a thing of ease, Whom sorrow may not reach or evil blight. To-morrow she will toil from floor to floor To smile upon the unreplying poor, To stay the tears of widows, and to be Confessor to men's erring hearts ... ah me! She knows not I am beggar at her door. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THREE GATES [OF GOLD] by ELIZABETH DAYTON RELIGION by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR SEVEN TIMES ONE [- CHILDHOOD. EXULTATION] by JEAN INGELOW THE NEW TIMON AND THE POETS by ALFRED TENNYSON MY BEAUTIFUL LADY by THOMAS WOOLNER THE ROSE TREE by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS TO AN ISLE IN THE WATER by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS IN WILTSHIRE; SUGGESTED BY POINTS OF SIMILARITY WITH THE SOMME COUNTRY by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN |