TAKING my walk the other day, I saw a little girl at play, So pretty, 'twould not be amiss, Thought I, to venture on a kiss. Fiercely the little girl began "I wonder at you, nasty man!" And all four fingers were applied, And crimson pinafore beside, To wipe what venom might remain; "Do if you dare the like again; I have a mind to teach you better," And I too had a mind to let her. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE PASSIONATE SHEPHERD: PASTORAL 3. THE HAPPY COUNTRYMAN by NICHOLAS BRETON THE ADMIRER by CLAUDIA EMERSON FUZZY-WUZZY' (SOUDAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE) by RUDYARD KIPLING LINES; SUGGESTED BY GRAVES TWO ENGLISH SOLDIERS ON CONCORD by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL THE FALL OF RICHMOND [APRIL, 1865] by HERMAN MELVILLE THE PILGRIM FATHERS by JOHN PIERPONT FROM A YOUNG WOMAN TO AN OLD OFFICER WHO COURTED HER by ELIZABETH FRANCES AMHERST |