The Old Man grumbled, as with slippered steps He pattered after her, or as in dream He sadly chuckled at "the new Regime," Quoting fresh tidbits from Montaigne or Pepys On wives and women and old age. And I By the stern instinct of man's husbandhood, Now eager to contract with fame and good Beyond the home, would sometimes hurry by, When she would stop me: "Set the flower-pot, My lady, as you like, on stand or sill, -- But on my head I pray you set it not" -- (And yet that then she laughed is something still). And sometimes, too, she seemed the restless child, In her home-making, of vagrant fancies wild. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SICKNESS by CHARLES BUKOWSKI HYMN TO ADVERSITY by THOMAS GRAY NEARER by ROBERT MALISE BOWYER NICHOLS ABRAHAM LINCOLN (1) by RICHARD HENRY STODDARD THE BROOK: AUTUMN by LAURA ABELL A TURKISH LEGEND by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH IN VINCULIS; SONNETS WRITTEN IN AN IRISH PRISON: LIBERTY, EQUALITY ... by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT |