One fine morning, in a land full of mild-mannered folk, a man and woman, majestic in their bearing, stood on the public square. The man said, "Friends, I want her to be queen!" And the woman said, "I want to be queen!" She laughed and trembled. And the man told his friends of a revelation, of a test completed. Then they swooned into each other's arms, enraptured. And for one whole morning, as the draperies hung rubycolored from the houses, and for one whole afternoon, as they walked toward the garden of palms, they were truly kings. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...I LOVE ALL BEAUTEOUS THINGS by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES FORGIVENESS by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES FALSE FRIEND by GHALIB IBN RIBAH AL-HAJJAM THE VIKING by CLARIBEL WEEKS AVERY TO HIS WORSHIPFULL WEL-WILLER, MAISTER EDWARD LEIGH by RICHARD BARNFIELD DEDICATIONS AND INSCRIPTIONS: 8. BEAM-VERSES AT WELL KNOWE by GORDON BOTTOMLEY |