THEN, as to her dresses, she kept in the attic a bevy of silkworms, and worked them emphatic at widening petals, and taking a seam in a gown that a spider had stitched in a dream; or at hemming a jacket of thistledown puff with an eyelash to tack it, when slender enough; or at using his whole skin, bequeathed by a gnat, to make her a moleskin to go with her hat. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MARIA WENTWORTH by THOMAS CAREW HEROIC LOVE by JAMES GRAHAM (1612-1650) THE NYMPH COMPLAINING FOR THE DEATH OF HER FAUN [OR, FAWN] by ANDREW MARVELL GATHERING SONG OF DONALD [OR, DONUI DHU] THE BLACK by WALTER SCOTT THE FIRST BREAK by ALEXANDER ANDERSON |