They loved each other, in joy or grief: He was a sharper, and she, a thief. At each new tale of her lover's craft She fell on her pillow and gaily laughed. All day, they revelled with mirth and jest; All night, she slumbered upon his breast. They dragged him to jaillike a creature daft She stood at the window and gaily laughed. He wrote her a letter: "Oh! come to me: I sigh for thy presence; I pine for thee." She read each word of the ill-scrawled draft Then shook her head and still gaily laughed. At six, he was hanged in the sight of Heaven His body was flung in a ditch, at seven And at eight in the morning, his mistress quaffed A bumper of wine and still gaily laughed. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WHITE NOCTURNE by CONRAD AIKEN THE WAY OF THE CONVENTICLE OF THE TREES by HAYDEN CARRUTH CALLING DREAMS by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON TO W.E.B. DUBOIS - SCHOLAR by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON YOUR WORLD by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON GUNS AS KEYS: AND THE GREAT GATE SWINGS by AMY LOWELL |