'T WAS but a breath -- And yet the fair, good name was wilted; And friends once fond grew cold and stilted, And life was worse than death. One venomed word, That struck its coward, poisoned blow, In craven whispers, hushed and low -- And yet the wide world heard. 'T was but one whisper -- one, That muttered low, for very shame, The thing the slanderer dare not name -- And yet its work was done. A hint so slight, And yet so mighty in its power, A human soul in one short hour Lies crushed beneath its blight. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE BAD CHILD'S BOOK OF BEASTS: INTRODUCTION by HILAIRE BELLOC OFFERING by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON NOBODY'S LOOKIN' BUT DE OWL AND DE MOON (A NEGRO SERENADE) by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON AT NIGHT; SONNET by AMY LOWELL TWO POEMS FROM THE WAR: 2 by ARCHIBALD MACLEISH |