The Little Book of Modern Verse; a selection from the work of contemporaneous American poets by Unknown
page 91 of 283 (32%)
page 91 of 283 (32%)
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Grieve not, Ladies. [Anna Hempstead Branch] Oh, grieve not, Ladies, if at night Ye wake to feel your beauty going. It was a web of frail delight, Inconstant as an April snowing. In other eyes, in other lands, In deep fair pools, new beauty lingers, But like spent water in your hands It runs from your reluctant fingers. Ye shall not keep the singing lark That owes to earlier skies its duty. Weep not to hear along the dark The sound of your departing beauty. The fine and anguished ear of night Is tuned to hear the smallest sorrow. Oh, wait until the morning light! It may not seem so gone to-morrow! But honey-pale and rosy-red! Brief lights that made a little shining! Beautiful looks about us shed -- They leave us to the old repining. |
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