Thou see’st yon woman with the grave pelisse
Lined with dark sables? Is she not devout?
Her soul is in the service, and her eyes
Are dim with weeping,–weeping for the follies
Of a misguided youth; thus saith the world,
But I, who know her ladyship, know this:
She weeps that youth itself, and the lost triumphs
Which followed in its train; the scores of lovers
Dead now, or married off; the rout, the joust,
The sweet flirtations, merry carnivals,
And–(oh! supremest memory of all!)–
The banded serenaders ‘neath the lattice,
Lifting the voice of passion in the night:
And one among the minstrels loved her well,
But him she laughed to scorn, his heart was riven;
She trampled on the purest pearl of love,
And cast it to the dogs; well, God is just!
She scorned his sacred gift, and so must walk,
Henceforth a lonely woman on the earth!
(Paul Hamilton Hayne)
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Based on Topics: Love Poems, God Poems, World Poems, Night Poems, Soul Poems, Youth Poems, Charity Poems, Passion Poems, Dogs Poems, Service PoemsBased on Keywords: joust, sables, ladyship, carnivals, flirtations, and-oh, pelisse, serenaders
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