Mother says, “Be in no hurry,
Marriage oft means care and worry.”
Auntie says, with manner grave,
“Wife is synonym for slave.”
Father asks, in tones commanding,
“How does Bradstreet rate his standing?”
Sister, crooning to her twins,
Sighs, “With marriage care begins.”
Grandma, near life’s closing days,
Murmurs, “Sweet are girlhood’s ways.”
Maud, twice widowed (“sod and grass”)
Looks at me and moans “Alas!”
They are six, and I am one,
Life for me has just begun.
They are older, calmer, wiser:
Age should aye be youth’s adviser.
They must know—and yet, dear me,
When in Harry’s eyes I see
All the world of love there burning—
On my six advisers turning,
I make answer, “Oh, but Harry,
Is not like most men who marry.
“Fate has offered me a prize,
Life with love means Paradise.
“Life without it is not worth
All the foolish joys of earth.”
So, in spite of all they say,
I shall name the wedding-day.
(Ella Wheeler Wilcox)
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Based on Topics: Love Poems, Life Poems, World Poems, Mothers Poems, Age Poems, Fool Poems, Slavery Poems, Sisters Poems, Marriage Poems, Twins Poems, Worry PoemsBased on Keywords: wedding-day, adviser, grandma, auntie, maud, synonym, know-and, bradstreet, advisers