Of A Woman Dead Young
If she had been beautiful, even,
Or wiser than women about her,
Or had moved with a certain defiance;
If she had had sons at her sides,
And she with her hands on their shoulders,
Sons, to make troubled the Gods-But where was there wonder in her?
What had she, better or eviler,
Whose days were a pattering of
From the pod to the bowl in her lap?
That the pine tree is blasted by lightning,
And the bowlder split raw from the mountain,
And the river dried short in its rushing-That I can know, and be humble.
But that They who have trodden the
Should turn from Their echoing
To trample a daisy,
In a meadow of small, open flowers-Where is Their triumph in that?
Where is Their pride, and Their vengeance?
Dorothy Parker
Other author posts
A Fairly Sad Tale
I think that I shall never Why I am thus, and I am so Around me, other girls In men the rush and roar of fire,
But Not Forgotten
I think, no matter where you stray, That I shall go with you a way Though you may wander sweeter lands, You will not soon forget my hands,
Interior
Her mind lives in a quiet room, A narrow room, and tall, With pretty lamps to quench the gloom And mottoes on the wall There all the things are waxen neat And set in decorous lines;
Fulfillment
For this my mother wrapped me warm, And called me home against the storm, And coaxed my infant nights to quiet, And gave me roughage in my diet,