Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
Humorous Poems: IV. Ingenuities: OdditiesOn the Brink
Charles Stuart Calverley (18311884)I
A wild flower in her hair to twine;
And wished that it had been my luck
To call her mine;
Mad words her babe within its cot,
And felt particularly glad
That it had not.
That she was uttering what she shouldn’t;
And thought that I would chide, and then
I thought I wouldn’t.
Those pouting coral lips, and chided:
A Rhadamanthus, in my place,
Had done as I did.
Is chained there oft by Beauty’s spell;
And, more than that, I did not know
The widow well.
Still mute—(O brothers, was it sin?)—
I drank unutterably moved,
Her beauty in.
As on her upturned face and dress
The moonlight fell, “Would she say No,—
By chance, or Yes?”
Betwixt me and that magic moon,
That I already was almost
A finished coon.
And soothed with smiles her little daughter;
And gave it, if I ’m right, a sup
Of barley-water;
Which only mothers’ tongues can utter,
Snowed with deft hand the sugar o’er
Its bread-and-butter;
Don’t women do these things in private?)—
I felt that if I lost her, I
Should not survive it.
The past, the future, I forgat ’em,—
“Oh, if you ’d kiss me as you do
That thankless atom!”
And froze the sentence on my lips:
“They err who marry wives that make
Those little slips.”
Some copy to my boyhood set;
And that ’s perhaps the reason I ’m
Unmarried yet.
And told her love with widow’s pride?
I never found out that, because
I never tried.
Hearts may be hard though lips are coral;
And angry words are angry words:
And that ’s the moral.