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Again Endorsing the Lady, II

I thought that I was wholly free,
That I had Love upon the shelf;
“Hereafter,” I declared in glee,
“I’ll have my evenings to myself.”
How can such mortal beauty live?
(Ah, Jove, thine errings I forgive!)
 
Her tresses pale the sunlight’s gold;
Her hands are featly formed and taper;
Her—well, the rest ought not be told
In any modest family paper.
Fair as Ischomache, and bright
As Brimo. Qu4ae2que queen is right.
 
O goddesses of long ago,
A shepherd called ye sweet and slender.
He saw ye, so he ought to know;
But sooth to her ye must surrender.
O may a million years not trace
A single line upon that face!
Other works by Franklin Pierce Adams...



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