Maurine and Other Poems | Page 3

Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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MAURINE AND OTHER POEMS
by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Contents:
Maurine?All Roads that Lead to God are Good?Dust-sealed?"Advice"?Over the Banisters?The Past?Secrets?Applause?The Story?Lean Down?Life?The Christian's New Year Prayer?In the Night?God's Measure?A March Snow?Philosophy?"Carlos"?The Two Glasses?La Mort d'Amour?Love's Sleep?True Culture?The Voluptuary?The Coquette?If?Love's Burial?Lippo?"Love is Enough"?Life is Love
MAURINE
PART I
I sat and sewed, and sang some tender tune,?Oh, beauteous was that morn in early June!?Mellow with sunlight, and with blossoms fair:?The climbing rose-tree grew about me there,?And checked with shade the sunny portico?Where, morns like this, I came to read, or sew.
I heard the gate click, and a firm, quick tread?Upon the walk. No need to turn my head;?I would mistake, and doubt my own voice sounding,?Before his step upon the gravel bounding.?In an unstudied attitude of grace,?He stretched his comely form; and from his face?He tossed the dark, damp curls; and at my knees,?With his broad hat he fanned the lazy breeze,?And turned his head, and lifted his large eyes,?Of that strange hue we see in ocean dyes,?And call it blue sometimes and sometimes green,?And save in poet eyes, not elsewhere seen.?"Lest I should meet with my fair
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