| Poems by Women |
"GRIEVE NOT, LADIES"
Oh, grieve not, Ladies, if at night
Ye wake to feel your beauty
going;
It was a web of frail delight,
Inconstant as an April snowing.
In other eyes, in other lands,
In deep fair pools new beauty
lingers;
But like spent water in your hands
It runs from your reluctant
fingers.
You shall not keep the singing lark
That owes to earlier skies its
duty.
Weep not to hear along the dark
The sound of your departing
beauty.
The fine and anguished ear of night
Is tuned to hear the smallest
sorrow:
Oh, wait until the morning light!
It may not seem so gone
to-morrow.
But honey-pale and rosy-red!
Brief lights that make a little
shining!
Beautiful looks about us shed -
They leave us to the old
repining.
Think not the watchful, dim despair
Has come to you the first,
sweet-hearted!
For oh, the gold in Helen's hair!
And how she cried when
that departed!
Perhaps that one that took the most,
The swiftest borrower, wildest
spender,
May count, as we would not, the cost -
And grow more true to us
and tender.
Happy are we if in his eyes
We see no shadow of forgetting.
Nay - if
our star sinks in those skies
We shall not wholly see its setting.
Then let us laugh as do the brooks,
That such immortal youth is
ours,
If memory keeps for them our looks
As fresh as are the springtime
flowers.
So grieve not, Ladies, if at night
Ye wake to feel the cold
December!
Rather recall the early light,
And in your loved one's arms,
remember.
From: Stevenson, Burton Egbert.
The Home Book of Verse.
This poet:
[Author index]
This collection assembled by Jone Johnson Lewis.
Collection © 1999-2002 Jone Johnson Lewis.
Citing poems from these pages:
| Author. "Poem Title." Women's History: Poems by Women. Jone Johnson Lewis, editor. URL: (date of logon) |

