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Poem by Dorothy Parker


A Portrait


Because my love is quick to come and go--
A little here, and then a little there--
What use are any words of mine to swear
My heart is stubborn, and my spirit slow
Of weathering the drip and drive of woe?
What is my oath, when you have but to bare
My little, easy loves; and I can dare
Only to shrug, and answer, "They are so"?

You do not know how heavy a heart it is
That hangs about my neck--a clumsy stone
Cut with a birth, a death, a bridal-day.
Each time I love, I find it still my own,
Who take it, now to that lad, now to this,
Seeking to give the wretched thing away.



Dorothy Parker


Dorothy Parker's other poems:
  1. Portrait of the Artist
  2. Chant for Dark Hours
  3. Inventory
  4. They Part
  5. The Immortals


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Edith Nesbit A Portrait ("LIKE the sway of the silver birch in the breeze of dawn")
  • Harriet Monroe A Portrait ("The little world span round and round")
  • Arthur Adams A Portrait ("HER glance is equable, serene")

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