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Poem by William Schwenck Gilbert


My Lady


Bedecked in fashion trim,
With every curl a-quiver;
Or leaping, light of limb,
O'er rivulet and river;
Or skipping o'er the lea
On daffodil and daisy;
Or stretched beneath a tree,
All languishing and lazy;
Whatever be her mood -
Be she demurely prude
Or languishingly lazy -
My lady drives me crazy!
In vain her heart is wooed,
Whatever be her mood!

What profit should I gain
Suppose she loved me dearly?
Her coldness turns my brain
To VERGE of madness merely.
Her kiss - though, Heaven knows,
To dream of it were treason -
Would tend, as I suppose,
To utter loss of reason!
My state is not amiss;
I would not have a kiss
Which, in or out of season,
Might tend to loss of reason:
What profit in such bliss?
A fig for such a kiss! 



William Schwenck Gilbert


William Schwenck Gilbert's other poems:
  1. The Bab Ballads. Sir Macklin
  2. The Bab Ballads. General John
  3. The Bab Ballads. Peter the Wag
  4. The Bab Ballads. To the Terrestrial Globe
  5. The Bab Ballads. Thomas Winterbottom Hance


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