Trespassers
Ellis Parker Butler
When Love and I drew softly nigh And gazed in modest Chloe’s eye We saw reflected there in part The lovely mansion of her heart, A sight so fair that, quite bereft Of sense and shame, we had but left One wish, that we by foul or fair Might enter in and tarry there. But when, with vagabondish art, We nearer crept to Chloe’s heart That we might steal therein, we found Her heart with barbed wires enwound; And crawling through those cruel rings My garments caught, Love caught his wings. And though we now would fain depart We twain are snared, outside her heart.
Next 10 Poems
- Ellis Parker Butler : Valentine To The Girl In Black
- Ellis Parker Butler : Western
- Ellis Parker Butler : When Ida Puts Her Armor On
- Ellis Parker Butler : Why I Went To The Foot
- Ellis Parker Butler : Why Washington Retreated
- Ellis Parker Butler : Womanly Qualms
- Ellis Parker Butler : Would You Believe It?
- George Gordon Lord Byron : A Fragment
- George Gordon Lord Byron : A Spirit Passed Before Me
- George Gordon Lord Byron : A Woman's Hair
Previous 10 Poems
- Ellis Parker Butler : To Phyllis And May
- Ellis Parker Butler : To May
- Ellis Parker Butler : To Marguerite
- Ellis Parker Butler : To Lovers
- Ellis Parker Butler : To Kate. ( In Lieu Of A Valentine )
- Ellis Parker Butler : To Jessica, Gone Back To The City
- Ellis Parker Butler : To G. M. W. And G. F. W.
- Ellis Parker Butler : The Wood Nymph
- Ellis Parker Butler : The Whale
- Ellis Parker Butler : The Water Nymphs