August
Dorothy Parker
When my eyes are weeds, And my lips are petals, spinning Down the wind that has beginning Where the crumpled beeches start In a fringe of salty reeds; When my arms are elder-bushes, And the rangy lilac pushes Upward, upward through my heart; Summer, do your worst! Light your tinsel moon, and call on Your performing stars to fall on Headlong through your paper sky; Nevermore shall I be cursed By a flushed and amorous slattern, With her dusty laces’ pattern Trailing, as she straggles by.
Next 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : Autobiography
- Dorothy Parker : Autumn Valentine
- Dorothy Parker : Ballade At Thirty-five
- Dorothy Parker : Ballade Of A Great Weariness
- Dorothy Parker : Ballade Of A Talked-off Ear
- Dorothy Parker : Ballade Of Unfortunate Mammals
- Dorothy Parker : Bohemia
- Dorothy Parker : Braggart
- Dorothy Parker : Bric-a-brac
- Dorothy Parker : But Not Forgotten
Previous 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : Anecdote
- Dorothy Parker : Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- Dorothy Parker : Alexandre Dumas And His Son
- Dorothy Parker : Afternoon
- Dorothy Parker : After Spanish Proverb
- Dorothy Parker : A Well-worn Story
- Dorothy Parker : A Very Short Song
- Dorothy Parker : A Portrait
- Dorothy Parker : A Pig's-eye View Of Literature
- Dorothy Parker : A Fairly Sad Tale