Recurrence
Dorothy Parker
We shall have our little day. Take my hand and travel still Round and round the little way, Up and down the little hill. It is good to love again; Scan the renovated skies, Dip and drive the idling pen, Sweetly tint the paling lies. Trace the dripping, pierced heart, Speak the fair, insistent verse, Vow to God, and slip apart, Little better, Little worse. Would we need not know before How shall end this prettiness; One of us must love the more, One of us shall love the less. Thus it is, and so it goes; We shall have our day, my dear. Where, unwilling, dies the rose Buds the new, another year.
Next 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : Renunciation
- Dorothy Parker : Requiescat
- Dorothy Parker : Resume
- Dorothy Parker : Reuben's Children
- Dorothy Parker : Rhyme Against Living
- Dorothy Parker : Rondeau Redouble
- Dorothy Parker : Roundel
- Dorothy Parker : Salome's Dancing-lesson
- Dorothy Parker : Sanctuary
- Dorothy Parker : Second Love
Previous 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : Rainy Night
- Dorothy Parker : Purposely Ungrammatical Love Song
- Dorothy Parker : Prophetic Soul
- Dorothy Parker : Prologue To A Saga
- Dorothy Parker : Prisoner
- Dorothy Parker : Prayer For A Prayer
- Dorothy Parker : Prayer For A New Mother
- Dorothy Parker : Pour Prendre Conge
- Dorothy Parker : Post-graduate
- Dorothy Parker : Portrait Of The Artist