The Choice
Dorothy Parker
He’d have given me rolling lands, Houses of marble, and billowing farms, Pearls, to trickle between my hands, Smoldering rubies, to circle my arms. You—you’d only a lilting song, Only a melody, happy and high, You were sudden and swift and strong— Never a thought for another had I. He’d have given me laces rare, Dresses that glimmered with frosty sheen, Shining ribbons to wrap my hair, Horses to draw me, as fine as a queen. You—you’d only to whistle low, Gayly I followed wherever you led. I took you, and I let him go— Somebody ought to examine my head!
Next 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : The Danger Of Writing Defiant Verse
- Dorothy Parker : The Dark Girl's Rhyme
- Dorothy Parker : The Dramatists
- Dorothy Parker : The Evening Primrose
- Dorothy Parker : The False Friends
- Dorothy Parker : The Flaw In Paganism
- Dorothy Parker : The Gentlest Lady
- Dorothy Parker : The Homebody
- Dorothy Parker : The Immortals
- Dorothy Parker : The Lady's Reward
Previous 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : The Burned Child
- Dorothy Parker : The Apple Tree
- Dorothy Parker : Testament
- Dorothy Parker : Temps Perdu
- Dorothy Parker : Symptom Recital
- Dorothy Parker : Sweet Violets
- Dorothy Parker : Surprise
- Dorothy Parker : Superfluous Advice
- Dorothy Parker : Summary
- Dorothy Parker : Story Of Mrs. W-