The Evening Primrose
Dorothy Parker
You know the bloom, unearthly white, That none has seen by morning light— The tender moon, alone, may bare Its beauty to the secret air. Who’d venture past its dark retreat Must kneel, for holy things and sweet, That blossom, mystically blown, No man may gather for his own Nor touch it, lest it droop and fall…. Oh, I am not like that at all!
Next 10 Poems
- 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
- Dorothy Parker : The Last Question
- Dorothy Parker : The Leal
- Dorothy Parker : The Little Old Lady In Lavender Silk
- Dorothy Parker : The Maid-servant At The Inn
Previous 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : The Dramatists
- Dorothy Parker : The Dark Girl's Rhyme
- Dorothy Parker : The Danger Of Writing Defiant Verse
- Dorothy Parker : The Choice
- 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