The Immortals
Dorothy Parker
If you should sail for Trebizond, or die, Or cry another name in your first sleep, Or see me board a train, and fail to sigh, Appropriately, I’d clutch my breast and weep. And you, if I should wander through the door, Or sin, or seek a nunnery, or save My lips and give my cheek, would tread the floor And aptly mention poison and the grave. Therefore the mooning world is gratified, Quoting how prettily we sigh and swear; And you and I, correctly side by side, Shall live as lovers when our bones are bare And though we lie forever enemies, Shall rank with Abelard and Heloise.
Next 10 Poems
- 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
- Dorothy Parker : The New Love
- Dorothy Parker : The Red Dress
- Dorothy Parker : The Satin Dress
- Dorothy Parker : The Sea
- Dorothy Parker : The Searched Soul
Previous 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : The Homebody
- Dorothy Parker : The Gentlest Lady
- Dorothy Parker : The Flaw In Paganism
- Dorothy Parker : The False Friends
- Dorothy Parker : The Evening Primrose
- 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