The Willow
Dorothy Parker
On sweet young earth where the myrtle presses, Long we lay, when the May was new; The willow was winding the moon in her tresses, The bud of the rose was told with dew. And now on the brittle ground I’m lying, Screaming to die with the dead year’s dead; The stem of the rose is black and drying, The willow is tossing the wind from her head.
Next 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : Theory
- Dorothy Parker : There Was One
- Dorothy Parker : They Part
- Dorothy Parker : Thomas Carlyle
- Dorothy Parker : Thought For A Sunshiny Morning
- Dorothy Parker : Threnody
- Dorothy Parker : To A Much Too Unfortunate Lady
- Dorothy Parker : To Newcastle
- Dorothy Parker : Tombstones In The Starlight
- Dorothy Parker : Transition
Previous 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : The White Lady
- Dorothy Parker : The Whistling Girl
- Dorothy Parker : The Veteran
- Dorothy Parker : The Trusting Heart
- Dorothy Parker : The Trifler
- Dorothy Parker : The Thin Edge
- Dorothy Parker : The Small Hours
- Dorothy Parker : The Second Oldest Story
- Dorothy Parker : The Searched Soul
- Dorothy Parker : The Sea