Transition
Dorothy Parker
Too long and quickly have I lived to vow The woe that stretches me shall never wane, Too often seen the end of endless pain To swear that peace no more shall cool my brow. I know, I know—again the shriveled bough Will burgeon sweetly in the gentle rain, And these hard lands be quivering with grain— I tell you only: it is Winter now. What if I know, before the Summer goes Where dwelt this bitter frenzy shall be rest? What is it now, that June shall surely bring New promise, with the swallow and the rose? My heart is water, that I first must breast The terrible, slow loveliness of Spring.
Next 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : Two-volume Novel
- Dorothy Parker : Ultimatum
- Dorothy Parker : Unfortunate Coincidence
- Dorothy Parker : Vers Demode
- Dorothy Parker : Verse For A Certain Dog
- Dorothy Parker : Victoria
- Dorothy Parker : Wail
- Dorothy Parker : Walter Savage Landor
- Dorothy Parker : Wisdom
- Dorothy Parker : Words Of Comfort To Be Scratched On A Mirror
Previous 10 Poems
- Dorothy Parker : Tombstones In The Starlight
- Dorothy Parker : To Newcastle
- Dorothy Parker : To A Much Too Unfortunate Lady
- Dorothy Parker : Threnody
- Dorothy Parker : Thought For A Sunshiny Morning
- Dorothy Parker : Thomas Carlyle
- Dorothy Parker : They Part
- Dorothy Parker : There Was One
- Dorothy Parker : Theory
- Dorothy Parker : The Willow