A Model For The Laureate
William Butler Yeats
ON thrones from China to Peru All sorts of kings have sat That men and women of all sorts proclaimed both good and great; And what's the odds if such as these For reason of the State Should keep their lovers waiting, Keep their lovers waiting? Some boast of beggar-kings and kings Of rascals black and white That rule because a strong right arm Puts all men in a fright, And drunk or sober live at ease Where none gainsay their right, And keep their lovers waiting, Keep their lovers waiting. The Muse is mute when public men Applaud a modern throne: Those cheers that can be bought or sold, That office fools have run, That waxen seal, that signature. For things like these what decent man Would keep his lover waiting, Keep his lover waiting?
Next 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : A Nativity
- William Butler Yeats : A Poet To His Beloved
- William Butler Yeats : A Prayer For My Daughter
- William Butler Yeats : A Prayer For My Son
- William Butler Yeats : A Prayer For Old Age
- William Butler Yeats : A Prayer On Going Into My House
- William Butler Yeats : A Song
- William Butler Yeats : A Song From The Player Queen
- William Butler Yeats : A Statesman's Holiday
- William Butler Yeats : A Stick Of Incense
Previous 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : A Memory Of Youth
- William Butler Yeats : A Meditation In Time Of War
- William Butler Yeats : A Man Young And Old: Xi. From Oedipus At Colonus
- William Butler Yeats : A Man Young And Old: X. His Wildness
- William Butler Yeats : A Man Young And Old: Viii. Summer And Spring
- William Butler Yeats : A Man Young And Old: Vii. The Friends Of His Youth
- William Butler Yeats : A Man Young And Old: Vi. His Memories
- William Butler Yeats : A Man Young And Old: V. The Empty Cup
- William Butler Yeats : A Man Young And Old: Ix. The Secrets Of The Old
- William Butler Yeats : A Man Young And Old: Iv. The Death Of The Hare