For Anne Gregory
William Butler Yeats
"NEVER shall a young man, Thrown into despair By those great honey-coloured Ramparts at your ear, Love you for yourself alone And not your yellow hair.' "But I can get a hair-dye And set such colour there, Brown, or black, or carrot, That young men in despair May love me for myself alone And not my yellow hair.' "I heard an old religious man But yesternight declare That he had found a text to prove That only God, my dear, Could love you for yourself alone And not your yellow hair."
Next 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : Form The Green Helmet And Other Poems
- William Butler Yeats : Fragments
- William Butler Yeats : Friends
- William Butler Yeats : From A Full Moon In March
- William Butler Yeats : From The 'antigone'
- William Butler Yeats : Girl's Song
- William Butler Yeats : Gratitude To The Unknown Instructors
- William Butler Yeats : He Bids His Beloved Be At Peace
- William Butler Yeats : He Gives His Beloved Certain Rhymes
- William Butler Yeats : He Hears The Cry Of The Sedge
Previous 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : Fergus And The Druid
- William Butler Yeats : Father And Child
- William Butler Yeats : Fallen Majesty
- William Butler Yeats : Ephemera
- William Butler Yeats : Ego Dominus Tuus
- William Butler Yeats : Easter, 1916
- William Butler Yeats : Down By The Salley Gardens
- William Butler Yeats : Demon And Beast
- William Butler Yeats : Death
- William Butler Yeats : Cuchulan's Fight With The Sea