tableau vivant

August 29, 2006

For A Lady Who Must Write Verse – Dorothy parker

Filed under: P — by cerene @ 7:24 pm

    Unto seventy years and seven,
    Hide your double birthright well—
    You, that are the brat of Heaven
    And the pampered heir to Hell.

    Let your rhymes be tinsel treasures,
    Strung and seen and thrown aside.
    Drill your apt and docile measures
    Sternly as you drill your pride.

    Show your quick, alarming skill in
    Tidy mockeries of art;
    Never, never dip your quill in
    Ink that rushes from your heart.

    When your pain must come to paper,
    See it dust, before the day;
    Let your night-light curl and caper,
    Let it lick the words away.

    Never print, poor child, a lay on
    Love and tears and anguishing,
    Lest a cooled, benignant Phaon
    Murmur, “Silly little thing!”

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