Читать книгу Impertinent Poems - Cooke Edmund Vance - Страница 4

DON'T YOU?

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When the plan which I have, to grow suddenly rich

Grows weary of leg and drops into the ditch,

And scheme follows scheme

Like the web of a dream

To glamor and glimmer and shimmer and seem…

Only seem;

And then, when the world looks unfadably blue,

If my rival sails by

With his head in the sky,

And sings "How is business?" why, what do I do?

Well, I claim that I aim to be honest and true,

But I sometimes lie. Don't you?


When something at home is decidedly wrong,

When somebody sings a false note in the song,

Too low or too high,

And, you hardly know why,

But it wrangles and jangles and runs all awry…

Aye, awry!

And then, at the moment when things are askew,

Some cousin sails in

With a face all a-grin,

And a "Do I intrude? Oh, I see that I do!"

Well, then, though I aim to be honest and true,

Still I sometimes lie. Don't you?


When a man whom I need has some foible or fad,

Not very commendable, not very bad;

Perhaps it's his daughter,

And some one has taught her

To daub up an "oil" or to streak up a "water";

What a "water"!

And her grass is green green and her sky is blue blue,

But her father, with pride,

In a stagey aside

Asks my "candid opinion." Then what do I do?

Well, I claim that I aim to be honest and true,

But I sometimes lie. Don't you?


Impertinent Poems

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