TO YVETTE GUILBERT
That was Yvette. The blithe Ambassadeurs
Glitters, this Sunday of the Fête des Fleurs;
Here are the flowers, too, living flowers that blow
A night or two before the odours go;
And all the flowers of all the city ways
Are laughing, with Yvette, this day of days.
Laugh, with Yvette? But I must first forget,
Before I laugh, that I have heard Yvette.
For the flowers fade before her: see, the light
Dies out of that poor cheek, and leaves it white;
And a chill shiver takes me as she sings
The pity of unpitied human things;
A woe beyond all weeping, tears that trace
The very wrinkles of the last grimace.
At The Ambassadeurs
Arthur Symons
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Poem topics: city, light, night, poor, human, white, forget, sunday, Valentine's Day, laugh, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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At The Ambassadeurs is a poem by Arthur Symons. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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