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The Woman That You Pass By

Topics: classic

My trade was old when the world was new,         Ere the pyramids rose by the Nile     Men quitted their wives, and gave me their goods         For the warmth of my kiss, and my smile.     For never was wife who could hold her man         By the honeymoon's afterglow     Did I veil mine eyes and beckon to him,         God's truth, and 'tis you who know.     My trade was old when the world was new,         Long ere Caesar ruled in Rome,     To spend their gold in a harlot's cell         Patricians quitted home.     And high born dames since the world began         Have learned to sit and to sigh     And to patiently wait for their lords to leave         The woman that you pass by.     I'm only a pawn in the game called life,         Yet I take what you never could hold;     I garner the kisses you'd barter life for         And with them, I gather your gold.     I garner the best of your manhood's prime         Then quit them when shattered in health;     I bring to heel the ones that you love         And smiling I shear them of wealth.     To garner the wealth that you hold in store         I must keep me surpassing fair,     For the life that I lead is an open book         And the game that I deal is square.     Stop--think of the maids and wives you know         As you drift thru life's subtle game--     How many are dealing as straight as I?         How many can say the same?     You give your all, and you slave your life         In a struggle to hold one man;     You think you're paid if he call you wife         And be true to you for a span.     You keep his house and you bear his child         And you walk with your head held high     But most of his love, and his kisses go         To the woman that you pass by.     The favors you give, I sell for gold,         And men prize what costs them high;     You never will learn that love goes out         With the tear in a woman's eye;     That the patient drudge who sits at home         And learns to save and to mend     Can never hold the light of love         But is doomed to lose in the end.     So I follow the old dishonored trade,         Bedecked in garments fine,     And the cream of the earth is saved for me         In raiment and food and wine.     And life to me is a merry game         Tho, sometimes, I weep and sigh,     For deep down in your heart, do you envy me         The woman that you pass by?

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"My trade was old when the world was new,..."

Pat O'Cotter's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "The Woman That You Pass By"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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