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An Excuse For Lalage

By Eugene Field

Topics: classic

To bear the yoke not yet your love's submissive neck is bent,     To share a husband's toil, or grasp his amorous intent;     Over the fields, in cooling streams, the heifer longs to go,     Now with the calves disporting where the pussy-willows grow.     Give up your thirst for unripe grapes, and, trust me, you shall learn     How quickly in the autumn time to purple they will turn.     Soon she will follow you, for age steals swiftly on the maid;     And all the precious years that you have lost she will have paid.     Soon she will seek a lord, beloved as Pholoe, the coy,     Or Chloris, or young Gyges, that deceitful, girlish boy,     Whom, if you placed among the girls, and loosed his flowing locks,     The wondering guests could not decide which one decorum shocks.

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"To bear the yoke not yet your love's submissive neck is bent,..."

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Author:Eugene Field

"To bear the yoke not yet your love's submissive ne..." by Eugene Field

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Eugene Field

About Eugene Field

Eugene Field (1850–1895) was an American writer and poet known as the "children's poet." His poems "Wynken, Blynken, and Nod" and "Little Boy Blue" are cherished classics of American children's literature.

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