Page:The Collected Poems of Dora Sigerson Shorter.djvu/100

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A BALLAD OF MARJORIE
81


“What said he, that you seem so sad,
O fisher of the sea?
(Alack! I know it was my love,
Who fain would speak to me!)”

“He said, ‘Beware a woman's mouth—
A rose that bears a thorn.’”
“Ah, me I these lips shall smile no more
That gave my lover scorn.”

“He said, ‘Beware a woman's eyes.
They pierce you with their death.’ ”
“Then falling tears shall make them blind
That robbed my dear of breath.”

“He said, ‘Beware a woman's hair—
A serpent's coil of gold.’”
“Then will I shear the cruel locks
That crushed him in their fold.”

“He said, ‘Beware a woman's heart
As you would shun the reef.’”
“So let it break within my breast,
And perish of my grief.”

“He raised his hands: a woman's name
Thrice bitterly he cried:
My net had parted with the strain;
He vanished in the tide.”

“A woman's name! What name but mine,
O fisher of the sea?”
“A woman's name, but not your name,
Poor maiden Marjorie.”

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