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Poems (Piatt)/Volume 2/The Queen of Spain

From Wikisource
Poems
by Sarah Piatt
The Queen of Spain
4618820Poems — The Queen of SpainSarah Piatt
THE QUEEN OF SPAIN.[1]
Ah, then she was a bride, a king's bride, too(With crimson velvet mantles lit with gold),And beautiful? Those fairy-tales are trueThat end in sorrow, somewhere we are told.And so you envied her? Tell me, I pray,How fares the Queen of Spain to-day?
Oh, now you only pity her? I see.Almost with tears you pity her—and why?Death is the saddest thing of all—and sheIs dead? Therefore—she will not have to dieNor have to live, for life itself may proveNot quite too sweet, for all of love.
You envied her what time the priest who bentTo bless the bridal might have seen in airHis own ghost holding the Last SacramentTo her loth lips, and weirdly waiting there. They hunger not who taste that pleasant bread.Poor child, what is it to be dead?
Oh, some who envied not her pearls and trains,Her Spanish lover and her Spanish crown,Do envy her the one thing that remainsTo those who keep their hollow hands shut down;For whether that one thing in truth be rest,Or Paradise, it is the best.
  1. Mercedes, who dies in 1878.