Public Domain Poetry And Stories - To The Portrait Of "A Gentleman" In The Athenieum Gallery by Oliver Wendell Holmes
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To The Portrait Of "A Gentleman" In The Athenieum Gallery

    By Oliver Wendell Holmes



    It may be so, - perhaps thou hast
    A warm and loving heart;
    I will not blame thee for thy face,
    Poor devil as thou art.

    That thing thou fondly deem'st a nose,
    Unsightly though it be, -
    In spite of all the cold world's scorn,
    It may be much to thee.

    Those eyes, - among thine elder friends
    Perhaps they pass for blue, -
    No matter, - if a man can see,
    What more have eyes to do?

    Thy mouth, - that fissure in thy face,
    By something like a chin, -
    May be a very useful place
    To put thy victual in.

    I know thou hast a wife at home,
    I know thou hast a child,
    By that subdued, domestic smile
    Upon thy features mild.

    That wife sits fearless by thy side,
    That cherub on thy knee;
    They do not shudder at thy looks,
    They do not shrink from thee.

    Above thy mantel is a hook, -
    A portrait once was there;
    It was thine only ornament, -
    Alas! that hook is bare.

    She begged thee not to let it go,
    She begged thee all in vain;
    She wept, - and breathed a trembling prayer
    To meet it safe again.

    It was a bitter sight to see
    That picture torn away;
    It was a solemn thought to think
    What all her friends would say!

    And often in her calmer hours,
    And in her happy dreams,
    Upon its long-deserted hook
    The absent portrait seems.

    Thy wretched infant turns his head
    In melancholy wise,
    And looks to meet the placid stare
    Of those unbending eyes.

    I never saw thee, lovely one, -
    Perchance I never may;
    It is not often that we cross
    Such people in our way;

    But if we meet in distant years,
    Or on some foreign shore,
    Sure I can take my Bible oath,
    I've seen that face before.



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