Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Snake. by Thomas Moore
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The Snake.

    By Thomas Moore



    My love and I, the other day,
    Within a myrtle arbor lay,
    When near us, from a rosy bed,
    A little Snake put forth its head.

    "See," said the maid with thoughtful eyes--
    "Yonder the fatal emblem lies!
    "Who could expect such hidden harm
    "Beneath the rose's smiling charm?"

    Never did grave remark occur
    Less à-propos than this from her.

    I rose to kill the snake, but she,
    Half-smiling, prayed it might not be.

    "No," said the maiden--and, alas,
        Her eyes spoke volumes, while she said it--
    "Long as the snake is in the grass,
        "One may, perhaps, have cause to dread it:
    "But, when its wicked eyes appear,
        "And when we know for what they wink so,
    "One must be very simple, dear,
        "To let it wound one--don't you think so?"



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