The Little Lady

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O The Little Lady's dainty
  As the picture in a book,
  And her hands are creamy-whiter
  Than the water-lilies look;
  Her laugh's the undrown'd music
  Of the maddest meadow-brook.--
  Yet all in vain I praise The Little Lady!

  Her eyes are blue and dewy
  As the glimmering Summer-dawn,--
  Her face is like the eglantine
  Before the dew is gone;
  And were that honied mouth of hers
  A bee's to feast upon,
  He'd be a bee bewildered, Little Lady!

  Her brow makes light look sallow;
  And the sunshine, I declare,
  Is but a yellow jealousy
  Awakened by her hair--
  For O the dazzling glint of it
  Nor sight nor soul can bear,--
  So Love goes groping for The Little Lady.

  And yet she's neither Nymph nor Fay,
  Nor yet of Angelkind:--
  She's but a racing school-girl, with
  Her hair blown out behind
  And tremblingly unbraided by
  The fingers of the Wind,
  As it wildly swoops upon The Little Lady.

© James Whitcomb Riley