SONG OF THE WILDERNESS


We'll go out to the open spaces,
Break the web of the morning mist,
Feel the wind on our upflung faces.
[This, of course, is if you insist.]
We'll go out in the golden season,
Brave-eyed, gaze at the sun o'erhead.
[Can't you listen, my love to reason?
Don't you know my nose gets red?]
Where the water falls, always louder,
Deep we'll dive, in the chuckling foam.
[I'll go big without rouge and powder!
Why on earth don't you leave me at home?]

We'll go out where the winds are playing,
Roam the ways of the brilliant West.
[I was never designed for straying;
In a taxi I'm at my best.]
Minds blown clean of the thoughts that rankle,
Far we'll stray where the grasses swirl.
[I'll be certain to turn my ankle;
Can't you dig up another girl?]
We'll go out where the light comes falling--
Bars of amber and rose and green.
[Go, my love, if the West is calling!
Leave me home with my magazine!]

by Dorothy Parker





BACK TO DOROTHY PARKER's POEMS

BACK TO POETRY PAGES

HOMEPAGE