When a maiden’s heart is tender, And her soul as pure as snow; When her eyes, with sunny splendor, Set her countenance aglow; When her every move discovers Newer graces without end, She can win a hundred lovers,— Yet may hunger for a friend. Pearly teeth and curly tresses, Ruby lips, in smiles that part, These will lure a man’s caresses, Easily enslave his heart; Yet, when all is said and over, Even though souls in passion blend, She has only one more lover, And may hunger for a friend. Blind I am not, no, nor callous; Beauty hath its charm for me. Yet would I, beyond life’s shallows, Push towards the depthless sea. Friendship’s true, and Love’s a rover, Love is selfish in the end. Choose thee, Sweet, whatever lover, Let me still remain thy friend. |