I WANTED you to come to-day— Or so I told you in my letter— And yet, if you had stayed away, I should have liked you so much better. I should have sipped my tea unseen, And thrilled at every door-bell’s pealing, And thought how nice I could have been Had you evinced a little feeling. I should have guessed you drinking tea With someone whom you loved to madness; I should have thought you cold to me, And revelled in a depth of sadness. But, no! you came without delay— I could not feel myself neglected: You said the things you always say, In ways not wholly unexpected. If you had let me wait in vain, We should, in my imagination, Have held, what we did not attain, Had you not come, I should have known At least a vague anticipation, Instead of which, I grieve to own, You did not give me one sensation. Caroline and Alice Duer. |