Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Dell And I by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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Dell And I

    By Ella Wheeler Wilcox



        In a mansion grand, just over the way
        Lives bonny, beautiful Dell;
        You may have heard of this lady gay,
        For she is a famous belle.
        I live in a low cot opposite -
        You never have heard of me;
        For when the lady moon shines bright,
        Who would a pale star see?
    But ah, well! ah, well!    I am happier far than Dell,
        As strange as that may be.

        Dell has robes of the richest kind -
        Pinks and purples and blues;
        And she worries her maid and frets her mind
        To know which one to choose.
        Which shall it be now, silk or lace?
        In which will I be most fair?
        She stands by the mirror with anxious face,
        And her maid looks on in despair.
    Ah, well! ah, well!    I am not worried, you see, like Dell,
        For I have but one to wear.

        Dell has lovers of every grade,
        Of every age and style;
        Suitors flutter about the maid,
        And bask in her word and smile.
        She keeps them all, with a coquette's art,
        As suits her mood or mirth,
        And vainly wonders if in one heart
        Of all true love has birth.
    Ah, well! ah, well!    I never question myself like Dell,
        For I know a true heart's worth.

        Pleasure to Dell seems stale and old,
        Often she sits and sighs;
        Life to me is a tale untold,
        Each day is a glad surprise.
        Dell will marry, of course, some day,
        After her belleship is run;
        She will cavil the matter in worldly way
        And wed Dame Fortune's son
    But, ah, well! sweet to tell, I shall not dally and choose like Dell,
        For I love and am loved by - one.



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