Beauty
in trouble flees to the good angel
On whom she can rely
To pay her cab-fare, run a steaming bath,
Poultice her bruised eye;
Will not at first,
whether for shame or caution,
Her difficulty disclose;
Until he draws a cheque book from his plumage,
Asking her how much she owes;
(Breakfast in bed:
coffee and marmalade,
Toast, eggs, orange-juice,
After a long, sound sleep - the first since when? -
And no word of abuse.)
Loves him less
only than her saint-like mother,
Promises to repay
His loans and most seraphic thoughtfulness
A million-fold one day.
Beauty grows plump,
renews her broken courage
And, borrowing ink and pen,
Writes a news-letter to the evil angel
(Her first gay act since when?):
The fiend who beats,
betrays and sponges on her,
Persuades her white is black,
Flaunts vespertilian wing and cloven hoof;
And soon will fetch her back.
Virtue, good angel,
is its own reward:
Your dollars were well spent.
But would you to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediment?
Robert
Graves
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