Ella Wheeler Wilcox (Элла Уилкокс)
The Belle’s Soliloquy
Heigh ho! well, the season's over! Once again we've come to Lent! Programme's changed from balls and parties-- Now we're ordered to repent. Forty days of self-denial! Tell you what I think it pays-- Know't'l freshen my complexion Going slow for forty days. No more savory French suppers-- Such as Madame R-- can give. Well, I need a little thinning-- Just a trifle--sure's you live! Sometimes been afraid my plumpness Might grow into downright fat. Rector urges need of fasting-- Think there's lot of truth in that. We must meditate, he tells us, On our several acts of sin. And repent them. Let me see now-- Whereabouts shall I begin! Flirting--yes, they say 'tis wicked; Well, I'm awful penitent. (Wonder if my handsome major Goes to early Mass through Lent?) Love of dress! I'm guilty there too-- Guess it's my besetting sin. Still I'm somewhat like the lilies, For I neither toil nor spin. Forty days I'll wear my plainest-- Could repentance be more true? What a saving on my dresses! They'll make over just like new. Pride, and worldliness and all that, Rector bade us pray about Every day through Lenten season, And I mean to be devout! Papa always talks retrenchment-- Lent is just the very thing. Hope he'll get enough in pocket So we'll move up town next spring.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox’s other poems: