Page:The poems of Emma Lazarus volume 1.djvu/243

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE SPAGNOLETTO.
229

Flung loosely back, and rippling unconfined
In shadowy magnificence below
The slim gold girdle o er the snow-soft gown.
Vested and draped in close-woven stuff of white,
With gold about her throat and waist and wrists,
A stately lily ere the dew of morn
Hath passed away—such was thy mother, child.

MARIA.

"Would I were like her! But what said she, father?
How did she plead for you?

RIBERA.

Ah, cunning child,
I see thy tricks; thou humorest my age,
Knowing how much I love to tell this tale,
Though thou hast heard it half a hundred times.

MARIA.

I find it sweet to hear as you to tell,
Believe me, father.

RIBERA.

’T was to pleasure her,
Signor Cortese gave me all I lacked
To prove my unfamed skill. A savage pride,
Matched oddly with my rags, the haughtiness
Wherewith I claimed rather than begged my tools,