MARCIA

By Edgar Lee Masters

Madeline's hair is straight and yours

Is just as curly as tendril vines;

And she is fair, but a deeper color

Your cheeks of olive incarnadines.

A serious wisdom burns and glows

Steadily in your dark-eyed look.

Already a wit and a little stoic —

Perhaps you are going to write a book,

Or paint a picture, or sing or act

The part of Katherine or Juliet.

I believe you were born with the gift of knowing

When to remember and when to forget.

And when to stifle and kill a grief,

And clutch your heart when it beats in vain.

The heart that has most strength for feeling

Must have the strength to conquer the pain.

You understand? It seems that you do —

Though you cannot utter a word to me.

Marcia, Marcia, look at Madeline

Building a doll-house under the tree!