| |
| I GO to concert, party, ball | |
| What profit is in these? | |
| I sit alone against the wall | |
| And strive to look at ease. | |
| The incense that is mine by right | 5 |
| They burn before Her shrine; | |
| And thats because Im seventeen | |
| And she is forty-nine. | |
| |
| I cannot check my girlish blush, | |
| My colour comes and goes. | 10 |
| I redden to my finger-tips, | |
| And sometimes to my nose. | |
| But She is white where white should be, | |
| And red where red should shine. | |
| The blush that flies at seventeen | 15 |
| Is fixed at forty-nine. | |
| |
| I wish I had her constant cheek: | |
| I wish that I could sing | |
| All sorts of funny little songs, | |
| Not quite the proper thing. | 20 |
| Im very gauche and very shy, | |
| Her jokes arent in my line; | |
| And, worst of all, Im seventeen | |
| While She is forty-nine. | |
| |
| The young men come, the young men go, | 25 |
| Each pink and white and neat, | |
| Shes older than their mothers, but | |
| They grovel at Her feet. | |
| They walk beside Her rickshaw-wheels | |
| None ever walk by mine; | 30 |
| And thats because Im seventeen | |
| And She is forty-nine. | |
| |
| She rides with half a dozen men | |
| (She calls them boys and mashes), | |
| I trot along the Mall alone; | 35 |
| My prettiest frocks and sashes | |
| Dont help to fill my programme-card, | |
| And vainly I repine | |
| From ten to two A.M. Ah me! | |
| Would I were forty-nine. | 40 |
| |
| She calls me darling, pet, and dear, | |
| And sweet retiring maid. | |
| Im always at the back, I know | |
| She puts me in the shade. | |
| She introduces me to men | 45 |
| Cast lovers, I opine; | |
| For sixty takes to seventeen, | |
| Nineteen to forty-nine. | |
| |
| But even She must older grow | |
| And end Her dancing days, | 50 |
| She cant go on for ever so | |
| At concerts, balls, and plays. | |
| One ray of priceless hope I see | |
| Before my footsteps shine; | |
| Just think, that Shell be eighty-one | 55 |
| When I am forty-nine! | |
| |