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Home  »  library  »  Song  »  Frank Dempster Sherman (1860–1916)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Frank Dempster Sherman (1860–1916)

Pepita

UP in her balcony where

Vines through the lattices run,

Spilling a scent on the air,

Setting a screen to the sun,

Fair as the morning is fair,

Sweet as a blossom is sweet,

Dwells in her rosy retreat

Pepita.

Often a glimpse of her face,

When the wind rustles the vine,

Parting the leaves for a space,

Gladdens this window of mine:

Pink in its leafy embrace,

Pink as a roseleaf is pink,

Sweet as a blossom I think

Pepita.

I who dwell over the way

Watch where Pepita is hid,

Safe from the glare of the day

Like an eye under its lid:

Over and over I say—

Name like the song of a bird,

Melody shut in a word—

“Pepita.”

Look where the little leaves stir!

Look, the green curtains are drawn!

There in a blossomy blur

Breaks a diminutive dawn—

Dawn and the pink face of her;

Name like the lisp of the South,

Fit for a rose’s small mouth,—

Pepita!