C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
To Pépa
By Alfred de Musset (18101857)
P
And mamma has bid good-night,
By thy light, half-clad and dumb,
As thou kneelest out of sight;
Ere thou sinkest to repose,
At the hour when half at rest
Folds thy soul as folds a rose;
Peace to all the house has brought,—
Pépita! my charming child!
What, oh, what is then thy thought?
Of some lady doomed to sigh;
All that Hope a truth deems now,
All that Truth shall prove, a lie.
That produce—alas! but mice;
Castles in Spain; a prince’s hand;
Bon-bons, lovers, or cream-ice.
’Mid the mazes of a ball;
Robes, or flowers, or hair enwreathed;
Me;—or nothing, dear! at all.