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Home  »  The World’s Best Poetry  »  Fortune

Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.

Poems of Sentiment: II. Life

Fortune

Fitz-Greene Halleck (1790–1867)

From “Fanny”

BUT Fortune, like some others of her sex,

Delights in tantalizing and tormenting.

One day we feed upon their smiles,—the next

Is spent in swearing, sorrowing, and repenting.

*****

Eve never walked in Paradise more pure

Than on that morn when Satan played the devil

With her and all her race. A lovesick wooer

Ne’er asked a kinder maiden, or more civil,

Than Cleopatra was to Antony

The day she left him on the Ionian sea.

The serpent—loveliest in his coilèd ring,

With eye that charms, and beauty that outvies

The tints of the rainbow—bears upon his sting

The deadliest venom. Ere the dolphin dies

Its hues are brightest. Like an infant’s breath

Are tropic winds before the voice of death

Is heard upon the waters, summoning

The midnight earthquake from its sleep of years

To do its task of woe. The clouds that fling

The lightning brighten ere the bolt appears;

The pantings of the warrior’s heart are proud

Upon that battle-morn whose night-dews wet his shroud;

The sun is loveliest as he sinks to rest;

The leaves of autumn smile when fading fast;

The swan’s last song is sweetest.