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Dorothy Parker - Rainy NightDorothy Parker - Rainy Night
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Ghosts of all my lovely sins,  Who attend too well my pillow, Gay the wanton rain begins;  Hide the limp and tearful willow. Turn aside your eyes and ears,  Trail away your robes of sorrow, You shall have my further years-  You shall walk with me tomorrow. I am sister to the rain;  Fey and sudden and unholy, Petulant at the windowpane,  Quickly lost, remembered slowly. I have lived with shades, a shade;  I am hung with graveyard flowers. Let me be tonight arrayed  In the silver of the showers. Every fragile thing shall rust;  When another April passes I may be a furry dust,  Sifting through the brittle grasses. All sweet sins shall be forgot;  Who will live to tell their siring? Hear me now, nor let me rot  Wistful still, and still aspiring. Ghosts of dear temptations, heed;  I am frail, be you forgiving. See you not that I have need  To be living with the living? Sail, tonight, the Styx`s breast;  Glide among the dim processions Of the exquisite unblest,  Spirits of my shared transgressions, Roam with young Persephone.  Plucking poppies for your slumber . . . With the morrow, there shall be  One more wraith among your number.
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