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A
Valentine to My Wife
by Eugene Field (1850-1895)
Accept, dear girl, this little token,
Our little ones are making merry
You are as fair and sweet and tender,
What though these years of ours be fleeting?
And when I fall before his reaping,
So take, dear love, this little token,
And if between the lines you seek,
You 'll find the love I 've often spoken---
The love my dying lips shall speak.
O'er am'rous ditties rhymed in jest,
But in these words (though awkward---very)
The genuine article 's expressed.
Dear brown-eyed little sweetheart mine,
As when, a callow youth and slender,
I asked to be your Valentine.
What though the years of youth be flown?
I 'll mock old Tempus with repeating,
"I love my love and her alone!"
And when my stuttering speech is dumb,
Think not my love is dead or sleeping,
But that it waits for you to come.
And if there speaks in any line
The sentiment I 'd fain have spoken,
Say, will you kiss your Valentine?
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