Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
Nonfictions
 
Authors
All Titles
 






In Association with Amazon.com

Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of G. K. Chesterton > Text of Ballade D'une Grande Dame

A poem by G. K. Chesterton

Ballade D'une Grande Dame

________________________________________________
Title:     Ballade D'une Grande Dame
Author: G. K. Chesterton [More Titles by Chesterton]

Heaven shall forgive you Bridge at dawn,
The clothes you wear--or do not wear--
And Ladies' Leap-frog on the lawn
And dyes and drugs, and _petits verres._
Your vicious things shall melt in air ...
... But for the Virtuous Things you do,
The Righteous Work, the Public Care,
It shall not be forgiven you.

Because you could not even yawn
When your Committees would prepare
To have the teeth of paupers drawn,
Or strip the slums of Human Hair;
Because a Doctor Otto Maehr
Spoke of "a segregated few"--
And you sat smiling in your chair--
It shall not be forgiven you.

Though your sins cried to---Father Vaughan,
These desperate you could not spare
Who steal, with nothing left to pawn;
You caged a man up like a bear
For ever in a jailor's care
Because his sins were more than _two_ ...
... I know a house in Hoxton where
It shall not be forgiven you.

ENVOI

Princess, you trapped a guileless Mayor
To meet some people that you knew ...
When the Last Trumpet rends the air
It shall not be forgiven you.


[The end]
G K Chesterton's poem: Ballade D'une Grande Dame

________________________________________________



GO TO TOP OF SCREEN