She craved the boon so sweetly
    That I had been a churl
Had I repulsed the homage
    Of this gentle, timid girl;
With bright illuminations
    I decked the manuscript,
And in my choicest paints and inks
    My brush and pen I dipt.
Indeed it had been tedious
    But that a flattering smile
Played on my rugged features
    And eased my toil the while.
I was assured my poem
    Would fill her with delight —
I fancied she was pretty —
    I knew that she was bright!
And for a spell thereafter
    That unknown damsel’s face
With its worshipful expression
    Pursued me every place;
Meseemed to hear her whisper:
    “O, thank you, gifted sir,
For the overwhelming honor
    You so graciously confer!”
But a catalogue from Benjamin’s
    Disproves what things meseemed —
Dispels with savage certainty
    The flattering dreams I dreamed;
For that poor “favorite poem,”
    Done and signed in autograph,
Is listed in “Cheap Items”
    At a dollar-and-a-half.