The Face of Love, by Frank L. Ludwig

The Face of Love

When Love came to my doorstep
to brighten up my days,
she let me have her body,
but did not show her face.   She was a ginger fairy,
a hazel Amazon,
she was a tall blonde goddess
who soon again was gone.   The raven-haired enchantress
became a nymphet fair:
her shape was ever changing,
her body and her hair.   But still she hid her beauty
behind a mask of stone;
I longed to see the features
no man has ever known.   'Oh let me see your face, Love,
that's all I dare to ask!' -
I gently stripped it off her
to find another mask.   She told me not to do this,
as I would hate the sight,
but I kept on removing
her masks all through the night.   'Oh let me see your face, Love,
that's all I dare to ask! ' -
I'd gently strip it off her
to find another mask.   As I took off the last one,
she turned away from me
before I looked behind it
and told me earnestly:   'For you it would be fatal
to see what you have done:
I have a thousand bodies,
but faces I have none.'

poems.one - Frank L. Ludwig

Frank L. Ludwig