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Poems and Ballads (second series)/Age and Song

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Previously printed (under the tentative title Barry Cornwall, and accompanied by a prose note) in The Pall Mall Gazette, October 20th, 1874, p. 11.

3767342Poems and Ballads (second series) — Age and SongAlgernon Charles Swinburne

AGE AND SONG.

(TO BARRY CORNWALL.)

i.

In vain men tell us time can alter

Old loves or make old memories falter,
That with the old year the old year's life closes.
The old dew still falls on the old sweet flowers,
The old sun revives the new-fledged hours,
The old summer rears the new-born roses.

ii.

Much more a Muse that bears upon her

Raiment and wreath and flower of honour,
Gathered long since and long since woven,
Fades not or falls as fall the vernal
Blossoms that bear no fruit eternal,
By summer or winter charred or cloven.

iii.

No time casts down, no time upraises,

Such loves, such memories, and such praises,
As need no grace of sun or shower,
No saving screen from frost or thunder,
To tend and house around and under
The imperishable and fearless flower.

iv.

Old thanks, old thoughts, old aspirations,

Outlive men's lives and lives of nations,
Dead, but for one thing which survives—
The inalienable and unpriced treasure,
The old joy of power, the old pride of pleasure,
That lives in light above men's lives.