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While Yet We May

Ancient, wrinkled dames and jealous -
  They whom joyless Age downcasts -
And the sere, gray-bearded fellows
  Who would fain re—live their pasts—
These, the ancients, grimly tell us:
  ‘Vows are vain, and no love lasts.’
 
 
Fleeting years fulfil Fate’s sentence,
  Eyes must dim, and hair turn gray,
Age bring wrinkles, p’rhaps repentance;
  Youth shall quickly hie away,
And that time when youth has went hence,
  We– and love– have had our day.
 
 
Let the world, and fuming, fretting,
  Busy worldlings pass us by,
Bent on piles of lucre getting -
  They shall lose it when they die;
Past and future, sweet! forgetting -
  Seize the present ere it fly.
 
 
Your bright eyes are soft and smiling,
  Pouting lips are moist and red,
And your whispers wondrous wiling -
  Surely they would quick the dead -
And these hours they’re now beguiling,
  All too hasty will have fled.
 
 
Years may bring a dole of sorrow,
  Time enough to fast and pray,
From the present pleasures borrow,
  Let the distant future pay;
Leave the penance for the morrow,
  Sweetheart! love and laugh to-day.
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