THOUGH you are young, and I am old, Though your veins hot, and my blood cold, Though youth is moist, and age is dry; Yet embers live, when flames do die. The tender graft is easily broke, But who shall shake the sturdy oak? You are more fresh and fair than I; Yet stubs do live when flowers do die. Thou, that thy youth doth vainly boast, Know buds are soonest nipped with frost: Think that thy fortune still doth cry, 'Thou fool! to-morrow thou must die!' | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MY VOCATION by PIERRE JEAN DE BERANGER THE LONELY WALK by MATILDA BARBARA BETHAM-EDWARDS PSALM 19. [THE HEAVENS ABOVE AND THE LAW WITHIN] by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE FO'C'S'LE YARNS: 1ST SERIES. DEDICATION by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN SERAPH AND THE POET by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING RED COTTON NIGHT-CAP COUNTRY; OR, TURF AND TOWERS: PART 1 by ROBERT BROWNING THE LASS THAT MADE THE BED TO ME by ROBERT BURNS TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. THE WANDERING LUNATIC MIND by EDWARD CARPENTER |