TIME'S eldest son, old age, the heir of ease, Strength's foe, Love's woe, And foster to devotion, Bids gallant youths in marshall prowess please, As for himself, he hath no earthly motion, But thinks, sighs, tears, vows, prayers, and sacrifices, As good as shows masks, justes, or tilt devices. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ARCADIA: SESTINA by PHILIP SIDNEY TO THE MOCKINGBIRD by RICHARD HENRY WILDE CIRCUS AT NIGHT by MADELEINE AARON THE RUSSIAN STUDENT'S TALE by MATHILDE BLIND THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 34. REMINDING HER OF A PROMISE (1) by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT TO DAMON by JANE (HUGHES) BRERETON HIS MOTHER'S FACE by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING ON STIRLING; SEEING THE ROYAL PALACE IN RUIN by ROBERT BURNS |