COME, let us be the willing fools Of April's earliest day, And dream we own all pleasant things The years have reft away. 'T is but to take the poet's wand, A touch or here or there, And I have lost that ancient stoop, And you are young and fair. Ah, no! The years that gave and took Have left with you and me The wisdom of the widening stream; Trust we the larger sea. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH: A DREAM OF PONCE DE LEON by HEZEKIAH BUTTERWORTH THE BAT by CHARLES LUTWIDGE DODGSON THE WAY THROUGH THE WOODS by RUDYARD KIPLING NATURAL HISTORY by MOTHER GOOSE THE POET'S SONG FOR HIS WIFE by BRYAN WALLER PROCTER LOVE SONG by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS |