Elegy 9: The AutumnalNo spring, nor summer beauty hath such grace,As I have seen in one autumnal face. Young beauties force your love, and that's a rape, If 'twere a shame to love, here 'twere no shame, Were her first years the Golden Age; that's true, That was her torrid and inflaming time, Fair eyes, who asks more heat than comes from hence, Call not these wrinkles, graves; if graves they were, Yet lies not Love dead here, but here doth sit And here, till hers, which must be his death, come, Here dwells he, though he sojourn everywhere, Here, where still evening is; not noon, nor night; In all her words, unto all hearers fit, This is Love's timber, youth his underwood; Which then comes seasonabliest, when our taste Xerxes' strange Lydian love, the platan tree, Or else because, being young, nature did bless If we love things long sought, age is a thing If transitory things, which soon decay, But name not winter-faces, whose skin's slack, Whose eyes seek light within, for all here's shade; Whose every tooth to a several place is gone, Name not these living death's-heads unto me, I hate extremes; yet I had rather stay Since such love's natural lation is, may still Not panting after growing beauties, so, |
John DONNE

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