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Home  »  The World’s Best Poetry  »  The Old Man Dreams

Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.

VIII. Wedded Love

The Old Man Dreams

Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809–1894)

O FOR one hour of youthful joy!

Give back my twentieth spring!

I ’d rather laugh a bright-haired boy

Than reign a gray-beard king!

Off with the spoils of wrinkled age!

Away with learning’s crown!

Tear out life’s wisdom-written page,

And dash its trophies down!

One moment let my life-blood stream

From boyhood’s fount of flame!

Give me one giddy, reeling dream

Of life all love and fame!

My listening angel heard the prayer,

And, calmly smiling, said,

“If I but touch thy silvery hair,

Thy hasty wish has sped.

“But is there nothing in thy track

To bid thee fondly stay,

While the swift seasons hurry back

To find the wished-for day?”

Ah! truest soul of womankind!

Without thee what were life?

One bliss I cannot leave behind:

I ’ll take—my—precious—wife!

The angel took a sapphire pen

And wrote in rainbow dew,

“The man would be a boy again,

And be a husband, too!”

“And is there nothing yet unsaid

Before the change appears?

Remember, all their gifts have fled

With those dissolving years!”

“Why, yes; for memory would recall

My fond paternal joys;

I could not bear to leave them all:

I ’ll take—my—girl—and—boys!”

The smiling angel dropped his pen—

“Why, this will never do;

The man would be a boy again,

And be a father, too!”

And so I laughed—my laughter woke

The household with its noise—

And wrote my dream, when morning broke,

To please the gray-haired boys.