When I was young the days were long, WHEN I was young the days were long, Oh, long the days when I was young: Oh, long the days when I was young: So long from morn to evenfall So long from morn to evenfall As they would never end at all. As they would never end at all. Now I grow old Time flies, alas! I watch the years and seasons pass. Now I grow old Time flies , alas! Time turns him with his fingers thin I watch the years and seasons pass. A wheel that whirls while it doth spin. Time turns him with his fingers thin There is no time to take one's ease, A wheel that whirls while it doth spin. For to sit still and be at peace: Oh, whirling wheel of Time, be still, Let me be quiet if you will! There is no time to take one's ease, Yet still it turns so giddily, For to sit still and be at peace: So fast the years and seasons fly, So fast the wheel of Time turns ' round , Dazed with the noise and speed I run The silence hath no other sound. And stay me on the Changeless One. I stay myself on Him who stays Ever the same through nights and days: And that which is to be is over, The One Unchangeable for aye, Over good times of love and lover: That was and will be: the one Stay, And one was young but now grown old O'er whom Eternity will pass Shrinks from the darkness and the cold . But as an image in a glass; To whom a million years are nought,- I stay myself on a great Thought. And one scarce dreams that youth is o'er I stay myself on the great Quiet Ere age is knocking at the door. After the noises and the riot; Oh, whirling wheel of Time be still, As in a garnished chamber sit Let me be quiet if you will! Far from the tumult of the street. Oh, wheel of Time, turn round apace! But I have found a resting-place. Yet still it turns so giddily, You will not trouble me again So fast the years and seasons fly, In the great peace where I attain. Dazed with the noise and speed I run And stay me on the Changeless One. I stay myself on him who stays Ever the same through nights and days: The One Unchangeable for aye, That was and will be: the one Stay, O'er whom Eternity will pass; But, as an image in a glass To whom a million years are nought, I stay myself on a great thought. I stay myself on the great Quiet After the noises and the riot. As in a garnished chamber sit Far from the tumult of the street. Oh, wheel of Time turn round apace! But I have found a resting- place . You will not trouble me again In the great peace where I attain. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A NOCTURNAL REVERIE by ANNE FINCH A TRIBUTE OF GRASSES by HAMLIN GARLAND SONG TO THE MEN OF ENGLAND by PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY PROSPECT by THOMAS CURTIS CLARK YOUTH by VIRGINIA WOODWARD CLOUD THE ASCENSION, SELECTION by CYNEWULF A TALE FROM THE TALMUD by WILLIAM DEARNESS |