If I were young as you, Sixteen,
And you were old as I,
I would not be as I have been,
You would not be so shy-
We should not watch with careless mien
The golden days go by,
If I were young as you, Sixteen,
And you were old as I.
The years of youth are yours, Sixteen;
Such years of old had I,
But time has set his seal between
Dark eyebrow and dark eye.
Sere grow the leaves that once were green,
The song turns to a sigh:
Ah! very young are you, Sixteen,
And very old am I.
Red bloom-times come and go, Sixteen,
With snow-soft feet, but I
Shall be no more as I have been
In times of bloom gone by;
For dimmer grows the pleasant scene
Beneath the pleasant sky;
The world is growing old, Sixteen-
The weary world and I.
Ah, would that once again, Sixteen,
A kissing mouth had I;
The days would gaily go, I ween,
Though death should stand anigh,
If springtime-s green were evergreen,
If Love would never die,
And I were young as you, Sixteen,
And you were old as I.
Sixty To Sixteen
Victor James Daley
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Poem topics: I love you, death, never, red, sky, snow, song, time, mouth, stand, soft, golden, beneath, scene, watch, youth, dark, green, love, world, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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About Sixty To Sixteen
Sixty To Sixteen is a poem by Victor James Daley. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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