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A Ballade Of "ChurchWardens"

Why, hang it all, let life go by,
 It is but bubbles we pursue;
They burst at last, and then we sigh
 And pay what folly claims as due.
We have our time to smile and sigh,
 Who knows the false from all the true?
Let us enjoy before we die,
 Churchwardens and a friend or two.


For these are things that will not fly
 Nor fade, as other pleasures do;
Nay, trust me, for I would not lie—
 At least I would not lie to you.
There is a time when earth and sky
 Unite—when lovers bill and coo—
A happy time; but let us try
 Churchwardens and a friend or two.


Alas! what grief when you descry
 White strangers—just a very few—
Among your hair. A friendly eye
 Detects them, though you never knew.
Well, let them come, nor look awry,
 But trust the gods to pull you through;
They'll do it if they but supply
 Churchwardens and a friend or two.


Envoi

Prince should your royal eyes espy
 A white hair—this is entre nous
Remember you are very nigh
 Churchwardens and a friend or two.

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Comments

  • leggomyeggo
    March 11, 2005
    Edit | Reply
    This is a brillaint piece, as the rhyme scheme is recurrent. The y ending twangs off the tongue, drawing sort of a low enunciation of the y. Atleast that was the way I read it. When I first read it, I actually paid more attention to the sound I made when I said awry and eye. It is a very good piece.