Page:Poems Tynan.djvu/165

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THE OAK SAID TO THE EAGLE
The Oak said to the Eagle:
How old art thou?
Clouds and the sunlight regal
Are on thy brow.

But the Eagle: Thine age, brother,
Tell it again.
We are old, both one and the other,
Past dreams of men.

And the Oak: Mine age hath thriven
A thousand years,
'Gainst the winds and the rains of heaven,
And lightning's spears.

I have seen men born and buried,
How long, how long?
The race of the red deer harried,
That was so strong.

But the Eagle laughed out scornful:
Thou dost not know
Thou graybeard, ragged and mournful,
How youth doth go.

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