Promise Of Peace

By Robinson Jeffers

The heads of strong old age are beautiful

Beyond all grace of youth. They have strange quiet,

Integrity, health, soundness, to the full

They've dealt with life and been tempered by it.

A young man must not sleep; his years are war,

Civil and foreign but the former's worse;

But the old can breathe in safety now that they are

Forgetting what youth meant, the being perverse,

Running the fool's gauntlet and being cut

By the whips of the five senses. As for me,

If I should wish to live long it were but

To trade those fevers for tranquillity,

Thinking though that's entire and sweet in the grave

How shall the dead taste the deep treasure they have?