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LATER LIFE.
I am sick of foresight and of memory,
I am sick of all I have and all I see,
  I am sick of self, and there is nothing new;
Oh weary impatient patience of my lot!—
  Thus with myself: how fares it, Friends, with you?

18.

So late in Autumn half the world's asleep,
And half the wakeful world looks pinched and pale;
For dampness now, not freshness, rides the gale;
And cold and colourless comes ashore the deep
With tides that bluster or with tides that creep;
Now veiled uncouthness wears an uncouth veil
Of fog, not sultry haze; and blight and bale
Have done their worst, and leaves rot on the heap.
So late in Autumn one forgets the Spring,
Forgets the Summer with its opulence,
The callow birds that long have found a wing,
The swallows that more lately gat them hence:
Will anything like Spring, will anything
Like Summer, rouse one day the slumbering sense?

19.

Here now is Winter. Winter, after all,
Is not so drear as was my boding dream