When I am old (I mean older) I will Not accept what the young will let me have: My booming laugh will scare my pretensions Of wisdom away. I’ll be fun, talk light And smile at will; when working men pass by, All brown and stretched by the long working hours I’ll talk of lazy summer noons and soft Evenings; I will wash away my kindness.
I’ll spend my fortunes (if someday I’m rich) On flippant things: maybe I’ll learn to fly, Or spend my weekends seeking sunken gold In Bahamas all alone; I will try New things: I’ll wear red when I please and paint My house the deepest purple shade; I’ll eat What I desire, drink *** on afternoons, And pretend to chase all the prettiest girls.
When I am old (I mean older) I will Grow eccentric. But still on winter nights When I’m alone (which will be every night) I’ll write (till weary eyes permit) the poems I write to you: that will not change with age. Like an old fruit, wrinkled and ripe, I’ll slide Into blank nothingness carrying just your thoughts: I’ll persist, still unfulfilled, still yearning.