Experience
John Boyle O'Reilly
THE world was made when a man was born,
He must
taste
for
himself
the
forbidden
springs;
He can
never
take
warning
from
old-fashion'd
things;
He must
fight as
a boy,
he must
drink as
a youth,
Of the
friend
of his
soul; he
must
laugh to
scorn
The
hints of
deceit
in a
woman's
eyes--
They are
clear as
the
wells of
Paradise.
And so
he goes
on till
the
world
grows
old,
Till his
toung
has
grown
cautious,
his
heart
has
grown
cold,
Till the
smile
leaves
his
mouth,
till the
ring
leaves
his
laugh,
And he
shirks
the
bright
headache
you ask
him to
quaff.
He grows
formal
with
men, and
with
women
polite,
And
distrustful
of both
when
they're
out of
his
sight.
Then he
eats for
his
palate
and
drinks
for his
head,
And
loves
for his
pleasure,--and
'tis
time he
was
dead.