Lyrics Sonnet 73 - Paul Kelly
That
time
of
year
thou
may'st
in
me
behold
When
yellow
leaves,
or
none,
or
few,
do
hang
Upon
those
boughs
which
shake
against
the
cold,
Bare
ruin'd
choirs,
where
late
the
sweet
birds
sang.
In
me
thou
see'st
the
twilight
of
such
day,
As
after
sunset
fadeth
in
the
west,
Which
by-and-by
black
night
doth
take
away,
Death's
second
self,
that
seals
up
all
in
rest.
In
me
thou
see'st
the
glowing
of
such
fire
That
on
the
ashes
of
his
youth
doth
lie,
As
the
death-bed
whereon
it
must
expire
Consum'd
with
that
which
it
was
nourish'd
by.
This
thou
perceivest,
which
makes
thy
love
more
strong,
To
love
that
well
which
thou
must
leave
ere
long.
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