| Gather ye rosebuds while ye may, | |
| Old Time is still a-flying; | |
| And this same flower that smiles today, | |
| Tomorrow will be dying. |
| The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun, | |
| The higher he's a-getting, | |
| The sooner will his race be run, | |
| And nearer he's to setting. |
| That age is best which is the first, | |
| When youth and blood are warmer; | |
| But being spent, the worse and worst | |
| Times still succeed the former. |
| Then be not coy, but use your time, | |
| And while ye may, go marry; | |
| For, having lost but once your prime, | |
| You may forever tarry. | |
| (1648) |