I saw a man, an old, old man,
The oldest man I ever did see—
Well! I am very nearly five,
And he was twice as old as me.
His eyes were much too old for sight,
His ears were much too old to hear,
His beard it was all tangled and white,
His old hands shook with a sort of fear.
He had a kind of twiggy broom
As though he had a room to mind,
Yet he was not in any room
But all among the blowy wind.
I saw him stoop to gather things—
He had not very far to stoop—
Leaves that had scattered like the wings
Of dead moths flying in a troop,
And little broken sticks beside
Where flowers and berries used to hang—
I wonder where the music died
Of all the birds that in them sang?—
There were some feathers on the ground,
And silky dried-up curls of flow'rs,
And he went stooping round and round
And gathering these things for hours.
I stood and watched and asked him why,
But still he groped about the mold
And never made the least reply
Because his ears were much too old.
He got his broom and swept and swept
A pile as round as any cup—
If I'd been littler I'd have wept
To see him sweeping summer up.
But I just stood and watched him there,
And presently he didn't sweep,
When there was nothing anywhere
But summer lying in a heap.
And then the old man found a light
And stooped above the darling mound,
And little dancing flames grew bright ...
He burned up summer on the ground!
But oh! there was the sweetest smell—
And yet the smell was sorry too—
Much sweeter than I ever could tell,
Of all the things I ever knew.
You could smell every kind of tree
And every kind of flower there is,
And wet weeds rather like the sea—
And something else as well as this.
It was—I don't know what it was!—
The sweetest, sorriest smell of all.
It crept in smoke-rings over the grass,
And hung, and would not rise or fall.
I think the old man must have known
What smell it was, but would not say.
He shuffled slowly off alone
When summer all was burned away.
One day when I'm a very old man
Perhaps I'll be as wise as he ...
But I am not quite five, you know,
And he was twice as old as me.