I wish Michael Phelps long life and good health and an autumn surrounded by adoring grandchildren. Meanwhile:
| To An Athlete Dying Young |
| THE time you won your town the race | ||
| We chaired you through the market-place; | ||
| Man and boy stood cheering by, | ||
| And home we brought you shoulder-high. | ||
| To-day, the road all runners come, | 5 | |
| Shoulder-high we bring you home, | ||
| And set you at your threshold down, | ||
| Townsman of a stiller town. | ||
| Smart lad, to slip betimes away | ||
| From fields where glory does not stay, | 10 | |
| And early though the laurel grows | ||
| It withers quicker than the rose. | ||
| Eyes the shady night has shut | ||
| Cannot see the record cut, | ||
| And silence sounds no worse than cheers | 15 | |
| After earth has stopped the ears: | ||
| Now you will not swell the rout | ||
| Of lads that wore their honours out, | ||
| Runners whom renown outran | ||
| And the name died before the man. | 20 | |
| So set, before its echoes fade, | ||
| The fleet foot on the sill of shade, | ||
| And hold to the low lintel up | ||
| The still-defended challenge-cup. | ||
| And round that early-laurelled head | 25 | |
| Will flock to gaze the strengthless dead, | ||
| And find unwithered on its curls | ||
| The garland briefer than a girl's. |
--A.E. Housman (link).
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