Robin Hood: To a friend No! those days are gone away And their hours are old and gray, and their minutes buried all under the down trodden pall of the leaves of many years; many times have winters shears, Frozen north and chilling east Sounded tempests to the feast Of the forests whipering fleeces since men knew nor rent nor leases, No the bugle sounds no more and the twanging bow no more silent is the ivory shrill Past the heath and up the hill there is no mid forest laugh where lone echo gives the half to some wight, amaz'd to hear justing deep in forest drear On the fairest time of june You may go with sun or moon or the seven stars to light you Or the polar ray to right you but you never may behold Little john or Robin Bold; never one of all the clan thrumming on an empty can some old hunting ditty while he doth his green way beguile To fair hostess Merriment Down beside the pasture Trent For he left the merry tale messenger for spicy ale Gone the merry morris din; Gone the song Gamelyn Gone the tough belted outlaw Idling in the green shawe All are gone away and past And if Robin should cast Sudden from his turfed grave And if Marian should have Once again her forest days She would weep and he would craze He would swear for all his oaks Falln beneath the dockyard strokes have rotted on the briny seas She would week that her wild bees Sang not to her---strange that honey Can't be got without hard money! So it is yet let us sing Honour to the old bow string Honour to the bugle horn honour to the woods unshorn Honour to the Lincoln green Honour to the Archer Keen Honour to tight little John And the horse he rode upon Honour to Bold Robin hood Sleeping in the underwood! Honour to Maid marian And to all the sherwood clan though their days have hurried by Let us two a burden try. John Keats