The still contentedness of seventy years.

Calm did he sit under[197] the wide-spread tree

Of his old age: and yet less calm and meek,

Winningly meek or venerably calm,

Than slow and torpid; paying in this wise

A penalty, if penalty it were,

For spendthrift feats, excesses of his prime.

I loved the old Man, for I pitied him!

A task it was, I own, to hold discourse

With one so slow in gathering up his thoughts,