Wythin a garth, under a rede rosere,Ane ald man, and decrepit, herd I syng;Gay was the note, suete was the voce et clere:It was grete joy to here of sik a thing.‘And to my dome,’ he said, in his dytyng,‘For to be yong I wald not, for my wisOff all this warld to mak me lord et king:The more of age the nerar hevynnis blis.‘False is this warld, and full of variance,Besoucht with syn and other sytis mo;Treuth is all tynt, gyle has the gouvernance,Wrechitnes has wroht all welthis wele to wo;Fredome is tynt, and flemyt the lordis fro,And covatise is all the cause of this;I am content that youthede is ago:The more of age the nerar hevynnis blisse.‘The state of youth I repute for na gude,For in that state sik perilis now I see;Bot full smal grace, the regeing of his bludeCan none gaynstand quhill that he agit be;Syne of the thing that tofore joyit heNothing remaynis for to be callit his;For quhy it were bot veray vanitee:The more of age the nerar hevynnis blisse.‘Suld no man traist this wrechit warld, for quhyOf erdly joy ay sorow is the end;The state of it can noman certify,This day a king, to morne na gude to spend.Quhat have we here bot grace us to defend?The quhilk god grant us for to mend oure mys,That to his glore he may oure saulis send;The more of age the nerar hevynnis blisse’.