I now think Love is rather deaf than blind, 
    For else it could not be 
          That she, 
    Whom I adore so much, should so slight me 
    And cast my love behind. 
    I'm sure my language to her was as sweet, 
    And every close did meet 
    In sentence of as subtle feet, 
    As hath the youngest He 
  That sits in shadow of Apollo's tree. 
  O, but my conscious fears, 
  That fly my thoughts between, 
  Tell me that she hath seen 
  My hundred of gray hairs, 
  Told seven and forty years 
  Read so much waste, as she cannot embrace 
  My mountain belly and my rocky face; 
  And all these through her eyes have stopp'd her ears.
Benjamin Jonson
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/my-picture-left-in-scotland-2/