Should fickle hands in far-off days 
No longer stroke thy hair, 
And lips that once were proud to praise 
Forget to call thee fair, 
Sigh but my name, and though I be 
Mute in the churchyard mould, 
I will arise and come to thee, 
And worship as of old. 
 
And should I meet the wrinkled brow, 
Or find the silver tress, 
What were't to me, it would be thou, 
I could not love thee less. 
'Gainst love time wages bootless strife, 
What now is would be then; 
The cry that brought me back to life 
Would make thee young again.
Alfred Austin
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/a-fragment-18/