We’ve lived for forty years, dear wife,
   And walked together side by side,
And you to-day are just as dear
   As when you were my bride.
I’ve tried to make life glad for you,
   One long, sweet honeymoon of joy,
A dream of marital content,
   Without the least alloy.
I’ve smoothed all boulders from our path,
   That we in peace might toil along,
By always hastening to admit
   That I was right and you were wrong.
No mad diversity of creed
   Has ever sundered me from thee;
For I permit you evermore
   To borrow your ideas of me.
And thus it is, through weal or woe,
   Our love forevermore endures;
For I permit that you should take
   My views and creeds and make them yours.
And thus I let you have my way,
   And thus in peace we toil along,
For I am willing to admit
   That I am right and you are wrong.
And when our matrimonial skiff
   Strikes snags in love’s meandering stream,
I lift our shallop from the rocks,
   And float as in a placid dream.
And well I know our marriage bliss
   While life shall last will never cease;
For I shall always let thee do,
   In generous love, just what I please.
Peace comes, and discord flies away,
   Love’s bright day follows hatred’s night;
For I am ready to admit
   That you are wrong and I am right.