Hillcrest
(To Mrs.
Edward
Dowell)No sound of any storm that shakes Old island walls with older seas Comes here where now September makes An island in a sea of trees. Between the sunlight and the shadeA man may learn till he forgets The roaring of a world remade, And all his ruins and regrets; And if he still remembers here Poor fights he may have won or lost,—If he be ridden with the fear Of what some other fight may cost,— If, eager to confuse too soon, What he has known with what may be, He reads a planet out of
For cause of his jarred harmony,— If here he venture to unroll His index of adagios, And he be given to console Humanity with what he knows,— He may by contemplation learn A little more than what he knew, And even see great oaks return To acorns out of which they grew. He may, if he but listen well,
Through twilight and the silence here, Be told what there are none may tell To vanity’s impatient ear; And he may never dare again Say what awaits him, or be
What sunlit labyrinth of pain He may not enter and endure. Who knows to-day from yesterday May learn to count no thing too strange: Love builds of what Time takes away,
Till Death itself is less than Change. Who sees enough in his duress May go as far as dreams have gone; Who sees a little may do less Than many who are blind have done; Who sees unchastened here the soul Triumphant has no other sight Than has a child who sees the whole World radiant with his own delight. Far journeys and hard
Await him in whose crude surmise Peace, like a mask, hides everything That is and has been from his eyes; And all his wisdom is unfound, Or like a web that error
On airy looms that have a sound No louder now than falling leaves.
Edwin Arlington Robinson
Другие работы автора
Eros Turannos
She fears him, and will always ask What fated her to choose him; She meets in his engaging mask All reason to refuse him But what she meets and what she fears Are less than are the downward years, Drawn slowly to the foamless weirs ...
Cassandra
I heard one who said: Verily, What word have I for children here Your Dollar is your only Word, The wrath of it your only fear
Firelight
Ten years together without yet a cloud They seek each other's eyes at intervals Of gratefulness to firelight and four walls For love's obliteration of the crowd Serenely and perennially endowed And bowered as few may be, their joy recalls No ...
The House on the Hill
They are all gone away, The House is shut and still, There is nothing more to say Through broken walls and gray The winds blow bleak and shrill: They are all gone away Nor is there one to-day To speak them good or ill: There is nothing m...