In A Disused Graveyard
Robert Frost
The living come with grassy tread To read the gravestones on the hill; The graveyard draws the living still, But never anymore the dead. The verses in it say and say: "The ones who living come today To read the stones and go away Tomorrow dead will come to stay." So sure of death the marbles rhyme, Yet can't help marking all the time How no one dead will seem to come. What is it men are shrinking from? It would be easy to be clever And tell the stones: Men hate to die And have stopped dying now forever. I think they would believe the lie.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert Frost : In A Vale
- Robert Frost : In Equal Sacrifice
- Robert Frost : In Hardwood Groves
- Robert Frost : In Neglect
- Robert Frost : In The Home Stretch
- Robert Frost : In White ( Frost's Early Version Of Design )
- Robert Frost : Into My Own
- Robert Frost : Investment, The
- Robert Frost : Iota Subscript
- Robert Frost : Kitchen Chimney, The
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert Frost : Immigrants
- Robert Frost : I Will Sing You One-o
- Robert Frost : Hyla Brook
- Robert Frost : Housekeeper, The
- Robert Frost : Home Burial
- Robert Frost : Hill Wife, The
- Robert Frost : Hannibal
- Robert Frost : Gum-gatherer, The
- Robert Frost : Grindstone, The
- Robert Frost : Good-bye, And Keep Cold