The Lockless Door
Robert Frost
It went many years, But at last came a knock, And I thought of the door With no lock to lock. I blew out the light, I tip-toed the floor, And raised both hands In prayer to the door. But the knock came again My window was wide; I climbed on the sill And descended outside. Back over the sill I bade a “Come in” To whoever the knock At the door may have been. So at a knock I emptied my cage To hide in the world And alter with age.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert Frost : The Mountain
- Robert Frost : The Need Of Being Versed In Country Things
- Robert Frost : The Oven Bird
- Robert Frost : The Pasture
- Robert Frost : The Road Not Taken
- Robert Frost : The Rose Family
- Robert Frost : The Self-seeker
- Robert Frost : The Silken Tent
- Robert Frost : The Soldier
- Robert Frost : The Sound Of The Trees
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert Frost : The Line-gang
- Robert Frost : The Housekeeper
- Robert Frost : The Hill Wife
- Robert Frost : The Gum-gatherer
- Robert Frost : The Generations Of Men
- Robert Frost : The Flower Boat
- Robert Frost : The Fear
- Robert Frost : The Exposed Nest
- Robert Frost : The Egg And The Machine
- Robert Frost : The Demiurge's Laugh