The Travellers' Curse After Misdirection
Robert Graves
(from the Welsh) May they stumble, stage by stage On an endless Pilgrimage Dawn and dusk, mile after mile At each and every step a stile At each and every step withal May they catch their feet and fall At each and every fall they take May a bone within them break And may the bone that breaks within Not be, for variations sake Now rib, now thigh, now arm, now shin but always, without fail, the NECK
Next 10 Poems
- Robert Graves : The Troll's Nosegay
- Robert Graves : To An Ungentle Critic
- Robert Graves : To Juan At The Winter Solstice
- Robert Graves : To Lucasta On Going To The War - For The Fourth Time
- Robert Graves : To Robert Nichols
- Robert Graves : Warning To Children
- Robert Graves : Welsh Incident
- Robert Graves : When I'm Killed
- Robert Graves : Wild Strawberries
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Previous 10 Poems
- Robert Graves : The Thieves
- Robert Graves : The Spoilsport
- Robert Graves : The Snapped Thread
- Robert Graves : The Shivering Beggar
- Robert Graves : The Poet In The Nursery
- Robert Graves : The Persian Version
- Robert Graves : The Next War
- Robert Graves : The Naked And The Nude
- Robert Graves : The Last Post
- Robert Graves : The Lady Visitor In The Pauper Ward