Afterthoughts
Edwin Arlington Robinson
We parted where the old gas-lamp still burned Under the wayside maple and walked on, Into the dark, as we had always done; And I, no doubt, if he had not returned, Might yet be unaware that he had earned More than earth gives to many who have won More than it has to give when they are gone— As duly and indelibly I learned. The sum of all that he came back to say Was little then, and would be less today: With him there were no Delphic heights to climb, Yet his were somehow nearer the sublime. He spoke, and went again by the old way— Not knowing it would be for the last time.
Next 10 Poems
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Alma Mater
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Amaryllis
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : An Evangelist's Wife
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : An Island
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Another Dark Lady
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Archibald's Example
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : As A World Would Have It
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Atherton's Gambit
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Aunt Imogen
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Avon's Harvest
Previous 10 Poems
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Aaron Stark
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : A Song At Shannon's
- Rainer Maria Rilke : You, You Only, Exist
- Rainer Maria Rilke : You Who Never Arrived
- Rainer Maria Rilke : World Was In The Face Of The Beloved
- Rainer Maria Rilke : Woman In Love
- Rainer Maria Rilke : What Survives
- Rainer Maria Rilke : What Fields Are As Fragrant As Your Hands?
- Rainer Maria Rilke : What Birds Plunge Through Is Not The Intimate Space
- Rainer Maria Rilke : Water Lily