Alma Mater
Edwin Arlington Robinson
He knocked, and I beheld him at the door— A vision for the gods to verify. “What battered ancientry is this,” thought I, “And when, if ever, did we meet before?” But ask him as I might, I got no more For answer than a moaning and a cry: Too late to parley, but in time to die, He staggered, and lay shapeless on the floor. When had I known him? And what brought him here? Love, warning, malediction, hunger, fear? Surely I never thwarted such as he?— Again, what soiled obscurity was this: Out of what scum, and up from what abyss, Had they arrived—these rags of memory?
Next 10 Poems
- 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
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Ballade By The Fire
Previous 10 Poems
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : Afterthoughts
- 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