The Pilot
Edwin Arlington Robinson
From the Past and Unavailing Out of cloudland we are steering: After groping, after fearing, Into starlight we come trailing, And we find the stars are true. Still, O comrade, what of you? You are gone, but we are sailing, And the old ways are all new. For the Lost and Unreturning We have drifted, we have waited; Uncommanded and unrated, We have tossed and wandered, yearning For a charm that comes no more From the old lights by the shore: We have shamed ourselves in learning What you knew so long before. For the Breed of the Far-going Who are strangers, and all brothers, May forget no more than others Who looked seaward with eyes flowing. But are brothers to bewail One who fought so foul a gale? You have won beyond our knowing, You are gone, but yet we sail.
Next 10 Poems
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Pity Of The Leaves
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Poor Relation
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Rat
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Return Of Morgan And Fingal
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Revealer
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Sage
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Story Of The Ashes And The Flame
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Sunken Crown
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Tavern
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Three Taverns
Previous 10 Poems
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Old Story
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Old King's New Jester
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Night Before
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The New Tenants
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Miracle
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Mill
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Master
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Man Against The Sky
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Long Race
- Edwin Arlington Robinson : The Klondike