What Man May Learn, What Man May Do
Robert Louis Stevenson
WHAT man may learn, what man may do, Of right or wrong of false or true, While, skipper-like, his course he steers Through nine and twenty mingled years, Half misconceived and half forgot, So much I know and practise not. Old are the words of wisdom, old The counsels of the wise and bold: To close the ears, to check the tongue, To keep the pining spirit young; To act the right, to say the true, And to be kind whate'er you do. Thus we across the modern stage Follow the wise of every age; And, as oaks grow and rivers run Unchanged in the unchanging sun, So the eternal march of man Goes forth on an eternal plan.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert Louis Stevenson : When The Sun Come After Rain
- Robert Louis Stevenson : Winter-time
- Robert Louis Stevenson : You Looked So Tempting In The Pew
- Jonathan Swift : A Beautiful Young Nymph Going To Bed
- Jonathan Swift : A Description Of A City Shower
- Jonathan Swift : A Description Of The Morning
- Jonathan Swift : A Maypole
- Jonathan Swift : A Satirical Elegy
- Jonathan Swift : Advice To The Grub Street Verse-writers
- Jonathan Swift : Elegy Upon Tiger
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert Louis Stevenson : Voluntary
- Robert Louis Stevenson : Variant Form Of The Preceding Poem
- Robert Louis Stevenson : To What Shall I Compare Her?
- Robert Louis Stevenson : To The Commissioners Of Northern Lights
- Robert Louis Stevenson : To Sydney
- Robert Louis Stevenson : To Rosabelle
- Robert Louis Stevenson : To Ottilie
- Robert Louis Stevenson : To Mrs. Macmarland
- Robert Louis Stevenson : To Miss Cornish
- Robert Louis Stevenson : To Mesdames Zassetsky And Garschine