Classic and Contemporary Poetry
AND THORNS, BUT DID THE SCULPTOR SPARE, by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON Poem Explanation Poet Analysis Poet's Biography Last Line: Of the bygone tempestuous birth Alternate Author Name(s): Stevenson, Robert Lewis Balfour Subject(s): Spring; Memory | ||||||||
AND thorns, but did the sculptor spare Sharp steel upon the marble, ere, After long vigils and much care And cruel discipline of blows, From the dead stone the statue rose? Think you I grudge the seed, who see Broad armed the consummated tree? Or would go back if it might be To some old geologic time With Saurians wallowing in fat slime, Before the rivers and the rains Had fashioned, and made fair with Plains And shadowy places fresh with flowers, This green and quiet world of ours. Where, as the grass in Springtime heals The furrow of the winter's wheels, Serene maturity conceals All memory on the perfect earth Of the bygone tempestuous birth. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MEMORY AS A HEARING AID by TONY HOAGLAND THE SAME QUESTION by JOHN HOLLANDER FORGET HOW TO REMEMBER HOW TO FORGET by JOHN HOLLANDER ON THAT SIDE by LAWRENCE JOSEPH MEMORY OF A PORCH by DONALD JUSTICE BEYOND THE HUNTING WOODS by DONALD JUSTICE A GOOD PLAY by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON |
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