Title:   A Boy's Will

Subject:  

Author:   Robert Frost

Keywords:  

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PDF Version:   1.2



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A Boy's Will

Robert Frost



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Table of Contents

A Boy's Will.........................................................................................................................................................1

Robert Frost.............................................................................................................................................1

Into My Own ............................................................................................................................................1

Ghost House .............................................................................................................................................2

My November Guest ................................................................................................................................3

Love and a Question................................................................................................................................3

A Late Walk .............................................................................................................................................4

Stars.........................................................................................................................................................4

Storm Fear ................................................................................................................................................5

Wind and Window Flower .......................................................................................................................5

To the Thawing Wind..............................................................................................................................6

A Prayer in Spring...................................................................................................................................6

Flowergathering .....................................................................................................................................7

Rose Pogonias ..........................................................................................................................................7

Asking for Roses ......................................................................................................................................8

Waiting  Afield at Dusk .......................................................................................................................8

In a Vale ...................................................................................................................................................9

A Dream Pang ..........................................................................................................................................9

In Neglect ...............................................................................................................................................10

The Vantage Point ..................................................................................................................................10

Mowing ..................................................................................................................................................10

Going for Water.....................................................................................................................................11

Revelation..............................................................................................................................................11

The Trial by Existence ...........................................................................................................................12

In Equal Sacrifice ...................................................................................................................................13

The Tuft of Flowers...............................................................................................................................14

Spoils of the Dead ..................................................................................................................................15

Pan with Us ............................................................................................................................................16

The Demiurge's Laugh ...........................................................................................................................17

Now Close the Windows.......................................................................................................................17

A Linestorm Song ................................................................................................................................17

October ...................................................................................................................................................18

My Butterfly..........................................................................................................................................19

Reluctance ..............................................................................................................................................20


A Boy's Will

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Page No 3


A Boy's Will

Robert Frost

Part I 

Into My Own. The youth is persuaded that he will be rather more than less himself for having forsworn the

world.



Ghost House. He is happy in society of his choosing. 

My November Guest. He is in love with being misunderstood. 

Love and a Question. He is in doubt whether to admit real trouble to a place beside the hearth with love. 

A Late Walk. He courts the autumnal mood. 

Stars. There is no oversight of human affairs. 

Storm Fear. He is afraid of his own isolation. 

Wind and Window Flower. Out of the winter things he fashions a story of modern love. 

To the Thawing Wind. He calls on change through the violence of the elements. 

A Prayer in Spring. He discovers that the greatness of love lies not in forwardlooking thoughts; 

Flowergathering. nor yet in any spur it may be to ambition. 

Rose Pogonias. He is no dissenter from the ritualism of nature; 

Asking for Roses. nor from the ritualism of youth which is makebelieve. 

WaitingAfield at Dusk. He arrives at the turn of the year. 

In a Vale. Out of old longings he fashions a story. 

A Dream Pang. He is shown by a dream how really well it is with him. 

In Neglect. He is scornful of folk his scorn cannot reach. 

The Vantage Point. And again scornful, but there is no one hurt. 

Mowing. He takes up life simply with the small tasks. 

Going for Water 

Part II 

Revelation. He resolves to become intelligible, at least to himself, since there. is no help else; 

The Trial by Existence. and to know definitely what he thinks about the soul; 

In Equal Sacrifice. about love; 

The Tuft of Flowers. about fellowship; 

Spoils of the Dead. about death; 

Pan with Us. about art (his own); 

The Demiurge's Laugh. about science. 

Part III 

Now Close the Windows. It is time to make an end of speaking. 

A Linestorm Song. It is the autumnal mood with a difference. 

October. He sees days slipping from him that were the best for what they were. 

My Butterfly. There are things that can never be the same. 

Reluctance  

Into My Own

          ONE of my wishes is that those dark trees, 

          So old and firm they scarcely show the breeze, 

          Were not, as 'twere, the merest mask of gloom, 

A Boy's Will 1



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Page No 4


But stretched away unto the edge of doom. 

          I should not be withheld but that some day 

          Into their vastness I should steal away, 

          Fearless of ever finding open land, 

          Or highway where the slow wheel pours the sand. 

          I do not see why I should e'er turn back, 

          Or those should not set forth upon my track 

          To overtake me, who should miss me here 

          And long to know if still I held them dear. 

          They would not find me changed from him they knew 

          Only more sure of all I thought was true. 

Ghost House

          I DWELL in a lonely house I know 

          That vanished many a summer ago, 

          And left no trace but the cellar walls, 

          And a cellar in which the daylight falls, 

          And the purplestemmed wild raspberries grow. 

          O'er ruined fences the grapevines shield 

          The woods come back to the mowing field; 

          The orchard tree has grown one copse 

          Of new wood and old where the woodpecker chops; 

          The footpath down to the well is healed. 

          I dwell with a strangely aching heart 

          In that vanished abode there far apart 

          On that disused and forgotten road 

          That has no dustbath now for the toad. 

          Night comes; the black bats tumble and dart; 

          The whippoorwill is coming to shout 

          And hush and cluck and flutter about: 

          I hear him begin far enough away 

          Full many a time to say his say 

          Before he arrives to say it out. 

          It is under the small, dim, summer star. 

          I know not who these mute folk are 

          Who share the unlit place with me 

          Those stones out under the lowlimbed tree 

          Doubtless bear names that the mosses mar. 

          They are tireless folk, but slow and sad, 

          Though two, closekeeping, are lass and lad, 

          With none among them that ever sings, 

          And yet, in view of how many things, 

          As sweet companions as might be had. 


A Boy's Will

Ghost House  2



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Page No 5


My November Guest

          MY Sorrow, when she's here with me, 

          Thinks these dark days of autumn rain 

          Are beautiful as days can be; 

          She loves the bare, the withered tree; 

          She walks the sodden pasture lane. 

          Her pleasure will not let me stay. 

          She talks and I am fain to list: 

          She's glad the birds are gone away, 

          She's glad her simple worsted gray 

          Is silver now with clinging mist. 

          The desolate, deserted trees, 

          The faded earth, the heavy sky, 

          The beauties she so truly sees, 

          She thinks I have no eye for these, 

          And vexes me for reason why. 

          Not yesterday I learned to know 

          The love of bare November days 

          Before the coming of the snow, 

          But it were vain to tell her so, 

          And they are better for her praise. 

Love and a Question

          A STRANGER came to the door at eve, 

          And he spoke the bridegroom fair. 

          He bore a greenwhite stick in his hand, 

          And, for all burden, care. 

          He asked with the eyes more than the lips 

          For a shelter for the night, 

          And he turned and looked at the road afar 

          Without a window light. 

          The bridegroom came forth into the porch 

          With, 'Let us look at the sky, 

          And question what of the night to be, 

          Stranger, you and I.' 

          The woodbine leaves littered the yard, 

          The woodbine berries were blue, 

          Autumn, yes, winter was in the wind; 

          'Stranger, I wish I knew.' 

          Within, the bride in the dusk alone 

          Bent over the open fire, 

          Her face rosered with the glowing coal 

          And the thought of the heart's desire. 

          The bridegroom looked at the weary road, 

          Yet saw but her within, 


A Boy's Will

My November Guest  3



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Page No 6


And wished her heart in a case of gold 

          And pinned with a silver pin. 

          The bridegroom thought it little to give 

          A dole of bread, a purse, 

          A heartfelt prayer for the poor of God, 

          Or for the rich a curse; 

          But whether or not a man was asked 

          To mar the love of two 

          By harboring woe in the bridal house, 

          The bridegroom wished he knew. 

A Late Walk

          WHEN I go up through the mowing field, 

          The headless aftermath, 

          Smoothlaid like thatch with the heavy dew, 

          Half closes the garden path. 

          And when I come to the garden ground, 

          The whir of sober birds 

          Up from the tangle of withered weeds 

          Is sadder than any words. 

          A tree beside the wall stands bare, 

          But a leaf that lingered brown, 

          Disturbed, I doubt not, by my thought, 

          Comes softly rattling down. 

          I end not far from my going forth 

          By picking the faded blue 

          Of the last remaining aster flower 

          To carry again to you. 

Stars

          HOW countlessly they congregate 

          O'er our tumultuous snow, 

          Which flows in shapes as tall as trees 

          When wintry winds do blow! 

          As if with keenness for our fate, 

          Our faltering few steps on 

          To white rest, and a place of rest 

          Invisible at dawn, 

          And yet with neither love nor hate, 

          Those stars like some snowwhite 

          Minerva's snowwhite marble eyes 

          Without the gift of sight. 


A Boy's Will

A Late Walk  4



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Storm Fear

          WHEN the wind works against us in the dark, 

          And pelts with snow 

          The lowest chamber window on the east, 

          And whispers with a sort of stifled bark, 

          The beast, 

          'Come out! Come out!' 

          It costs no inward struggle not to go, 

          Ah, no! 

          I count our strength, 

          Two and a child, 

          Those of us not asleep subdued to mark 

          How the cold creeps as the fire dies at length, 

          How drifts are piled, 

          Dooryard and road ungraded, 

          Till even the comforting barn grows far away 

          And my heart owns a doubt 

          Whether 'tis in us to arise with day 

          And save ourselves unaided. 

Wind and Window Flower

          LOVERS, forget your love, 

          And list to the love of these, 

          She a window flower, 

          And he a winter breeze. 

          When the frosty window veil 

          Was melted down at noon, 

          And the cagèd yellow bird 

          Hung over her in tune, 

          He marked her through the pane, 

          He could not help but mark, 

          And only passed her by, 

          To come again at dark. 

          He was a winter wind, 

          Concerned with ice and snow, 

          Dead weeds and unmated birds, 

          And little of love could know. 

          But he sighed upon the sill, 

          He gave the sash a shake, 

          As witness all within 

          Who lay that night awake. 

          Perchance he half prevailed 

          To win her for the flight 

          From the firelit lookingglass 

          And warm stovewindow light. 


A Boy's Will

Storm Fear  5



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Page No 8


But the flower leaned aside 

          And thought of naught to say, 

          And morning found the breeze 

          A hundred miles away. 

To the Thawing Wind

          COME with rain, O loud Southwester! 

          Bring the singer, bring the nester; 

          Give the buried flower a dream; 

          Make the settled snowbank steam; 

          Find the brown beneath the white; 

          But whate'er you do tonight, 

          Bathe my window, make it flow, 

          Melt it as the ices go; 

          Melt the glass and leave the sticks 

          Like a hermit's crucifix; 

          Burst into my narrow stall; 

          Swing the picture on the wall; 

          Run the rattling pages o'er; 

          Scatter poems on the floor; 

          Turn the poet out of door. 

A Prayer in Spring

          OH, give us pleasure in the flowers today; 

          And give us not to think so far away 

          As the uncertain harvest; keep us here 

          All simply in the springing of the year. 

          Oh, give us pleasure in the orchard white, 

          Like nothing else by day, like ghosts by night; 

          And make us happy in the happy bees, 

          The swarm dilating round the perfect trees. 

          And make us happy in the darting bird 

          That suddenly above the bees is heard, 

          The meteor that thrusts in with needle bill, 

          And off a blossom in mid air stands still. 

          For this is love and nothing else is love, 

          The which it is reserved for God above 

          To sanctify to what far ends He will, 

          But which it only needs that we fulfil. 


A Boy's Will

To the Thawing Wind  6



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Page No 9


Flowergathering

          I LEFT you in the morning, 

          And in the morning glow, 

          You walked a way beside me 

          To make me sad to go. 

          Do you know me in the gloaming, 

          Gaunt and dusty grey with roaming? 

          Are you dumb because you know me not, 

          Or dumb because you know? 

          All for me? And not a question 

          For the faded flowers gay 

          That could take me from beside you 

          For the ages of a day? 

          They are yours, and be the measure 

          Of their worth for you to treasure, 

          The measure of the little while 

          That I've been long away. 

Rose Pogonias

          A SATURATED meadow, 

          Sunshaped and jewelsmall, 

          A circle scarcely wider 

          Than the trees around were tall; 

          Where winds were quite excluded, 

          And the air was stifling sweet 

          With the breath of many flowers, 

          A temple of the heat. 

          There we bowed us in the burning, 

          As the sun's right worship is, 

          To pick where none could miss them 

          A thousand orchises; 

          For though the grass was scattered, 

          Yet every second spear 

          Seemed tipped with wings of color, 

          That tinged the atmosphere. 

          We raised a simple prayer 

          Before we left the spot, 

          That in the general mowing 

          That place might be forgot; 

          Or if not all so favoured, 

          Obtain such grace of hours, 

          That none should mow the grass there 

          While so confused with flowers. 


A Boy's Will

Flowergathering  7



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Page No 10


Asking for Roses

          A HOUSE that lacks, seemingly, mistress and master, 

          With doors that none but the wind ever closes, 

          Its floor all littered with glass and with plaster; 

          It stands in a garden of oldfashioned roses. 

          I pass by that way in the gloaming with Mary; 

          'I wonder,' I say, 'who the owner of those is. 

          'Oh, no one you know,' she answers me airy, 

          'But one we must ask if we want any roses.' 

          So we must join hands in the dew coming coldly 

          There in the hush of the wood that reposes, 

          And turn and go up to the open door boldly, 

          And knock to the echoes as beggars for roses. 

          'Pray, are you within there, Mistress Whowereyou?' 

          'Tis Mary that speaks and our errand discloses. 

          'Pray, are you within there? Bestir you, bestir you! 

          'Tis summer again; there's two come for roses. 

          'A word with you, that of the singer recalling 

          Old Herrick: a saying that every maid knows is 

          A flower unplucked is but left to the falling, 

          And nothing is gained by not gathering roses.' 

          We do not loosen our hands' intertwining 

          (Not caring so very much what she supposes), 

          There when she comes on us mistily shining 

          And grants us by silence the boon of her roses. 

Waiting  Afield at Dusk

          WHAT things for dream there are when spectrelike, 

          Moving among tall haycocks lightly piled, 

          I enter alone upon the stubble field, 

          From which the laborers' voices late have died, 

          And in the antiphony of afterglow 

          And rising full moon, sit me down 

          Upon the full moon's side of the first haycock 

          And lose myself amid so many alike. 

          I dream upon the opposing lights of the hour, 

          Preventing shadow until the moon prevail; 

          I dream upon the nighthawks peopling heaven, 

          Each circling each with vague unearthly cry, 

          Or plunging headlong with fierce twang afar; 

          And on the bat's mute antics, who would seem 

          Dimly to have made out my secret place, 

          Only to lose it when he pirouettes, 

          And seek it endlessly with purblind haste; 

          On the last swallow's sweep; and on the rasp 


A Boy's Will

Asking for Roses  8



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Page No 11


In the abyss of odor and rustle at my back, 

          That, silenced by my advent, finds once more, 

          After an interval, his instrument, 

          And tries oncetwiceand thrice if I be there; 

          And on the worn book of oldgolden song 

          I brought not here to read, it seems, but hold 

          And freshen in this air of withering sweetness; 

          But on the memory of one absent most, 

          For whom these lines when they shall greet her eye. 

In a Vale

          WHEN I was young, we dwelt in a vale 

          By a misty fen that rang all night, 

          And thus it was the maidens pale 

          I knew so well, whose garments trail 

          Across the reeds to a window light. 

          The fen had every kind of bloom, 

          And for every kind there was a face, 

          And a voice that has sounded in my room 

          Across the sill from the outer gloom. 

          Each came singly unto her place, 

          But all came every night with the mist; 

          And often they brought so much to say 

          Of things of moment to which, they wist, 

          One so lonely was fain to list, 

          That the stars were almost faded away 

          Before the last went, heavy with dew, 

          Back to the place from which she came 

          Where the bird was before it flew, 

          Where the flower was before it grew, 

          Where bird and flower were one and the same. 

          And thus it is I know so well 

          Why the flower has odor, the bird has song. 

          You have only to ask me, and I can tell. 

          No, not vainly there did I dwell, 

          Nor vainly listen all the night long. 

A Dream Pang

          I HAD withdrawn in forest, and my song 

          Was swallowed up in leaves that blew alway; 

          And to the forest edge you came one day 

          (This was my dream) and looked and pondered long, 

          But did not enter, though the wish was strong: 

          You shook your pensive head as who should say, 


A Boy's Will

In a Vale  9



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Page No 12


'I dare nottoo far in his footsteps stray 

          He must seek me would he undo the wrong. 

          Not far, but near, I stood and saw it all 

          Behind low boughs the trees let down outside; 

          And the sweet pang it cost me not to call 

          And tell you that I saw does still abide. 

          But 'tis not true that thus I dwelt aloof, 

          For the wood wakes, and you are here for proof. 

In Neglect

          THEY leave us so to the way we took, 

          As two in whom they were proved mistaken, 

          That we sit sometimes in the wayside nook, 

          With mischievous, vagrant, seraphic look, 

          And try if we cannot feel forsaken. 

The Vantage Point

          IF tired of trees I seek again mankind, 

          Well I know where to hie mein the dawn, 

          To a slope where the cattle keep the lawn. 

          There amid lolling juniper reclined, 

          Myself unseen, I see in white defined 

          Far off the homes of men, and farther still, 

          The graves of men on an opposing hill, 

          Living or dead, whichever are to mind. 

          And if by moon I have too much of these, 

          I have but to turn on my arm, and lo, 

          The sunburned hillside sets my face aglow, 

          My breathing shakes the bluet like a breeze, 

          I smell the earth, I smell the bruisèd plant, 

          I look into the crater of the ant. 

Mowing

          THERE was never a sound beside the wood but one, 

          And that was my long scythe whispering to the ground. 

          What was it it whispered? I knew not well myself; 

          Perhaps it was something about the heat of the sun, 

          Something, perhaps, about the lack of sound 

          And that was why it whispered and did not speak. 

          It was no dream of the gift of idle hours, 

          Or easy gold at the hand of fay or elf: 


A Boy's Will

In Neglect  10



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Page No 13


Anything more than the truth would have seemed too weak 

          To the earnest love that laid the swale in rows, 

          Not without feeblepointed spikes of flowers 

          (Pale orchises), and scared a bright green snake. 

          The fact is the sweetest dream that labor knows. 

          My long scythe whispered and left the hay to make. 

Going for Water

          THE well was dry beside the door, 

          And so we went with pail and can 

          Across the fields behind the house 

          To seek the brook if still it ran; 

          Not loth to have excuse to go, 

          Because the autumn eve was fair 

          (Though chill), because the fields were ours, 

          And by the brook our woods were there. 

          We ran as if to meet the moon 

          That slowly dawned behind the trees, 

          The barren boughs without the leaves, 

          Without the birds, without the breeze. 

          But once within the wood, we paused 

          Like gnomes that hid us from the moon, 

          Ready to run to hiding new 

          With laughter when she found us soon. 

          Each laid on other a staying hand 

          To listen ere we dared to look, 

          And in the hush we joined to make 

          We heard, we knew we heard the brook. 

          A note as from a single place, 

          A slender tinkling fall that made 

          Now drops that floated on the pool 

          Like pearls, and now a silver blade.

Revelation

          WE make ourselves a place apart 

          Behind light words that tease and flout, 

          But oh, the agitated heart 

          Till someone find us really out. 

          'Tis pity if the case require 

          (Or so we say) that in the end 

          We speak the literal to inspire 

          The understanding of a friend. 

          But so with all, from babes that play 

          At hideandseek to God afar, 


A Boy's Will

Going for Water  11



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Page No 14


So all who hide too well away 

          Must speak and tell us where they are. 

The Trial by Existence

          EVEN the bravest that are slain 

          Shall not dissemble their surprise 

          On waking to find valor reign, 

          Even as on earth, in paradise; 

          And where they sought without the sword 

          Wide fields of asphodel fore'er, 

          To find that the utmost reward 

          Of daring should be still to dare. 

          The light of heaven falls whole and white 

          And is not shattered into dyes, 

          The light for ever is morning light; 

          The hills are verdured pasturewise; 

          The angel hosts with freshness go, 

          And seek with laughter what to brave; 

          And binding all is the hushed snow 

          Of the fardistant breaking wave. 

          And from a clifftop is proclaimed 

          The gathering of the souls for birth, 

          The trial by existence named, 

          The obscuration upon earth. 

          And the slant spirits trooping by 

          In streams and cross and counterstreams 

          Can but give ear to that sweet cry 

          For its suggestion of what dreams! 

          And the more loitering are turned 

          To view once more the sacrifice 

          Of those who for some good discerned 

          Will gladly give up paradise. 

          And a white shimmering concourse rolls 

          Toward the throne to witness there 

          The speeding of devoted souls 

          Which God makes his especial care. 

          And none are taken but who will, 

          Having first heard the life read out 

          That opens earthward, good and ill, 

          Beyond the shadow of a doubt; 

          And very beautifully God limns, 

          And tenderly, life's little dream, 

          But naught extenuates or dims, 

          Setting the thing that is supreme. 

          Nor is there wanting in the press 

          Some spirit to stand simply forth, 

          Heroic in its nakedness, 

          Against the uttermost of earth. 


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The Trial by Existence  12



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Page No 15


The tale of earth's unhonored things 

          Sounds nobler there than 'neath the sun; 

          And the mind whirls and the heart sings, 

          And a shout greets the daring one. 

          But always God speaks at the end: 

          'One thought in agony of strife 

          The bravest would have by for friend, 

          The memory that he chose the life; 

          But the pure fate to which you go 

          Admits no memory of choice, 

          Or the woe were not earthly woe 

          To which you give the assenting voice.' 

          And so the choice must be again, 

          But the last choice is still the same; 

          And the awe passes wonder then, 

          And a hush falls for all acclaim. 

          And God has taken a flower of gold 

          And broken it, and used therefrom 

          The mystic link to bind and hold 

          Spirit to matter till death come. 

          'Tis of the essence of life here, 

          Though we choose greatly, still to lack 

          The lasting memory at all clear, 

          That life has for us on the wrack 

          Nothing but what we somehow chose; 

          Thus are we wholly stripped of pride 

          In the pain that has but one close, 

          Bearing it crushed and mystified. 

In Equal Sacrifice

          THUS of old the Douglas did: 

          He left his land as he was bid 

          With the royal heart of Robert the Bruce 

          In a golden case with a golden lid, 

          To carry the same to the Holy Land; 

          By which we see and understand 

          That that was the place to carry a heart 

          At loyalty and love's command, 

          And that was the case to carry it in. 

          The Douglas had not far to win 

          Before he came to the land of Spain, 

          Where long a holy war had been 

          Against the toovictorious Moor; 

          And there his courage could not endure 

          Not to strike a blow for God 

          Before he made his errand sure. 

          And ever it was intended so, 

          That a man for God should strike a blow, 


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Page No 16


No matter the heart he has in charge 

          For the Holy Land where hearts should go. 

          But when in battle the foe were met, 

          The Douglas found him sore beset, 

          With only strength of the fighting arm 

          For one more battle passage yet 

          And that as vain to save the day 

          As bring his body safe away 

          Only a signal deed to do 

          And a last sounding word to say. 

          The heart he wore in a golden chain 

          He swung and flung forth into the plain, 

          And followed it crying 'Heart or death!' 

          And fighting over it perished fain. 

          So may another do of right, 

          Give a heart to the hopeless fight, 

          The more of right the more he loves; 

          So may another redouble might 

          For a few swift gleams of the angry brand, 

          Scorning greatly not to demand 

          In equal sacrifice with his 

          The heart he bore to the Holy Land. 

The Tuft of Flowers

          I WENT to turn the grass once after one 

          Who mowed it in the dew before the sun. 

          The dew was gone that made his blade so keen 

          Before I came to view the leveled scene. 

          I looked for him behind an isle of trees; 

          I listened for his whetstone on the breeze. 

          But he had gone his way, the grass all mown, 

          And I must be, as he had been,alone, 

          'As all must be,' I said within my heart, 

          'Whether they work together or apart.' 

          But as I said it, swift there passed me by 

          On noiseless wing a 'wildered butterfly, 

          Seeking with memories grown dim o'er night 

          Some resting flower of yesterday's delight. 

          And once I marked his flight go round and round, 

          As where some flower lay withering on the ground. 

          And then he flew as far as eye could see, 

          And then on tremulous wing came back to me. 

          I thought of questions that have no reply, 

          And would have turned to toss the grass to dry; 

          But he turned first, and led my eye to look 

          At a tall tuft of flowers beside a brook, 

          A leaping tongue of bloom the scythe had spared 

          Beside a reedy brook the scythe had bared. 


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Page No 17


I left my place to know them by their name, 

          Finding them butterfly weed when I came. 

          The mower in the dew had loved them thus, 

          By leaving them to flourish, not for us, 

          Nor yet to draw one thought of ours to him. 

          But from sheer morning gladness at the brim. 

          The butterfly and I had lit upon, 

          Nevertheless, a message from the dawn, 

          That made me hear the wakening birds around, 

          And hear his long scythe whispering to the ground, 

          And feel a spirit kindred to my own; 

          So that henceforth I worked no more alone; 

          But glad with him, I worked as with his aid, 

          And weary, sought at noon with him the shade; 

          And dreaming, as it were, held brotherly speech 

          With one whose thought I had not hoped to reach. 

          'Men work together,' I told him from the heart, 

          'Whether they work together or apart.' 

Spoils of the Dead

          TWO fairies it was 

          On a still summer day 

          Came forth in the woods 

          With the flowers to play. 

          The flowers they plucked 

          They cast on the ground 

          For others, and those 

          For still others they found. 

          Flowerguided it was 

          That they came as they ran 

          On something that lay 

          In the shape of a man. 

          The snow must have made 

          The feathery bed 

          When this one fell 

          On the sleep of the dead. 

          But the snow was gone 

          A long time ago, 

          And the body he wore 

          Nigh gone with the snow. 

          The fairies drew near 

          And keenly espied 

          A ring on his hand 

          And a chain at his side. 

          They knelt in the leaves 

          And eerily played 

          With the glittering things, 

          And were not afraid. 


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Page No 18


And when they went home 

          To hide in their burrow, 

          They took them along 

          To play with tomorrow. 

          When you came on death, 

          Did you not come flowerguided 

          Like the elves in the wood? 

          I remember that I did. 

          But I recognised death 

          With sorrow and dread, 

          And I hated and hate 

          The spoils of the dead. 

Pan with Us

          PAN came out of the woods one day, 

          His skin and his hair and his eyes were gray, 

          The gray of the moss of walls were they, 

          And stood in the sun and looked his fill 

          At wooded valley and wooded hill. 

          He stood in the zephyr, pipes in hand, 

          On a height of naked pasture land; 

          In all the country he did command 

          He saw no smoke and he saw no roof. 

          That was well! and he stamped a hoof. 

          His heart knew peace, for none came here 

          To this lean feeding save once a year 

          Someone to salt the halfwild steer, 

          Or homespun children with clicking pails 

          Who see no little they tell no tales. 

          He tossed his pipes, too hard to teach 

          A newworld song, far out of reach, 

          For a sylvan sign that the blue jay's screech 

          And the whimper of hawks beside the sun 

          Were music enough for him, for one. 

          Times were changed from what they were: 

          Such pipes kept less of power to stir 

          The fruited bough of the juniper 

          And the fragile bluets clustered there 

          Than the merest aimless breath of air. 

          They were pipes of pagan mirth, 

          And the world had found new terms of worth. 

          He laid him down on the sunburned earth 

          And ravelled a flower and looked away 

          Play? Play?What should he play? 


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Page No 19


The Demiurge's Laugh

          IT was far in the sameness of the wood; 

          I was running with joy on the Demon's trail, 

          Though I knew what I hunted was no true god. 

          It was just as the light was beginning to fail 

          That I suddenly heardall I needed to hear: 

          It has lasted me many and many a year. 

          The sound was behind me instead of before, 

          A sleepy sound, but mocking half, 

          As of one who utterly couldn't care. 

          The Demon arose from his wallow to laugh, 

          Brushing the dirt from his eye as he went; 

          And well I knew what the Demon meant. 

          I shall not forget how his laugh rang out. 

          I felt as a fool to have been so caught, 

          And checked my steps to make pretence 

          It was something among the leaves I sought 

          (Though doubtful whether he stayed to see). 

          Thereafter I sat me against a tree. 

Now Close the Windows

          NOW close the windows and hush all the fields; 

          If the trees must, let them silently toss; 

          No bird is singing now, and if there is, 

          Be it my loss. 

          It will be long ere the marshes resume, 

          It will be long ere the earliest bird: 

          So close the windows and not hear the wind, 

          But see all windstirred. 

A Linestorm Song

          THE linestorm clouds fly tattered and swift, 

          The road is forlorn all day, 

          Where a myriad snowy quartz stones lift, 

          And the hoofprints vanish away. 

          The roadside flowers, too wet for the bee, 

          Expend their bloom in vain. 

          Come over the hills and far with me, 

          And be my love in the rain. 

          The birds have less to say for themselves 

          In the woodworld's torn despair 


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Page No 20


Than now these numberless years the elves, 

          Although they are no less there: 

          All song of the woods is crushed like some 

          Wild, easily shattered rose. 

          Come, be my love in the wet woods; come, 

          Where the boughs rain when it blows. 

          There is the gale to urge behind 

          And bruit our singing down, 

          And the shallow waters aflutter with wind 

          From which to gather your gown. 

          What matter if we go clear to the west, 

          And come not through dryshod? 

          For wilding brooch shall wet your breast 

          The rainfresh goldenrod. 

          Oh, never this whelming east wind swells 

          But it seems like the sea's return 

          To the ancient lands where it left the shells 

          Before the age of the fern; 

          And it seems like the time when after doubt 

          Our love came back amain. 

          Oh, come forth into the storm and rout 

          And be my love in the rain. 

October

          O HUSHED October morning mild, 

          Thy leaves have ripened to the fall; 

          Tomorrow's wind, if it be wild, 

          Should waste them all. 

          The crows above the forest call; 

          Tomorrow they may form and go. 

          O hushed October morning mild, 

          Begin the hours of this day slow, 

          Make the day seem to us less brief. 

          Hearts not averse to being beguiled, 

          Beguile us in the way you know; 

          Release one leaf at break of day; 

          At noon release another leaf; 

          One from our trees, one far away; 

          Retard the sun with gentle mist; 

          Enchant the land with amethyst. 

          Slow, slow! 

          For the grapes' sake, if they were all, 

          Whose leaves already are burnt with frost, 

          Whose clustered fruit must else be lost 

          For the grapes' sake along the wall. 


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Page No 21


My Butterfly

          THINE emulous fond flowers are dead, too, 

          And the daft sunassaulter, he 

          That frighted thee so oft, is fled or dead: 

          Save only me 

          (Nor is it sad to thee!) 

          Save only me 

          There is none left to mourn thee in the fields. 

          The gray grass is not dappled with the snow; 

          Its two banks have not shut upon the river; 

          But it is long ago 

          It seems forever 

          Since first I saw thee glance, 

          With all the dazzling other ones, 

          In airy dalliance, 

          Precipitate in love, 

          Tossed, tangled, whirled and whirled above, 

          Like a limp rosewreath in a fairy dance. 

          When that was, the soft mist 

          Of my regret hung not on all the land, 

          And I was glad for thee, 

          And glad for me, I wist. 

          Thou didst not know, who tottered, wandering on high, 

          That fate had made thee for the pleasure of the wind, 

          With those great careless wings, 

          Nor yet did I. 

          And there were other things: 

          It seemed God let thee flutter from his gentle clasp: 

          Then fearful he had let thee win 

          Too far beyond him to be gathered in, 

          Snatched thee, o'er eager, with ungentle grasp. 

          Ah! I remember me 

          How once conspiracy was rife 

          Against my life 

          The languor of it and the dreaming fond; 

          Surging, the grasses dizzied me of thought, 

          The breeze three odors brought, 

          And a gemflower waved in a wand! 

          Then when I was distraught 

          And could not speak, 

          Sidelong, full on my cheek, 

          What should that reckless zephyr fling 

          But the wild touch of thy dyedusty wing! 

          I found that wing broken today! 

          For thou are dead, I said, 

          And the strange birds say. 

          I found it with the withered leaves 

          Under the eaves. 


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Page No 22


Reluctance

OUT through the fields and the woods 

          And over the walls I have wended; 

          I have climbed the hills of view 

          And looked at the world, and descended; 

          I have come by the highway home, 

          And lo, it is ended. 

          The leaves are all dead on the ground, 

          Save those that the oak is keeping 

          To ravel them one by one 

          And let them go scraping and creeping 

          Out over the crusted snow, 

          When others are sleeping. 

          And the dead leaves lie huddled and still, 

          No longer blown hither and thither; 

          The last lone aster is gone; 

          The flowers of the witchhazel wither; 

          The heart is still aching to seek, 

          But the feet question 'Whither?' 

          Ah, when to the heart of man 

          Was it ever less than a treason 

          To go with the drift of things, 

          To yield with a grace to reason, 

          And bow and accept tand accept the end 

          Of a love or a season? 

End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of A Boy's Will, by Robert Frost


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. A Boy's Will, page = 4

   3. Robert Frost, page = 4

   4. Into My Own, page = 4

   5. Ghost House, page = 5

   6. My November Guest, page = 6

   7. Love and a Question, page = 6

   8. A Late Walk, page = 7

   9. Stars, page = 7

   10. Storm Fear, page = 8

   11. Wind and Window Flower, page = 8

   12. To the Thawing Wind, page = 9

   13. A Prayer in Spring, page = 9

   14. Flower-gathering, page = 10

   15. Rose Pogonias, page = 10

   16. Asking for Roses, page = 11

   17. Waiting -- Afield at Dusk, page = 11

   18. In a Vale, page = 12

   19. A Dream Pang, page = 12

   20. In Neglect, page = 13

   21. The Vantage Point, page = 13

   22. Mowing, page = 13

   23. Going for Water, page = 14

   24. Revelation, page = 14

   25. The Trial by Existence, page = 15

   26. In Equal Sacrifice, page = 16

   27. The Tuft of Flowers, page = 17

   28. Spoils of the Dead, page = 18

   29. Pan with Us, page = 19

   30. The Demiurge's Laugh, page = 20

   31. Now Close the Windows, page = 20

   32. A Line-storm Song, page = 20

   33. October, page = 21

   34. My Butterfly, page = 22

   35. Reluctance, page = 23