What Man May Learn, What Man May Do
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.
Robert Louis Stevenson
D'autres poésies de Robert Louis Stevenson
A Good Boy
I woke before the morning, I was happy all the day,
I...
A Good Play
We built a ship upon the stairs
All made of the...
A Thought
It is very nice to think
The world is full of meat and...
A Valentine's Song
MOTLEY I count the only wear
That suits, in this mixed...
About The Sheltered Garden Ground
ABOUT the sheltered garden ground
The trees stand...
Ad Magistrum Ludi
NOW in the sky
And on the hearth of
Now in a drawer...
Ad Martialem
GO(D) knows, my Martial, if we two could be
To enjoy our...
Ad Nepotem
O NEPOS, twice my neigh(b)our (since at home
We're door by...
Ad Olum
CALL me not rebel, though { here at every word
...
Ad Piscatorem
FOR these are sacred fishes all
Who know that lord that is...
Précédentes poésies
Ziyi Song
Chang-an -- one slip of moon;
in ten thousand houses, the...
Waterfall at Lu-shan
Sunlight streams on the river stones.
From high above, the...
Visiting A Taoist On Tiatien Mountain
Amongst bubbling streams
a dog barks; peach blossom
Under the Moon
Under the crescent moon's faint glow
The washerman's bat...
To Wang Lun
I was about to sail away in a junk,
When suddenly I...

