That thou hast kept thy love, increased thy will, Bettered thy trust to letters; that thy skill; Hast taught thyself worthy thy pen to tread, And that to write things worthy to be read: How much of great example wert thou, Roe, If time to facts, as unto men would owe? But much it now avails, what's done, of whom: The selfsame deeds, as diversely they come, From place, or fortune, are made high, or low, And even the praiser's judgement suffers so. Well, though thy name less than our great ones' be, Thy fact is more: let truth encourage thee. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AN EGYPTIAN PULLED GLASS BOTTLE IN THE SHAPE OF A FISH by MARIANNE MOORE CALVARY by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON TO A FOIL'D EUROPEAN REVOLUTIONAIRE by WALT WHITMAN THE KANSAS EMIGRANTS by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER THE BALLAD OF READING GAOL by OSCAR WILDE GULLS by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS SOLILOQUIES OF A SMALL-TOWN TAXI-DRIVER: ON THE WRITING OF POETRY by EDGAR BARRATT |