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Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Robert Louis Stevenson > Text of Ad Martialem

A poem by Robert Louis Stevenson

Ad Martialem

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Title:     Ad Martialem
Author: Robert Louis Stevenson [More Titles by Stevenson]

GO(D) knows, my Martial, if we two could be
To enjoy our days set wholly free;
To the true life together bend our mind,
And take a furlough from the falser kind.
No rich saloon, nor palace of the great,
Nor suit at law should trouble our estate;
On no vainglorious statues should we look,
But of a walk, a talk, a little book,
Baths, wells and meads, and the veranda shade,
Let all our travels and our toils be made.
Now neither lives unto himself, alas!
And the good suns we see, that flash and pass
And perish; and the bell that knells them cries:
"Another gone: O when will ye arise?"






-THE END-
Robert Louis Stevenson's poem: Ad Martialem

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