New poems and variant readings/Stout marches lead to certain ends

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New poems and variant readings (1918)
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Stout marches lead to certain ends
1911161New poems and variant readings — Stout marches lead to certain ends1918Robert Louis Stevenson

STOUT MARCHES LEAD TO CERTAIN ENDS

Stout marches lead to certain ends,
We seek no Holy Grail, my friends—
That dawn should find us every day
Some fraction farther on our way.


The dumb lands sleep from east to west,
They stretch and turn and take their rest.
The cock has crown in the steading-yard,
But priest and people slumber hard.


We two are early forth, and hear
The nations snoring far and near.
So peacefully their rest they take,
It seems we are the first awake!


—Strong heart! this is no royal way,
A thousand cross-roads seek the day;
And, hid from us, to left and right,
A thousand seekers seek the light.