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Poem by Edwin Arlington Robinson


The Corridor


IT may have been the pride in me for aught
I know, or just a patronizing whim;
But call it freak of fancy, or what not,
I cannot hide the hungry face of him.

I keep a scant half-dozen words he said,
And every now and then I lose his name;
He may be living or he may be dead,
But I must have him with me all the same.

I knew it and I knew it all along,--
And felt it once or twice, or thought I did;
But only as a glad man feels a song
That sounds around a stranger's coffin lid.

I knew it, and he knew it, I believe,
But silence held us alien to the end;
And I have now no magic to retrieve
That year, to stop that hunger for a friend.



Edwin Arlington Robinson


Edwin Arlington Robinson's other poems:
  1. The Dead Village
  2. Cliff Klingenhagen
  3. Neighbors
  4. Two Men
  5. Momus


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