Ask and it shall be given. Askask. And if you ask a stone Expect not bread; And if the stone glitter like a caught star, And shine on a warm, soft breast, And you have tossed your soul away To see it in that nest, Yet is it still a stonenot bread. Seek and you shall find. Seekseek. And if you go the crowded street Look not to find the hills; And if the shops sit gay along the way, And laughter fills the air, Stillyou have lost the hills. Knock and the door shall open. Knockknock. Two doors are there, beware! Think well before you knock; Your tapping finger will unlock Your heaven or hell. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE RED TURTLENECK by KAREN SWENSON A SHROPSHIRE LAD: 19. TO AN ATHLETE DYING YOUNG by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN TO A COMMON PROSTITUTE by WALT WHITMAN TO THE SOLITUDE OF FONTENAY by GUILLAUME AMFRYE FOR EVER AND EVERMORE by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) THE SHEPHERD O' THE FARM by WILLIAM BARNES |