WHEN a night in November Blew forth its bleared airs An infant descended His birth-chamber stairs For the very first time, At the still, midnight chime; All unapprehended His mission, his aim. -- Thus, first, one November, An infant descended The stairs. On a night in November Of weariful cares, A frail aged figure Ascended those stairs For the very last time: All gone his life's prime, All vanished his vigour, And fine, forceful frame: Thus, last, one November Ascended that figure Upstairs. On those nights in November -- Apart eighty years -- The babe and the bent one Who traversed those stairs From the early first time To the last feeble climb -- That fresh and that spent one -- Were even the same: Yea, who passed in November As infant, as bent one, Those stairs. Wise child of November! From birth to blanched hairs Descending, ascending, Wealth-wantless, those stairs; Who saw quick in time As a vain pantomime Life's tending, its ending, The worth of its fame. Wise child of November, Descending, ascending Those stairs! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE MAN TO BE by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON THE DESIRE OF NATIONS by EDWIN MARKHAM SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: IPPOLIT KONOVALOFF by EDGAR LEE MASTERS LANCELOT by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON THE REVEALER by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON JOHN ERICSSON DAY MEMORIAL, 1918 by CARL SANDBURG TO W.P.: 1 by GEORGE SANTAYANA |