Lost Poetry Quotations
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home is the hunter
Posted by: Betty-Jean (---.proxy.aol.com)
Date: March 21, 2022 12:20PM

As far as I remember it goes something like "....home is the hunter from the hills"


Re: looking for rest of poem
Posted by: lg (---.ca.charter.com)
Date: March 21, 2022 12:28PM

Here you go Betty-Jean



Home Is the Sailor
---A.E. Housman


Home is the sailor, home from sea:
  Her far-borne canvas furled
The ship pours shining on the quay
   The plunder of the world.

Home is the hunter from the hill:
    Fast in the boundless snare
All flesh lies taken at his will
  And every fowl of air.

'Tis evening on the moorland free,
   The starlit wave is still:
Home is the sailor from the sea,
   The hunter from the hill.

Les



Post Edited (03-21-05 11:30)


Re: looking for rest of poem
Posted by: JohnnySansCulo (---.nycmny83.covad.net)
Date: March 21, 2022 12:29PM

good Les, I could only find "Home is the hunter from the hills. The sailor from the sea, And thou art home, O friend of my heart. And will come back to me"


Re: looking for rest of poem
Posted by: RJAllen (---.creation-net.co.uk)
Date: March 21, 2022 12:48PM

Hold hard: before AEH.

Epitaph

Under the wide and starry sky
Dig the grave and let me lie.
Glad did I live and glad did I die
And I lay me down with a will.

This be the verse you grave for me:
Here he lies where he longs to be.
Home is the sailor, home from sea
And the hunter home from the hill.
-R. L. Stevenson


"This be the verse" in turn inspired Philip Larkin's most...famous, shall we say?...poem.


Re: home is the hunter
Posted by: Henry (194.150.176.---)
Date: March 24, 2022 10:10AM

Housman's poem is simply titled R.L.S.

It was number XXII in Additional Poems, published in 1939.


Re: home is the hunter
Posted by: RJAllen (193.114.111.---)
Date: March 24, 2022 02:10PM

Housman's poem: R. L. S. is Robert Louis Stevenson- Housman's own adaptation and memorial to him.


Re: home is the hunter
Posted by: Henry (213.78.103.---)
Date: March 24, 2022 02:54PM

Gavin Bell climbed up Mount Veae in Samoa to visit Stevenson's grave on a small plateau near the summit. He found that the two verses were inscribed on a plaque attached to the gravestone.

In his book In Search of Tusitala, he quotes some further lines from Stevenson's Requiem, written in San Francisco fifteen years before his death;

You, who pass this grave, put aside hatred; love kindness; be all services remembered in your heart, and all offences pardoned; and as you go down again among the living, let this be your question: can I make some one happier this day before I lie down to sleep? Thus the dead man speaks to you from the dust: you will hear no more from him.

I can understand why Housman should have admired him so.


Re: home is the hunter
Posted by: IanB (192.168.128.---)
Date: August 25, 2021 10:14AM

The correct wording of the two verses on Stevenson's gravestone is

Under the wide and starry sky,
Dig the grave and let me lie.
Glad did I live and gladly die,
And I laid me down with a will.

This be the verse you grave for me:
Here he lies where he long'd to be;
Home is the sailor, home from sea,
And the hunter home from the hill.

I believe he titled it 'Requiem' (as mentioned by Henry), not 'Epitaph', but don't know whether the title appears on the gravestone.




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