Confetti In The Wind
Robert William Service
He wrote a letter in his mind
To answer one a maid had sent;
He sought the fitting word to find,
As on by hill and rill he went.
By bluebell wood and hawthorn lane,
The cadence sweet and silken phrase
He incubated in his brain
For days and days.
He wrote his letter on a page
Of paper with a satin grain;
It did not ring, so in a rage
He tore it up and tried again.
Time after time he drafted it;
He polished it all through the night;
He tuned and pruned till bit by bit
He got it right.
He took his letter to the post,
Yet long he held it in his hand.
Strangely his mood had veered, almost
Reversed,—he could not understand.
The girl was vague, the words were vain;
April romance had come to grief . . .
He tore his letter up again,—
Oh blest relief!
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Conqueror
- Robert William Service : Contentment
- Robert William Service : Contrast
- Robert William Service : Convicts Love Canaries
- Robert William Service : Courage
- Robert William Service : Cowardice
- Robert William Service : Cows
- Robert William Service : Dance-hall Girls
- Robert William Service : Dark Glasses
- Robert William Service : Dark Trinity
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Comrades
- Robert William Service : Compensation Pete
- Robert William Service : Compassion
- Robert William Service : Comfort
- Robert William Service : Cocotte
- Robert William Service : Clemenceau
- Robert William Service : Class-mates
- Robert William Service : Clancy Of The Mounted Police
- Robert William Service : Cinderella
- Robert William Service : Child Lover