Ghosts
Robert William Service
I to a crumpled cabin came
upon a hillside high,
And with me was a withered dame
As weariful as I.
“It used to be our home,” she said;
“How well I remember well!
Oh that our happy hearth should be
Today an empty shell!”
The door was flailing in the storm
That deafed us with its din;
The roof that kept us once so warm
Now let the snow-drift in.
The floor sagged to the sod below,
The walls caved crazily;
We only heard the wind of woe
Where once was glow and glee.
So there we stood disconsolate
Beneath the Midnight Dome,
And ancient miner and his mate,
Before our wedded home,
Where we had know such love and cheer . . .
I sighed, then soft she said:
“Do not regret—remember, dear,
We, too, are dead.”
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Gignol
- Robert William Service : Gipsy
- Robert William Service : God's Battleground
- Robert William Service : God's Grief
- Robert William Service : Gods In The Gutter
- Robert William Service : God's Skallywags
- Robert William Service : God's Vagabond
- Robert William Service : Going Home
- Robert William Service : Golden Days
- Robert William Service : Good-bye, Little Cabin
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Gentle Gaoler
- Robert William Service : Gangrene
- Robert William Service : Futility
- Robert William Service : Funk
- Robert William Service : Fulfilment
- Robert William Service : Frustration
- Robert William Service : Freethinker
- Robert William Service : Freedom's Fool
- Robert William Service : Four-foot Shelf
- Robert William Service : Forward