The Woman At The Gate
Robert William Service
“Where is your little boy to-day?”
I asked her at the gate.
“I used to see him at his play,
And often I would wait:
He was so beautiful, so bright,
I watched him with delight.
“He had a tiny motor-car
And it was painted red;
He wound it up; it ran so far,
So merrily it sped.
I think he told me that it was
A gift from Santa Claus.”
The woman said: “It ran so far
He followed it with joy.
Then came a real motor-car,—
He sought to save his toy . . .
My little boy is far away
Where angel children play.
“His father perished in the War;
Now I am all alone,
And death is all I’m longing for . . .”
So said with face of stone
That woman. “Curse their crazy cars
And cruel wars!”
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Womb
- Robert William Service : The Wonderer
- Robert William Service : The Wood-cutter
- Robert William Service : The World's All Right
- Robert William Service : The Younger Son
- Robert William Service : The Yukoner
- Robert William Service : Three Wives
- Robert William Service : Tick-tock
- Robert William Service : Tim
- Robert William Service : Tipperary Days
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Woman And The Angel
- Robert William Service : The Wistful One
- Robert William Service : The Wildy Ones
- Robert William Service : The Wife
- Robert William Service : The Widower
- Robert William Service : The Widow
- Robert William Service : The Whistle Of Sandy Mcgraw
- Robert William Service : The Wee Shop
- Robert William Service : The Wedding Ring
- Robert William Service : The Wanderlust