Divine Detachment
Robert William Service
One day the Great Designer sought His Clerk of Birth and Death. Said he: “Two souls are in my thought, to whom I gave life-breath. I deemed my work was fitly done, But yester-eve I saw That in the finished brain of one There was a tiny flaw. “It worried me, and I would know, Since I am all to blame, What happened to them down below, Of honour or of shame; For if the later did befall, My sorrow will be grave . . .” Then numbers astronomical unto the Clerk he gave. The Keeper of the Rolls replied: “Of them I’ve little trace; But one he was a Prince of pride And one of lowly race. One was a Holy Saint proclaimed; For one no hell sufficed . . . . Let’s see—the last was Nero named, The other . . . Jesus Christ.”
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Divine Device
- Robert William Service : Dolls
- Robert William Service : Domestic Scene
- Robert William Service : Don't Cheer
- Robert William Service : Dram-shop Ditty
- Robert William Service : Dreams
- Robert William Service : Dreams Are Best
- Robert William Service : Drifter
- Robert William Service : Duello
- Robert William Service : Dumb Swede
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Distracted Druggist
- Robert William Service : Detachment
- Robert William Service : Design
- Robert William Service : Dedication To Providence
- Robert William Service : Dedication
- Robert William Service : Decorations
- Robert William Service : Decadence
- Robert William Service : Death's Way
- Robert William Service : Death Of A Cockroach
- Robert William Service : Death In The Arctic