Failure
Robert William Service
He wrote a play; by day and night He strove with passion and delight; Yet knew, long ere the curtain drop, His drama was a sorry flop. In Parliament he sought a seat; Election Day brought dire defeat; Yet he had wooed with word and pen Prodigiously his fellow men. And then he wrote a lighter play That made him famous in a day. He won a seat in Parliament, And starry was the way he went. Yet as he neared the door of death They heard him say with broken breath: ‘For all I’ve spoken, planned and penned, I’m just a wash-out in the end.’ So are we all; our triumphs won Are mean by what we might have done. Our victories that men applaud Are sordid in the sight of God.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Faith
- Robert William Service : Fallen Leaves
- Robert William Service : Familiarity
- Robert William Service : Farewell To Verse
- Robert William Service : Fear
- Robert William Service : Fidelity
- Robert William Service : Fi-fi In Bed
- Robert William Service : Fighting Mac
- Robert William Service : Finale
- Robert William Service : Finality
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Facility
- Robert William Service : Eyrie
- Robert William Service : Externalism
- Robert William Service : Expectation
- Robert William Service : Evenfall
- Robert William Service : Euthansia
- Robert William Service : Escape
- Robert William Service : Ernie Pyle
- Robert William Service : Erico
- Robert William Service : Equality